Outline
- Lectures
- Course Web Site/Gradebook
- Instructors
- Assigned Textbook
- Homework
- Discovery Room
- i>clickers
- E-Mail Policy
- Hour Exams
- Final Exam
- Grading Policy
- Excused Absences
- Course Philosophy
Monday and Wednesday from 4:00-5:15 PM, 141 Loomis Laboratory of
Physics (LLP)
http://online.physics.uiuc.edu/courses/phys140/spring10/
The Student Gradebook is found on the Course Web Site: Click on
“Gradebook and Exam Results”, then “Student Gradebook” and log on with
your NetID and NetID password. This is where you check your grades and
sign up for conflict exams. Please check the Student Gradebook
regularly throughout the semester. If it is not up to date (allow 2
weeks for corrections), please notify Prof. Willenbrock. The Student
Gradebook closes on TBA.
*TA Commons is on the second floor (279 Loomis).
You are welcome to attend any office hour
listed, and to make appointments with any of the TAs or Professor Willenbrock.
How Things Work 4th edition by
Louis A. Bloomfield
You may choose to purchase an e-book instead of a hard copy of the textbook. Information about the variety of electronic textbook options may be found here.
Two fun websites are http://www.physicscentral.com/ and
http://www.howstuffworks.com/
The homework can be found on the course web site,
or directly at: http://online.physics.uiuc.edu/courses/phys140/spring10/homework/
The homework is done online. It is due on Tuesdays at 11:00 p.m., at which time the
answers are posted. Each 10-question homework set is of equal value.
You may work your homework sets multiple times, and the computer
scoring system will keep only your last saved answers.
You must remember to save your answers!
Discussion is encouraged. There is no credit for late homework.
Your lowest homework grade is dropped at the end of the semester
The discussion/laboratory sections are
called “Discovery Room,” or DR, in Physics 140. The DRs begin on
Thursday, January 21. The DR week runs throughout the semester from
Thursday 10:00 a.m. through Monday at 1 p.m. There are no Discovery Room
sessions in the weeks following the hour exams (2/10, 3/17, and 4/21).
Your Pass/Fail grade is determined by your
attendance at your assigned discovery room, your willingness to
participate, and completion of a short DR worksheet. Being 5 minutes
late counts as an absence: you must sign an attendance sheet to get
credit, which is removed 5 minutes into the hour. If you cannot make
your assigned time, you may attend another DR only
if you get prior permission from BOTH your own TA and the TA whose
class you wish to attend, and you must sign the attendance sheet
of the DR you attended. Check DR times and instructors on the Physics
140 Web Page under
Discovery Room (DR) sections. Your lowest Discovery Room grade is
dropped at the end of the semester. You may attend a substitute DR
section no more than twice a semester unless
you get approval from Prof. Willenbrock.
We cannot help you to get into a DR section
or to change DR sections—only you can sign up for and drop DR sections
in Banner.
i>clickers are available at all three university bookstores. You MUST register your clicker to your NetID by noon on January 25. You must register your i>clicker
at the i>clicker web site. (Your Student ID is your Net ID, which is your email address [without the @illinois].
Your Remote ID is on the back of your i>clicker. If you cannot read the Remote ID on the back of your i>clicker,
please go to the Customer Service Counter at the Illini Union Bookstore. A station has been set up there so that you can retrieve the Remote ID.)
The lecturer will ask multiple choice questions during class and you are invited to respond using your i>clicker. Credit is given for responses (right or wrong), with two points given per lecture. You may miss four lectures without any loss of credit.
You are responsible for changing the batteries in your i>clicker. You are also responsible for replacements if you damage or lose your i>clicker.
iClicker Rules:
- Read the instructions on the back of your i>clicker carefully.
- i>clicker Student Gradebook updates require at least one week.
- Please note the i>clicker registration deadline. If you do not register your i>clicker by the deadline, you will not receive i>clicker points for the semester.
- A blank i>clicker grade in the Student Gradebook indicates that the Student Gradebook has not yet been updated for that lecture. An “AB” grade means “absent” (and that the Student Gradebook has been updated).
- If you replace your i>clicker, you must re-register your new iclicker AND e-mail Prof. Willenbrock within 24 hours to receive i>clicker credit for the rest of the semester.
Any concerns, questions, or comments about the
administration of the course you wish to submit by e-mail must be sent
to Prof. Willenbrock (willen@illinois.edu). Please bring physics questions to any
TA or Prof. Willenbrock’s office hours.
You may also e-mail the TAs about re-scheduling a
DR, but all administrative questions must be sent to Prof. Willenbrock.
- You must use your UIUC express e-mail account.
- You must have PHYS140 in the subject line.
- You must have the reason for the e-mail in the subject line
(e.g., double conflict exam, excused absence, etc.).
- Your full name must appear in the e-mail message.
Your email messages may be
detected as spam and deleted if you do not follow these rules.
There are three 45-question multiple-choice Hour
Exams:
- Wednesday, February 10, 2010
- Wednesday, March 17, 2010
- Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Exam locations will be announced on the course
webpage and by e-mail.
CONFLICT EXAM: If you have a conflict with the
exam time, you may sign up for the conflict exam, which is given at
5:45 p.m. on that same day. This sign-up option will appear in the
Student Gradebook by the end of the second week of classes. To take the conflict exam you must sign up in the Student
Gradebook by 10:00 p.m. on the Monday preceding the exam.
DOUBLE CONFLICT EXAM:There is a double
conflict exam given at 4:00 that same day. Only conflicts with other
UIUC classes make one eligible for the double conflict. You must e-mail
Prof. Willenbrock detailed information of your UIUC conflicts, including your
UIN, at least one week before the exam, so it can be cleared by the
Emergency Dean (see below).
You can view the “Answer(s) You Marked” in
the “Exam Results by Question” options listed under “Gradebook and Exam
Results” on the Course Web Site. If you think the displays do not
accurately reflect what you bubbled in on your answer sheet, send an
e-mail message to shunk@illinois.edu. In your e-mail message, please
include your name, the name of your discussion section, that this
concerns Physics 140, the exam number, the question number(s) and
answer letter(s).
Thursday, May 13 from 7:00-10:00 PM
The Final Exam has 96 multiple-choice questions
and covers material from the entire semester.
Homework: 175 points
Discovery Rooms: 175 points
iClicker: 50 points
Each Hour Exam : 120 points (for a total of 3x120=360 points)
Final Exam: 240 points
TOTAL POSSIBLE: 1000 point
Your final grade for Physics 140 will be
based on your total score on all the components of the course (after
the lowest DR and homework grades are dropped). Letter grade ranges
are: A+(900), A(860), A-(840), B+(820), B(790), B-(770), C+(750),
C(700), C-(660), D+(620), D(550) and D-(500), where the number in
parentheses is the lowest score for that grade.
HWs: You will be graded on 13 homework
assignments (14 total with the lowest one dropped), 10 points each. To
get your HW score, multiply your total sum of points of your 13 kept HW
assignments times 175/130.
DRs: You will be graded on 10 DRs (11 total
with the lowest one dropped); each DR is worth 1 point. To get your DR
score, multiply the sum of your remaining 10 DR grades times 175/10.
i>clicker: Each lecture in which the i>clicker is used is worth 2 points. The number of lectures in which the i>clicker is used is 29, but you will be graded on only 25: the lowest four grades will be dropped. Your i>clicker grade is then the sum of your points.
HEs: Your Hour Exams are 45 questions each.
To get your score for each HE, multiply your score times 120/45.
Final: The Final Exam has 96 questions and
is worth 240 points. To get your final exam score, multiply your number
of correct answers times 240/96.
EX grade: “Excused Absence” (see Section
12). The way that EX grades are applied is explained in Section 12.
AB grade: “Absence” . This becomes a 0
(zero) at the end of the semester.
All docmuentation for an Excused Absence must
be turned in within two weeks of an absence.
EX scores for Hour Exams, Discovery Room, Homework, and Lecture (i>clicker) will be granted
only in one of the following circumstances: (a) illness; (b) personal crisis
(e.g., automobile accident, required court appearance, death of a close relative
or friend, weather conditions preventing travel to campus); or (c) required
attendance at an official UIUC activity (e.g., varsity athletics, band concert).
In case
(a), go to the McKinley Health Center. After you have been seen, you will receive
a Visit Confirmation note that you should take to the course secretary in 231/233
Loomis. (Do not take it to an instructor.) She will make a a photocopy
of the note for the course record book and will distribute copies to all of
your instructors (lecturer and Discovery Room TA). You may choose instead
go to a private physician and obtain a written excuse. That excuse should contain
your doctor's name and telephone number. Take the excuse note to the course
secretary for recording, confirmation, and notification of your instructors.
In case
(b) contact the Dean of Students' Office 333-0050. (At night this number is
referred to as the Emergency Dean). The Dean's Office will subsequently send
you a letter and a copy to the course secretary. She will place it in the course
record book and send copies to all of your P211 instructors.
In case
(c) inform your lecturer in advance that you will be missing an hour
exam and request an I score. Similarly, inform your TA if you will
be missing a Discovery Room.
In addition, obtain a written note of confirmation from an official of the sponsoring
office and take that note to the course secretary for recording and distribution
to all of your instructors. Alternatively, request that the note be sent directly
to the course secretary in 231/233 Loomis.
If you fail
to take a regular or conflict Final Exam in Physics 140, you will receive an
ABS letter grade for the course, which will be interpreted as a failure (F)
in your semester grade report. Permission to change an ABS letter grade to an
"I" (Incomplete) letter grade can only be granted by an authorized member of the Dean's Office
of your college. If an "I" grade is granted, you must take a replacement Final
Exam before the deadline specified in UIUC Code of Policies and Regulations
Applying to All Students.
Hour Exams: If your Confining
Illness or Personal Emergency Excused Absence dates include the date of
an hour exam, you will receive an EX grade. If you have an EX on an Hour Exam, you calculate your grade by
multiplying your Final Exam grade times 120/240.
Homework Assignments: Since you have
a full week to do your homework assignments, an EX grade will only be
granted if four or more days of that week are Excused Absences. Please
do your homework assignments early, just in case an emergency occurs!
An EX grade becomes the average of the other homework grades, after the
lowest homework grade is dropped.
Discovery Rooms: Since you can make up a missed DR in another section during the Thursday
morning through Monday Noon DR week, an EX grade only be given if it
was not possible for you to re schedule your DR in another section
during the week that your Excused Absence(s) were granted. An EX grade
becomes the average of the other DR grades, after the lowest DR grade is
dropped.
i>clicker: If you miss lecture due to an Excused Absence, you will be given the usual 2 points awarded for using the i>clicker in lecture.
This course is meant to be a fun way to learn how things actually work. We hope that
by the end of the course you will understand why it is easier to stay
up on your bicycle when you are moving than when you are standing
still, why violins and pipe organs are shaped the way they are and why
you need to always wear your seatbelt, pulled tightly, in a car or
airplane. But even more, we hope you will discover questions you never
even thought of before the course started, and that this gentle introduction to physics will spark your curiosity about the intriguing puzzles
that surround us every day.