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Physics 113 a physics survey course designed for science majors who are not majoring in physics or engineering. The topics of vectors, linear and multi-dimensional.

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Presentation on theme: "Physics 113 a physics survey course designed for science majors who are not majoring in physics or engineering. The topics of vectors, linear and multi-dimensional."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Physics 113 a physics survey course designed for science majors who are not majoring in physics or engineering. The topics of vectors, linear and multi-dimensional motion, work, energy, gravitation, simple harmonic motion, conservation of momentum and energy, constant acceleration motion, rotational motion, thermodynamics, and waves, will be covered at an introductory university level. Students are assumed to have some knowledge of calculus, though the techniques will be reviewed as they are used. No previous physics instruction is assumed. … is Surgeon General’s warning: No matter what you’re smoking, this is not your high school course.

3 Professor Steven Manly B&L 203E 5-8473 manly@pas.rochester.edu http://hertz.pas.rochester.edu/class/P113_2002/ Name University ( @mail … ) email address favorite midnight snack favorite novel Why are you in this course? See syllabus/info writeup

4 Why are You here? It is a requirement for my major. I have to take the course to graduate. I have to take the course to apply to med school.

5 Why is this a requirement for your major? fluid flow, arteries, water fountains, commodes mechanics of breathing, walking, running, flying, standing golf all sports: curve balls, spin in tennis, drag in swimming, etc. Motors, gears, wheels, ambulances, bikes buildings, doors, bridges, skeletons Chemical bond modeling planes, boats gravity

6 Why do I think you are here? Awareness and respect for physics in the real (your) world Not on the list: To learn to be physicists. To learn to solve problems.

7 “It is not so very important for a person to learn facts. For that he does not really need a college. He can learn them from books. The value of an education in a liberal arts college is not the learning of many facts but the training of the mind to think something that cannot be learned from textbooks.” - Albert Einstein, 1921, commenting on Thomas Edison’s opinion that a college education is useless.

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9 Hidden slide: notes for discussion of recipe analogy Why hard? Lack of experience, lack of confidence, language, prior knowledge, equipment which is harder? Why Can you make bread following a recipe? Would you feel confident changing the recipe to make a different kind of bread? Suppose the bread didn’t work out, would you know what to change to make it work next time? What are the similarities in the recipes? What is essential and what can be changed? What is the essence of what happens with each ingredient/step?

10 Components of the course: Lecture Concepts, depth, association with the rest of life, other disciplines, systematic technique, gotchas, class issues, hints, some problem solving

11 Components of the course: Lecture Lab Not as integrated as we would like. Part of your P113 grade. Must do all 5 labs to get a grade in P113.

12 Components of the course: Lecture Lab Text More depth and associations, different approach, problems, not a substitute for lecture or doing problem sets

13 Components of the course: Lecture Lab Text Problem sets Absolutely critical that you struggle with them and follow thru on particular personal questions/issues, taken up and graded for effort only

14 Components of the course: Lecture Lab Text Problem sets Workshop My way to help you help yourself!

15 Components of the course: Lecture Lab Text Problem sets Workshop Project A fun break from the analytical.

16 Components of the course: Lecture Lab Text Problem sets Workshop Project Exams

17 Evaluation: E1E2E3FinalLabPrStsProjCncpt mps 1---16%16%30%12%12%12%2% 216%---16%30%12%12%12%2% 316%16%---30%12%12%12%2% 415.5%15.5%15.5%15.5%12%12%12%2% 515.38%15.38%15.38%28.77%11.55%11.54%---2% Each scheme calculated, best average sets your place on the numerical curve I place grade boundaries on numerical curve … and if you don’t like that fact...

18  Thou shall come to class.  Thou shall read the text.  Thou shall do the problem sets (the right way!).  Thou shall ask questions.  Thou shall attend workshop.  Thou shall participate in workshop.  Thou shall strive to understand what is behind the problems and what thou dost wrong on them.  Thou shall keep up with the class.  Thou shall not CRAM for exams.  Thou shall talk to ME the moment you sense impending doom. OR ELSE THOU SHALL GET SCREWED! The 10 Commandments of P113:

19 The really, really important ones... Problem sets (the right way) Workshop Don’t cram For those of you who like to pick and choose the commandments you follow …. And the keys to POST-PHYSICS NIRVANA are

20 Roth & Yoshinaka: analysis of P113 (1999) and P113 (2000) grade correlation with workshop attendance

21 More stuff: Workshops and section signup Problem sets and solutions Office hours E-mail list Labs and lab section signup physlabs@pas.rochester.edu

22 First assignment: Concept map EXAMPLE Eat flour water yeast oven pan meas cup recipe teaspoon ingredients See handout. Due at start of class on Thursday (Sept. 5)

23 ingredients recipe Teaspoon, meas cup pan oven eat Yeast, water, flour requires Measured using Which are Combine in Cook in

24 ingredients recipe Teaspoon, meas cup pan oven eat Yeast, water, flour Must combine Measured using According to Cook in in

25 ingredients Teaspoon pan oven eat flour While sitting on on While making yeast water meas cup contains

26 Second assignment: Problem Set 1 Problem Set #1 (due September 12, 2002) - P113, Fall 2002 Estimation, sig. figures, unit conversion, straight line motion Chapter 1: 2, 16, 18, 19, 28, 32, 45, 53 Chapter 2: 6, 10, 23, 28, 36, 48, 58, 71, 78 This is posted on the class website


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