Rules of the Road
Procedures and My Rules of the Road
Class Meetings
- Lectures
on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday in ESLC 130, unless it is a holiday or
you are taking a class exam, which will also be in this room.
- Recitations
on Thursdays only and each begins with a QUIZ.
- Laboratory
sessions on days and times as you signed up. Note these do not occur each week. See syllabus.
- To
interact with Instructor, use the following procedures:
a)
Schedule a meeting with him after the lectures.
b)
Send him an e-mail to schedule a meeting.
c)
Send him e-mail describing your question/problem.
d)
Stick notes to his office door, specifically stating your name (or class ID), how he
can reach you, and the problem.
e)
Go to his office (SER 250A).
Rules
- The following
are applied to all students uniformly; exceptions to this are only
processed via the Physics department head/college administrator.
- Homework,
recitation quizzes, and laboratory are mandatory.
- There
are no laboratory session make-ups; see notes on laboratory procedures.
- Recitation
quizzes are administered at the start of the recitation period; no
make-ups are offered, and late attendance, which disrupts the recitation
class, is treated as a missed quiz.
(The instructor will support recitation teacher decisions regarding
this issue 100%).
- Homework
can earn 100% (or more) credit if completed before 1:00 a.m. on the Monday
after the week it is assigned.
Late homework receives lesser credit. Absolutely no written homework is accepted. The IT support for this Web
homework is maintained by the publisher, with over 40,000 students using
it. Their statistics are that
their computer system, its backup, and IT support have had ALMOST zero
downtime in the last 5 years.
- Exams
1, 2, and 3 will cover only the material since the prior exam. The final exam is comprehensive,
covers all the material taught during the semester in PHYS 2220. No make-up exams are offered.
- Use
same six-character class ID number as last semester PHYS 2200/2210. Each student, on the first day of
class, is given a 3-digit class identification number to which they add 3
letters of their choosing as their password for this class. Students must use these 6
characters: 3 digits followed by 3 letters, on their recitation quiz,
laboratory sign-in sheets, and exams.
Grade Determination
In fairness to all students in the class, the above rules
are imposed uniformly on all students.
If a student in Physics 2220 misses more than 3 laboratory sessions they
have failed the entire class.
Grading is based on the following final grade breakdown.
|
Physics 2220
|
|
Laboratory:
20
Homework:
15
Recitation: 10
Exam 1: 10
Exam 2:
10
Exam 3: 10
Final Exam: 25 (Final is comprehensive)
100
|
Getting Help Doing PHYS 2220
- The
Physics department has a problem-solving center called the Learning Center
(GEOL Rm 401). Please get
used to using this. Please
report to the Physics office or the instructor (Jan Sojka via e-mail) if
the Learning Center instructor is not present. They are paid to be there.The next level of attack is
to get to know your Recitation Teaching Assistant. He or she is usually approachable
to help on class questions.
They are integrally involved in setting and grading exams.
- Contact
Jan Sojka as outlined in the earlier section (Class Meetings), item
4.
- Do
not wait until the last minute, i.e., asking about homework on Sunday night
at 11 p.m. or the evening before an exam, etc.; no help is offered at such
times.
Students with Disabilities
Students with physical, sensory, emotional or medical
impairments may be eligible for reasonable accommodations in accordance with
the Americans with Disabilities Act and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act
of 1973. All accommodations are coordinated through the Disability Resource
Center (DRC) in Room 101 of the University Inn, 797-2444 voice, 797-0740 TTY,
or toll free at 1-800-259-2966. Please contact the DRC as early in the semester
as possible. Alternate format materials (Braille, large print or digital) are
available with advance notice.