General
Physics II

Spring 2017
course
navigation

Syllabus

Info

Title General Physics II
Term Spring 2017
Credits 4
Time Mon, Wed, Fri 11.30-12.50
Place Brown Science/Sci 117A
Level Introductory
Faculty Sara Salimbeni
Office Hours: by appointment (M, Tu, W, F)
Tutor to be announced

Textbook

Physics for Scientists and Engineers a Strategic Approach, vol I (Chapters 12-14-15)- II-III by Randall D. Knight. We will start by using Vol I chapter 14, and after we will move to Vol 3. We will use Vol 2 during the second part of the semester.

Other Useful Books

Student Accessibility

This course will honor all reasonable accommodations for students with documented disabilities. If you have a disability that requires specific accommodation, please contact Catherine O’Callaghan, Assistant Dean of Academic Advising & Support (cocallag@marlboro.edu). Catherine will convene the ADA committee to review documentation and determine what accommodations are warranted. Catherine will then provide a letter to faculty outlining reasonable accommodations. It is your responsibility to engage in this process; i.e., disclose your disability, provide documentation, request accommodations, and deliver the accommodations letter to your faculty.

Course Policies & Grading

Attendance and Participation
Attending the lessons and actively participating in class are essential to successfully pass this course. I understand that emergencies happen in life (illness, family emergencies, religious observance, homework overload etc.), for this reason you are allowed to miss 3 classes without the need of reporting to me. However, your final grade will drop by 2.5 points for each absence beyond the first three. You will not receive any credit for this course if you missed more than a total of 10 classes. Arriving late in class is a disruptive behavior and affects yours and other students' learning experience. Please, come on time to class. Three late arrivals will be considered an absence.

Readings, Participation and Pre-class assignments
I hope you will participate and collaborate with other students during class discussions, group work and experiments, this is the best way of learning the material in this course. You are encouraged to come to class prepared to discuss the material and ask questions. Reading the material is critical for having a productive class time, failing to prepare will affect the learning of you and your classmates. To help you with the reading I will assign pre-class questions that will be discussed during class time. Readings, quality of participation and pre-class assignments are part of your grade (15% of your final grade).
Homework
Homework will be assigned weekly (35% of your final grade). Homework is an essential tool to learn and to receive feedback. For this reason it is important that you hand in your assignments on time. Students are encouraged to work together on the homework assignments. However, your final write-up of the assignment must represent your own understanding; copying another person's work is plagiarism and will result in no credit for that assignment.
You are allowed to review your assignments after my correction for a higher grade. Reviewing an assignment means to redo an exercise you had trouble with from scratch, it does not mean copying the solutions given during the class discussion or the feedback you received on your assignment. This review will help us both to verify your understanding and if further help is needed.

Take-Home tests and Final
In addition to the weekly assignments, there will be two take-home tests (30% of your grade) and a in class final (20% of your final grade). You are not allowed to collaborate while you are working on the take-home tests or on the final (unless I assign group work).
Late Police for Assignments, Take-Home tests and Final
You have one bonus late assignment to use during the semester in case of emergency, use it wisely. Special arrangements for further late work can be obtained under very special circumstances agreed through prior discussion with me. No late work will be accepted for the Take-Home tests and Final assignments.

If you are late in more than one assignment and we did not agree on any special arrangement this is how I will value your late work:

Plagiarism
Academic Honesty is expected of all scientists, and also of all students. Cheating on homework or the final exam will result in no credit.
If you are not sure on how to use a source, please check this link on the library webpage.

Grading

Grade Letters
The green represents the range of numerical grades that corresponds to the letter grade

Tentative Schedule

Day Topics ------ ----- Jan 20 Rotation of a Rigid Body Jan 23 Rotation of a Rigid Body Jan 25 Newton’s Theory of Gravity Jan 27 Newton’s Theory of Gravity Jan 30 Oscillations Feb 1 Oscillations Feb 3 Oscillations Feb 6 Review Feb 8 Pendulum Experiment Feb 10 Fluids Feb 13 Fluids Feb 15 Fluids + Archimede's Principle Experiment Feb 17 Review Feb 20 A Macroscopic Description of Matter - Sara goes to a conference Feb 22 A Macroscopic Description of Matter Feb 24 Work, Heat, and the first Law of Thermodynamic Feb 27 Work, Heat, and the first Law of Thermodynamic Mar 1 Calorimetry Experiment - Test on Newton’s Theory of Gravity, Oscillations, Fluids and part of Thermodynamics due Mar 3 The Micro-Macro connection Mar 6 The Micro-Macro connection Mar 8 The Micro-Macro connection Mar 10 Heat Engines and Refrigerators Mar 27 Heat Engines and Refrigerators Mar 29 Heat Engines and Refrigerators Mar 31 Heat Engines and Refrigerators Apr 3 Review Apr 5 Traveling Waves Apr 7 Traveling Waves Apr 10 Superposition Apr 12 Superposition Apr 14 Wave Optics Apr 17 Wave Optics Apr 19 Wave Optics Apr 21 Ray Optics Apr 24 Ray Optics Apr 26 Ray Optics Apr 28 Optical Instruments - Second test due May 1 Optical Instruments May 3 Review

After the end of classes, there will be an in class final on everything we covered during the semester.
http://cs.marlboro.edu/ courses/ spring2017/physics2/ syllabus
last modified Tuesday April 4 2017 5:01 pm EDT