Course Syllabus

Syllabus | PHYS 141 Parallel Pedagogy

For these two Cross-Listed Courses: PHYS 141-08 and PHYS 141-10, General Physics I

Pete Schwartz, Cal Poly Physics:, Pete's Webpage: pschwart@calpoly.edu, x6-1220, 180-608
Office Hours: (in our classroom) MTR at 1:00  PM and
in my office: Wednesdays at 9:10 AM and 11:10 AM.  And Fridays at noon (same time as class)

 

Diversity, Inclusivity, Sustainability

Cal Poly's mission statement includes "...Cal Poly values free inquiry, cultural and intellectual diversity, mutual respect, civic engagement, and social and environmental responsibility." Issues of diversity, inclusivity, and environmental responsibility have recently taken on great importance, globally as well as at Cal Poly. As an instructor, I wish to nurture awareness of how our actions affect others, near and far. I strive to maintain a classroom environment in which meaningful dialogue and debate is encouraged. We will welcome individuals of all ages, backgrounds, beliefs, ethnicities, sexual orientations, gender identities, national origins, religious affiliations, abilities—and any other visible and non-visible differences. In any decision-making process, we will remind ourselves that our knowledge is not complete and that we can benefit from other perspectives that contrast our own. I believe that good problem solving is inclusive, requiring application of empathy, critical thinking, and ethics to all aspects of the problem-solving process. Lastly, I think it’s our responsibility to make the world a happier place – all of us, all the time.

 

Missing Class

If you find yourself experiencing COVID-like symptoms, or feel you are sick, please stay home from class.

If you can't be here for class, please have others in your working group FaceTime you during class.  In taking responsibility for learning, it's most effective (and fun) to build and leverage friendships in the class.

 

Textbook/Workbook

I wrote a short guide for this class, Mechanics in Parallel. It is linked to the main class website.  We will also provide you with a printed version, chapter by chapter.  Carry it with you, write all over it!

Grading

Your grade consists of your performance on assessments as long as you prepare for class watching videos, reading (and reflecting on Canvas discussion), and do both your projects. I grade on your understanding of the material as determined by exams. The reason I do this is so that you will focus on increasing your understanding of the material rather than on getting homework problems done for the points. Of course, students who do well on homework (with the intention of understanding concepts) score better on the exams.

Your final grade will be determined through two separate categories (assessment and participation):

Assessments: 30% for the final exam, 70% for weekly assessments. 
Grade Replacement: The final exam will cover the material from the final week of class as well as the concepts from all the weekly assessments.  If you do better on a final exam question than the corresponding assessment, the grade on the final exam question will replace the lower assessment grade.  Hence, the final exam also acts as a make up assessment for missed/botched assessments.  Please do not ask me to take an assessment outside of the regular class time because the final exam does that for us.

Participation: You are required to watch videos before class, hand in homework on time, and do both your group projects, and participate in the surveys and discussion boards.   If you do 90% of your participation then your grade will be determined by the assessments (above).  If you do less than 90% of the participation, your grade will be lowered.

Weekly Assessments: We will have a short (~ 20 minutes) assessment on each Wednesday. The grades from the first two weeks will not count. 
No Calculators: Calculators offer you no advantage and I discourage you from bringing calculators. We emphasize setting up the equations with symbols. Getting the correct numerical answer is less important. Any answer good to +/- 20% will be fine. The problem with calculators is that they distract your attention away from the concepts, which are what you are graded on.  You can't use calculators on assessments, please don't bring calculators to class.

Assessments and Exams: You are graded on your ability to communicate to me that you understand physics. Thus you will receive no credit if I can't read or follow your logic, or if you provide no logic, but simply calculate the answer with a formula. You will earn an A, B, C, D, F, based on ability to communicate physics accordingly:

D (1 out of 4): Make a drawing and correctly identify an appropriate physics concept and provide reasons supporting this concept.  The drawing/diagram is the most important part of your solution.  It is expected that the diagram will take about half the space provided  You will certainly lose a full point if your drawing is smaller than 1/4 of the paper.
C (2/4): Besides that required for a D, provide a relevant, labeled drawing illustrating the physics being discussed.
B (3/4): Besides the statement and drawing required for a C, consistently set up a method to solve the problem.
A (4/4): Besides the statement, drawing, and method required for a B, solve the problem, correctly use units and verify whether answer makes sense.
F (0/4): If you do not achieve the threshold for D.
Please notice I use the same grading scheme as the university does to calculate your grade point average, where a 2 out of 4 is a C, not a failing grade.
 
Notebook: We think with our hands - drawing, taking notes. I encourage you to keep a class notebook. Please come prepared to think with your hands, make a labeled drawing and write down thoughts.

Class Prep, VIDEOS: It is imperative that we come to class prepared. You are required to check videos and other preparation from the daily class schedule on our class website.  Please watch the videos on time before every class until the end of the video and answer all the questions. You are graded for answering video questions not on getting them right - so relax, enjoy, learn... take notes. If you watch 90% of the videos on time, then you will receive full credit toward your final grade. You will receive half credit for late videos. Your final grade will be lowered by twice the % of the videos that you watch less than 90%. So if you watch 75% of the videos, your grade will be docked (90% - 75%)*2 = 0.3, or about the difference between an "A" and an "A-". If you watch none of the videos, it will lower an "A" to about a "C".

Class Prep, READING: Again, it is imperative that we come to class prepared. You are required to do the reading and provide a reflection/question/realization on the discussion board, as well as respond to someone else's post.  These two posts will count as a single video.  Half credit if it is posted after class starts.  Postings must contain some original thought and reflect that you've done the reading. 

Other: We will do an Empathy Reflection in Week 6. Your participation will count as three videos.  We also have online surveys. Participation counts as a video.

Weekly Homework: Due Tuesday by class time. Each HW counts as two videos. Problem sets model assessment and final exam questions.  Problem sets need to be done so that we can learn together in class.  However, they are not graded for correctness.  Please give them some time and attention.  It would be a very good idea to completely understand homework assignments, class problems and previous assessments before each assessment.

Idea Sheets: You are welcome to build your own idea sheet with no more than 50 ideas (word string or formula). Drawings are great, but may count as many ideas. I provide you with no ideas during an exam. I recommend that you start an idea sheet immediately (keep it in the back of your notebook) and add material as we cover it. I suggest you start with a reminder of how you approach a problem, and the 4 lenses. If you gather more than 50 ideas, you will need to start dropping off ideas that you already know. If during a test, I judge your idea sheet to have too much information, I'll ask you to tear it in half.

2 Video Projects: In groups of 2-3 students, you will do two projects:

- A video analysis of motion is due during week 3. You will make a video of (your) human power production and analyze the video.  You will hand in an analysis, not a video.

- In week 7, we do a research project in groups of 2-3 students on something related to mechanics (for instance it can not be about quantum physics, electricity, light, relativity, etc.) that interests you. It may involve reading and research, or building and calculating, but ideally will involve doing an experiment. You will document it with a less than 5 minute video that you will post on YouTube for the rest of the class to see.

Everyone is expected to support their group's effort toward a successful project in order to share the project's grade. So, please find a group, have fun, and fully participate for both projects.

 

Commitment/Expectation

My Commitment to You: I will do my best to provide you with a planned structure, resources, and activities to learn. I will evaluate you only on criteria that I find foundational (to communicate concepts and how they affect our lives) allowing you the freedom to learn in a manner that suits you best. I will do my best to understand your professed needs and help you the best way I know. My Expectations of You: I expect that you will make decisions consistent with your best interest and your values. I also expect that we will all work toward the well being of our community. I expect that you will respect my time and make the best use of our time together by coming to class prepared. My intention is not to "teach" you, but to foster a good learning environment; to help you learn from the resources around you: textbooks, online media, but mostly from each other. I expect you to record your questions while you study. I expect to start class with questions related to the reading and videos. If you have a question, please ask it after you have addressed the related resource (video or reading) and consulted others in your group. Competition: Your performance will be graded not against each other, but rated against the A-F criteria established above. Therefore if you help others in your class, it is good for you too. My experience has shown that a positive collaborative attitude is likely to raise everyone’s grade.

On Pete and Cheating

I feel that the topic of cheating creates a wall between students and "learning facilitator" (me) - a wall that I feel impedes learning and harmony; a wall that I make great effort to disassemble. I think part of the tension involved in "academic honesty" is the moral emphasis. I mean to make no moral judgement - people have different ways of responding to an authoritarian learning system imposed upon them. What we call "cheating" might be an act of desperation, or rebellion against the hierarchy of education/success/wealth/status that a student may feel they don't buy into. And the tension is cultural. I spent my senior year in Austria, where we spent the entire day in a single classroom with the same group of students. We became close friends and cheating was standard... "team work". It was "us" against "them".

So, I recognize the mere discussion of cheating damaging and counter productive. I know some instructors that disregard cheating as a way to prioritize relationship within the class.

However, it is also important for me to be transparent about what you might expect based on what I have seen myself do. On two occasions, I saw a student look on another's final exam. I looked at the exams and concluded that this student had taken a significant amount of information from the other student. Consistent with university policy, I assigned an "F" and reported the event to the university. I requested that the student be spoken with, but that no disciplinary action be taken. The next quarter, I looked the student up... they were no longer enrolled.

Were these students expelled? Would I bet my life that they cheated? This haunts me a little.

While I don't wish to talk about cheating, I think that the very least I should do is report to you what I have seen myself do. However, if you have concerns about academic integrity, I will gladly discuss it and help where I can. I have spoken with a students in the past who were cheating and wanted to stop.  It worked out well.  My interest is to work with you, not against you.

Please go to this website if you want more information on my thoughts about academic honesty.

 

24-hour policies

1) I will not change any class preparation requirements less than 24 hours before class.  In general, this shouldn't matter because I expect to have all requirements posted at least a week before the due date.  However, it is possible I'll change something a day or two before class.  Thus, if you work more than a day ahead of class, please check back 24 hours before class to make sure nothing has changed.

2) Expect to get your assessments back on Thursday, the day after you take them. 

3) After an assessment, I think it's very important for students to talk with each other, share information, and learn what they can before talking with me about it.  Thus, I will not discuss your test results until 24 hours after I hand them back.

 

Student Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course you will be able to...

  1. Explain the underlying concepts of the four "lenses" for analyzing mechanical systems: dynamics, energy, momentum, and kinematics
  2. Describe physical phenomena by choosing the appropriate lens and supporting that choice with words, pictures, and equations
  3. Design and execute simple experiments to verify theoretical models of physical phenomena
  4. Practice the skills, tools, and habits of mind that scientists and engineers use when confronting complex problems
  5. Work with others to develop evidence-based arguments that support explanations of physical phenomena
  6. Recognize where our understanding of physical law is incomplete and show how it may be improved by considering contrary perspectives
  7. Demonstrate awareness of how our actions affect others nearby, far away, and in the future.
  8. Articulate the power of empathy in helping us see our common humanity and strive for truth and justice in the world.