Post on 04-Jun-2020
transcript
Physics 218
Alexei Safonov
Lecture 1:
Introduction
Today Lecture
• Structure of the class
• Organizational issues– Instructors, textbooks, meeting times
• Course requirements and grading
• Practical details– Exams
– Homework and quizzes
– Reading assignments
– Recitations
Physics 218: Basics
• Content:
– Introduction to Classical Mechanics
– Concepts, Problem Solving, and Labs
– Requires high school level calculus
• Structure:
– Lecture (2 per week) – MPHY205 (here)
– Recitation (1 per week)- MPHY335
– Lab (1 per week) – MPHY 234 or 210
Instructors
• Lectures (MPHY 205, MW 5:45pm):
– Alexei Safonov (me)
– Email: safonov@tamu.edu• Put PHYS-218 first in the Subject line!!!
– MIST M319, 979-845-1479• The “tower” portion of the Physics Building
– Office hours: T 3:30-5:00 PM• Tentatively, likely to change
• Recitation and labs:
– TA’s will provide contact info at your first meeting
– First meeting already this week
Online Info
• Main link
– Not yet ready, give it a day or two!
– http://people.physics.tamu.edu/safonov/218/
– Presumably has links to everything else
Finding it
• Google me, then click on “Teaching” tab
• Main course page:
http://physics218.physics.tamu.edu/
Syllabus
• In eCampus, also will appear in howdy
Pre-Requisites
• MATH 151
– It is a GOOD idea to take it before this class
– If you do well in MATH 151, you will survive here too, but you are in somewhat disadvantaged position as many of your classmates took calculus in high school
• Gauge yourself:
– A lot of math in the first week (quizzes, reviews, checkpoints) – a great opportunity to assess your situation
• If you can relatively easily get 80+% right, you ok
• If not, consider coming back next semester
PHYS-218 This Year
• An “inverted” course:
– Heavily interactive with the material reviewed under
different angles
• Pre-lectures, lectures following up on your pre-lecture
performance, interactive recitations with content-reach
problems
– Research shows substantially increased learning
outcomes compared to standard courses
• Third time it is offered at TAMU
• A common course with common practices:
– Grade determined by your performance compared to
everyone else in PHYS-218 (almost 2,000 people)
– Unified grading policy across the whole course
How It’s Meant to Work• You: go over pre-lectures, do quizzes as part of re-lectures
and read material of the chapter BEFORE the lecture
– You should have pretty good grasp of the material when you come
here at conceptual level and have already done at least some
problems
• Me: in lecture I focus on fixing typical misunderstandings
and misconceptions and help you learn how to think “right”
– Still heavy focus (50-60%) on conceptual understanding, but about
40% practical examples (incl. problems) demonstrating concepts
• You: Do homework problems until you can do almost any
problem in the book
– Most of you will struggle in the beginning, but if you keep pushing
you will start “getting it” and there is no other way really
• Recitations: focus on solving challenging problems, help
with remaining challenges
Materials
• Get them right now or the bookstore may
run out of them:
– Buy and Register your clicker ASAP!
– Register for Modified Mastering Physics ASAP!
• MP packet comes with new textbooks or loose-leaf
book options, also available separately in the
bookstore, also can pay online (via eCampus)
– Make sure it says “Modified”!
– Register for SmartPhysics and WebAssign
• You will need both tomorrow!!!
• Note you can use their free trial offers (see syllabus)
– Textbook (see syllabus)
Grading
• Grading will be based on the following scales:
• I will curve all scores AFTER the final, but will give you feedback along the way– If your final score is higher than the lowest of the
midterms, that midterm be replaced by an average score on that midterm and the final
SmartPhysics
• Pre-lectures that you work on before the
lecture (for credit and required)
– Pass check-points and send feedback
Modified Mastering Physics
• Online homework management system
– Weekly assignments (for credit), somewhat elaborate grading
system with (harsh!) penalties for late submission
– Only access it via eCampus, do not use direct links for
registration! – you do not need a “course ID”
Mastering Registration Steps
Lectures
• A follow up on the pre-lectures
– Focus on specific problems, typical mistakes and feedback from
your work on pre-lectures
– I assume you already know all basics and more and focus on
challenges, misconceptions etc.
• Clicker quizzes
– These are for credit, designed to check on your progress and
facilitate your learning
• Many “simpler” questions, but some will be pretty challenging
• A lot of focus on conceptual understanding plus
problems to illustrate the application of concepts
– Focus on “illustrative” problems in lecture, few hard problems
• Lectures give you the tools and teach you how to connect things,
the rest is you applying this knowledge as you train yourself in
solving problems using homework
Recitations
• Common implementation for all sections of this course
• You have to do most of the work on your HW before the recitation
• At recitations, you will be working in groups of 3-4 learning to work out challenging problems– Multiple concepts in a single problem
– Recitation instructor will facilitate your work, but will not be solving the problem for you
– Each student will be turning in their own report, which will be graded
• Additional short quizzes very possible
Labs
• Lab policies are uniform and set by the Department – WebAssign is the online system used by the lab portion of the course
• Register today: http://webassign.net/tamu/login.html– It will take you to TAMU SSO page to identify you, then will automatically place you in
the right class
What to Expect: PHYS-218
• Be prepared that this is one of very hard and time consuming classes
– Need typically 12 hours of hard work a week besides classes
• Inter-relation and intensity of the material makes it harder:
– You miss one thing, but it will come and bite you several times as the same concepts repeat throughout the course
• If you can’t afford that much time, take this class next semester
Independent Perspective
• From koofers.com
How To Do Well in PHYS-218
• Strategy:– Maximize scores in all “service” categories
• Labs, recitations, HW, clicker quizzes
– Do your best on the exams
• Exams are the “make it or break it” part of the course
• Will “break it” if you don’t do well in “service” categories
• Final grade math’s “rules of thumb”:– Low scores on HW will likely cost you a whole letter grade
• Most people have 90% and more on homework
– Low scores on labs or recitations will likely cost you a whole letter grade
• Most people will have 80-90% for both
– 60% of those who frequently do not participate in clicker quizzes and pre-lecture quizzes will lose a whole letter grade
• If you are in very high C range otherwise, you may still get a C; if you are in the lower 60% of the C range, you will almost definitely get a D
How To Do Well in PHYS-218
• You won’t do well on exams unless you train yourself in solving HW problems– Do problems yourself: if someone explains you the
solution and you “understood” it, that’s not good enough
– If you are stuck, ask for help with a similar problem; if you had to get help with a HW problem, solve 5 more similar ones from the book yourself
– Really helps to go beyond HW assignments and do more problems from the book
– You will struggle withy many of the problems first, but that’s the only way to get through. If you keep pushing, you will notice that there will be a break though point where things will start coming to you easier
Tutoring
• Not a bad idea, but be careful:
– You do not want a tutor who is solving
problems for you and trains you to memorize
“standard exam problems”
– You want someone who will:
• spend time finding your weak spots
• help you understand concepts
• teach you how to solve problems
• check that you figured this material by letting you
solve several problems on the same subject while
watching your steps and logic
Communications
• I am pretty busy generally. The way I keep up with all I do is
by trying to be efficient and organized
• Help me maximize my efficiency in this class
– Please read my emails carefully, usually most questions are
answered there
– If I missed something, email me and I will add clarifications and
send a new email to everyone
– Be prompt for class
• I will absolutely ask why you are late and you better have a good
excuse
– Be prepared when you come to my office hours
– Make sure “PHYS-218” is in the subject line, give me a day or two to
respond to non-urgent emails
• I usually set aside several time slots a week when I respond to the
emails from students
• If there is no “PHYS-218”, most likely it will get lost!
Our Interaction
• My role is to help you succeed in this competition against
other 1,800 students and prepare you for hard engineering
classes
• I will help you get a good grasp of concepts and will give
you the initial “push” into problem solving
• I will help you in avoiding common traps
– Falling behind is one major trap
• I will provide you with a straight and accurate feedback on
where you stand
– Don’t mix “straight” with “mean”
• I guarantee that you will get the grade you earned
• None of this will work without a lot of hard work on your part
– Physics is a subject you learn by training yourself doing problems
From Fall-2013 student’s
evaluations
Dr. Safonov can sometimes be mean
but it’s not his fault:
he is just not a very nice person
Clicker
• Model called “i>clicker 2”– The original i>clicker will be okay as
well, but your other classes may require i>clicker2
• Get them now before the bookstore ran out of them!– There seem to be some options to get
a discount when you purchase your text book (see my web-page)
• Today use as a practice only, next time we will use it for real
Registering Your clicker• 1.Go to http://www.iclicker.com/support/registeryourclicker/
• 2.Enter your first and last names as they appear on your TAMU ID.
• 3.For "Student ID" enter your TAMU UIN.
• 4. For "Remote ID" enter the code that appears on the back of your
i>clicker2 (also on the LCD screen upon powering on your i>clicker2)
Clickers Setup
• Turn on your clicker (press the power
button)
• Set the frequency:
– Press and hold the power button
– Two letters will be flashing
– If it’s not “BD”, press “B” and then “D”
• If everything works, you should see
“Welcome” and “Ready”
Clicker Question 1• Do you have your i>clicker with you today?
A) Yes
B) No
C) Maybe
D) I like pudding
We use the “BD” frequency in this class
Clicker Question 2• Which of the following best describes your
high-school physics class?
A) Great
B) Pretty good
C) So-so
D) Not so good
E) Awful
We use the “BD” frequency in this class
Clicker Question 3• Who do you think will be elected in 2016
as the next US President?
We use the “BD” frequency in this class
A) R. Bowen Loftin
B) Hillary Clinton
C) Karl Marx
D) Abraham Lincoln
E) Britney Spears
Prepare for Wednesday
• Read material of Chapter 1 ASAP
• Do pre-lectures and check-points if you
haven’t done so already
– Provide feedback via SmartPhysics
• Lecture quizzes
– You will need your clicker up and running!
• Don’t forget the recitation and lab
meetings this week
– For many of you it is tomorrow and your
attendance is mandatory (will be checked)
TIME PERMITTING
Converting Units• Problem: express length of a football field in feet:
– 1 football field = 100 yards
– 1 yard = 3 feet
• Solution:– 1 football field = 1 football field
– 1 football field = 1 football field x (1) x (1)• Can always multiply by a unity; nothing should change
– 1 football field = 1 football field x (100 yards/1 football field) = 100 yards • Got to yards above, which is already an improvement
– 1 football filed = 100 yards x (3 feet/yard) = 300 feet• Got rid of yards and expressed in feet!
– Both are units of length!
• Another problem:– Express speed v= 50 km/hour in m/sec
Problem Solving Overview
• There are good general problem solving TRICKS
– Units checking
– Special case checking
– Etc.
• There are good METHODS of problem solving that prepare you for the exams
We’ll use both to solve
problems in lecture
First Things First!
What’s the first thing you should do
when you’re given a a problem?
• Draw a diagram!!!
– Usually good for some partial credit
• List givens and wants as variables
– Also a good bet for partial credit
Then use reasonable equations and
solve with variables
Trick #1
Trick #2: Units• The speed of your car isn’t measured in
seconds, its measured in meters/second (or miles/hour etc.)
• Paying attention to the units will help you catch LOTS of mistakes on exams, quizzes and homework!!
– If we ask what the mass of your car is, make sure your answer is in kg (or lbs etc.)
Trick #2: Every time you finish a problem
ALWAYS check the units of your answer!!
Tricks #3 and #4
Check Reasonableness:
• Can you find another way to do the
same problem that gives the same
answer?
• Trivial choices of values for variables
give expected numerical answers?
Example: Zero, or infinity
Trick #3
Trick #4
Moving toward an Example
Problem• Next we’ll do an example problem like one
of the homework problems in the text book
• Solve this problem using the right method
– Draw a diagram
– Convert the numbers to variables
– Solve to get a formula
– Plug in the numbers at the end
– Check
Example ProblemYou want to measure the height of a building.
You stand 2m away from a 3m pole and see that it’s “in line” with the top of the building. You measure 16 m from the pole to the building.
What is the height of the building?
16 m
• Will take you to SSO, log in normally,
• WebAssign will put you in the right class