Course Syllabus for PY 211, College Physics I Sections 001, 002 and 003 Spring Semester 2015



Similar documents
SYLLABUS FORM WESTCHESTER COMMUNITY COLLEGE Valhalla, NY lo595. l. Course #: PHYSC NAME OF ORIGINATOR /REVISOR: Dr.

Salem Community College Course Syllabus. Course Title: Physics I. Course Code: PHY 101. Lecture Hours: 2 Laboratory Hours: 4 Credits: 4

The University of Akron Department of Mathematics. 3450: COLLEGE ALGEBRA 4 credits Spring 2015

KERN COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT CERRO COSO COLLEGE PHYS C111 COURSE OUTLINE OF RECORD

COURSE OUTLINE BIOLOGY 366 BEHAVIOR OF ANIMALS NORTHERN ARIZONA UNIVERSITY FALL 2012

PHY 201 College Physics I Science Department

Alabama Department of Postsecondary Education. Representing The Alabama Community College System

MAT150 College Algebra Syllabus Spring 2015

PHYSICS 1101W.100: Introductory College Physics I. Preliminary Syllabus, Spring Syllabus revisions will be posted on the 1101 syllabus web site

PEC 479 Sport Management Course Syllabus

Economics : Principles of Microeconomics

MATHEMATICAL TOOLS FOR ECONOMICS ECON SPRING 2012

A. COURSE DESCRIPTION

PHY 221 University Physics I Science Department

ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY (PSYCH 238) Psychology Building, Rm.31 Spring, 2010: Section K. Tues, Thurs 1:45-2:45pm and by appointment (schedule via )

AGEC 448 AGEC 601 AGRICULTURAL COMMODITY FUTURES COMMODITY FUTURES & OPTIONS MARKETS SYLLABUS SPRING 2014 SCHEDULE

BBA SMALL BUSINESS MANAGEMENT Spring 2016

CHEM PRINCIPLES OF CHEMISTRY Lecture

MATH 2103 Business Calculus Oklahoma State University HONORS Spring 2015 Instructor: Dr. Melissa Mills 517 Math Sciences

Drop Policy: A course drop grade will be assigned in accord with UTA policy (see current catalog).

Sequences, series, and multivariable calculus M408D

Financial Calculator (any version is fine but access to a support manual is critical)

ACCT W Advanced Managerial Accounting Spring Office Hours: Mon - 1 PM to 6 PM (BA 122 or UCD, every other week, appointment recommended)

COM 530 Interpersonal Communication in Science and Technology Organizations

Online Courses for High School Students

COMPETENCY GOAL 1: The learner will develop abilities necessary to do and understand scientific inquiry.

INFO Management Information Systems Spring 2015

Class Day & Time: Tuesday & Thursday, 10:25 am 1:25 pm Office Location: INST 2014 Classroom: INST 2014

ENGR 102: Engineering Problem Solving II

(575) and by prior appointment nmsu. edu

**SYLLABUS IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE**

SOUTHWEST COLLEGE Department of Mathematics COURSE SYLLABUS

How To Pass Physics 161

THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN Department of Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics. EM 311M - DYNAMICS Spring 2012 SYLLABUS

Iowa State University

PSYCHOLOGY Section M01 Mixed Mode Spring Semester Fundamentals of Psychology I MW 11:30 - A130. Course Description

Los Angeles Pierce College. SYLLABUS Math 227: Elementary Statistics. Fall 2011 T Th 4:45 6:50 pm Section #3307 Room: MATH 1400

PHY 107 Online GENERAL PHYSICS I Winter 2016

SYLLABUS MAC 1105 COLLEGE ALGEBRA Spring 2011 Tuesday & Thursday 12:30 p.m. 1:45 p.m.

University of South Florida Sarasota-Manatee Course Syllabus Forensic Accounting and Fraud Examination ACG 4931 Spring 2015

Psychology 318, Thinking and Decision Making Course Syllabus, Spring 2015 TR 8-9:20 in Lago W262

MAC2233, Business Calculus Reference # , RM 2216 TR 9:50AM 11:05AM

Introduction to Psychology Psych 100 Online Syllabus Fall 2014

Code: MATH 274 Title: ELEMENTARY DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS

MAC 1105 FLEX SYLLABUS

Math 3E - Linear Algebra (3 units)

MGT 3361 Project Management

School of Kinesiology Faculty of Health Sciences Western University. KIN 2032b Research Design in Human Movement Science January to April 2016

Gustavus Adolphus College Department of Economics and Management E/M : MARKETING M/T/W/F 11:30AM 12:20AM, BH 301, SPRING 2016

STA 4442 INTRODUCTION TO PROBABILITY FALL 2012

Rollins College Entrepreneurial and Corporate Finance BUS 320- H1X

INFO 3130 Management Information Systems Spring 2016

CISM Fundamentals of Computer Applications

College of Southern Maryland Fundamentals of Accounting Practice(ACC 1015) Course Syllabus Spring 2015

Course Outline. 1. COURSE INFORMATION Session Offered Winter 2012 Course Name Mathematics V

Select One: New Delete Course Modification

How To Pass A Chemistry Course

College Algebra MATH 1111/11

SLHS 1301W The Physics and Biology of the Spoken Language. Spring Semester 2010

College Algebra Online Course Syllabus

College of Southern Maryland PHY-1010L College Physics Lab I (1 credit) Course Information Web

Class: BBA 440 Human Resource Management; 3 credit hours. Dates: Jan 12 th May 4 th Class #:

COURSE: Exercise and Stress Management (PE 183) CRN E-102 Delayed opening time (N/A for Virtual Campus students)

MAT 1500: College Algebra for the Social and Management Sciences General Syllabus

Introduction to Physics I (PHYS ) Fall Semester 2012

Prerequisite Math 115 with a grade of C or better, or appropriate skill level demonstrated through the Math assessment process, or by permit.

CHEM 1305: SURVEY OF GENERAL CHEMISTRY COURSE INFORMATION

Physics 2110B Oscillations and Waves Course Information: Winter/Spring 2016

IVY TECH COMMUNITY COLLEGE REGION 03 SYLLABUS MATH 136: COLLEGE ALGEBRA SUMMER Instructor: Jack Caster Telephone: ext.

MATH 2412 PRECALCULUS SPRING 2015 Synonym 26044, Section 011 MW 12:00-1:45, EVC 8106

Psychology 201: Mind and Brain Winter 2014 (CRN # 26347), Mon/Wed 4:00-5:50, 150 Columbia

FLUID MECHANICS IM0235 DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS - CB _1

JMS, MAT150 THIS SYLLABUS, COURSE SCHEDULE, ASSIGNMENTS, AND EXAM DATES Summer 2014 ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AS CIRCUMSTANCES DICTATE.

ANT 104 C Lost Tribes and Buried Cities

HARRISBURG AREA COMMUNITY COLLEGE VIRTUAL CAMPUS. COURSE: Math 119 Online ---- Pre-calculus Summer 2015 CRN: 4146

Course Syllabus: Math 1314 College Algebra Spring 2016 T/R

Page 1 of 5

STA2023 Introduction to Statistics Spring Class Website:

SOUTHWEST COLLEGE Department of Mathematics

ECON-2105, Principles of Macroeconomics, 1rst Half Term, Spring/2016

TA contact information, office hours & locations will be posted in the Course Contacts area of Blackboard by end of first week.

PS 320 Classical Mechanics Embry-Riddle University Spring 2010

Georgia State University Chemistry 1212K Course Syllabus, Fall 2014

Finance 3503 Corporate Finance II Spring 2012

Systems and Internet Marketing Syllabus Spring 2011 Department of Management, Marketing and International Business

MATH 245 COLLEGE ALGEBRA Section :55 1:30

MDA 126-9A INTRODUCTION TO ELECTRONIC HEALTH RECORDS 2 cr. (1-2) (WF Ext. Ctr. Room #114)

January 10, Course MIS Enterprise Resource Planning Professor Dr. Lou Thompson Term Spring 2011 Meetings Thursday, 4-6:45 PM, SOM 1.

ENG/COM 395: Big Data and the Rhetoric of Information

MKTG 2150 GLOBAL MARKETING WINTER 2015 (Tuesday/Thursday course) - - -F I R S T D A Y H A N D O U T- - -

PCB 3043: Ecology Spring 2012, MMC

Physics 21-Bio: University Physics I with Biological Applications Syllabus for Spring 2012

CHEM121: General Chemistry II. Spring 2012

Course Syllabus: Math W College Algebra Spring 2015 ONLINE

Transcription:

Course Syllabus for PY 211, College Physics I Sections 001, 002 and 003 Spring Semester 2015 Posted on the Moodle course site for PY 211 (https://wolfware.ncsu.edu/) Course Description PY 211 is a 4 credit hour course. It is the first semester of a two-semester introductory sequence in noncalculus physics, with laboratory. Major topics include mechanics, heat, wave motion, sound and fluids. Students will learn to apply fundamental physics principles to explain and predict the outcome of natural phenomena. Prerequisites MA 107 or 111 or 121 or 131 or 108 or 141 with a C- or better, or 480 on the SAT Subject Test in Mathematics Level 2 or the NCSU Math Skills Test, or 2 or better on an AP Calculus exam. Credit is not allowed for more than one of PY 201, PY 205 or PY 211. Lecture Time and Location 001: Mon/Wed/Fri 8:05-8:55 am in Riddick 451 002: Mon/Wed/Fri 9:10-10:00 am in Riddick 451 003: Mon/Wed/Fri 10:15-11:05 am in Riddick 451 Instructor Information Dr. xxxxxx Office: Riddick xxxx Office ph: 919-5xx-xxxx xxxxx@ncsu.edu Office hours: Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays 1:30 2:30 pm and by appointment Textbook This course uses a free on-line textbook: College Physics by Urone/Hinrichs, 1st Edition, published by Openstax College. The free electronic copy can be downloaded from: http://openstaxcollege.org/textbooks/college-physics. Printed copies may also be purchased from the Openstax College website or the NCSU bookstore. Expectation of students Attend class and participate actively. Read the textbook. Keep organized class notes. Complete homework assignments and take the opportunity to learn from those assignments. Continuously evaluate your own mastery of the material, and seek help immediately whenever necessary. Be courteous to the other students in the class, which means not playing on your laptop or electronic devices, not talking out of turn, arriving and leaving class on time. PY 211 Course Syllabus Spring 2015 Page 1

Tutorial Centers There are a few different tutoring options: The Physics Department provides a walk-in tutorial center staffed by physics TAs. It is open Monday through Friday and is located in Riddick 319A. The tutorial center hours are Mon through Thu 11:00 am to 5:00 pm. The Undergraduate Tutorial Center (UTC) also offers several free physics tutoring options, including tutoring by appointment, walk-in tutoring and Supplementary Instruction (SI). The SI schedule is TBD. For tutoring by appointment, students must attend an orientation, if they have not attended one in a previous semester, and submit an application. Orientation sessions begin Jan 12. See the UTC website for the complete orientation schedule and other details about any of these tutoring options: http://tutorial.ncsu.edu/. Clickers TurningPoint Response Cards (otherwise known as clickers ) will be used in this course. Clickers may be purchased from the NCSU Bookstore. New and old versions of the TurningPoint clickers may be used (RF, XR, and NXT). Clickers will be used to poll students to confirm understanding of material, for taking attendance and for taking quizzes (at the discretion of the instructor). Students must only use their own clicker and may not click in for other students. Alternatively, students may use their smartphones with the Responseware app. See Course Costs below for more information. Note: Clickers will be used to take attendance. It is the student s responsibility to make sure their clicker is in good working order (functioning, good batteries, etc), and that they bring their clicker to each class. Students that do not click in will be counted as absent from class. Course Costs Two WebAssign licenses are required, one for course homework and one for laboratory assignments (which includes an electronic lab manual). The WebAssign licenses can be purchased from WebAssign at https://www.webassign.net/ncsu/. Note, that there isn t a class key code. If you log in with your NCSU login and password, you should then see the lecture class and your lab section, and you can purchase the license for each. The license costs are: Laboratory license $48.95/semester Course license: $32.95/semester or $50.90/multi-term A clicker is required. New clickers may be purchased from the Bookstore for $50, and can be sold back for about half of that fee. Alternatively, students may use their smartphones with the Responseware app. This app can be purchased for $9 to $40 depending on the length of the license. Details may be found here: http://oit.ncsu.edu/clickers. Once you have purchased a license to use with Responseware, the device number can be found by logging into https://account.turningtechnologies.com/account/. A scientific calculator is required (any make and model). Laboratory Registration: You must register for the laboratory section of PY211 separately from the class section. PY 211 Course Syllabus Spring 2015 Page 2

If you are retaking PY211, you must retake the laboratory as well, even if you previously passed the laboratory component (at NCSU or another institution). The reason for this is that the laboratory supports the lecture class to help students learn physics principles and succeed in the course. If you have difficulty registering for a lab section, contact Mr. Keith Warren: http://www4.ncsu.edu/~ckwarren/. Per departmental policy, lab section changes are only permitted up through Friday of the first week of classes (if classes begin on a Wednesday, Friday of the same week is still the last day to change sections). If you need to change your lab section, use the "Edit" tab in MyPack Portal rather than the "Swap" tab. Complete instructions can be found here. If you do not follow this procedure, you may be inadvertently dropped from the lecture class. Attending Lab: Each lab section meets every other week. The even numbered lab sections (202, 204, etc.) will begin the week of Jan 12, and the odd numbered lab sections (201, 203, etc.) will begin the week of Jan 19. The complete schedule can be found on the physics lab website: http://www.physics.ncsu.edu/classes/pylabs.php. Each lab consists of: o A Prelab assignment - to be completed in WebAssign before attending each lab. o An In-lab experiment - with assignments on WebAssign. o A Post Lab assignment - also to be completed on WebAssign. Before attending each lab, including the first lab, students must complete the Prelab assignment. Students should also print any data sheets and bring them to each lab. The lab manual is available electronically on WebAssign. Click My ebooks to access the manual. Formal lab reports are not required in PY211 labs. Because each lab is performed over a two week period, there are occasions when a lab is performed before the concepts of the lab have been presented in the lecture. Lab TA's are aware of this and will discuss necessary concepts before the lab. In addition, the concepts of the lab are discussed in the introduction of the Lab Procedure. Grading: The final lab grade is worth 10% of the overall course grade. Students must obtain a minimum final lab grade of 50% to pass the course. Questions: In general, lab questions and issues should first be directed to your lab TA and then to the Lab Director, if necessary. Contact information for all lab TAs and the Lab Director can be found on the lab website: http://www.physics.ncsu.edu/classes/pylabs.php. Refer to the lab website for additional information about labs: http://www.physics.ncsu.edu/classes/pylabs.php. Homework and Using WebAssign Due Dates: Homework assignments will be given on WebAssign. As a general rule, assignments will be due on Mondays and Thursdays at midnight, though the due dates may be adjusted on occasion. You should anticipate that homework assignments will be due during the last week of classes ( dead week ). Submissions: Students will be allowed four submissions without penalty, except for true/false and multiple choice questions, which may be less. The number of allowed submissions for each question can be seen by clicking on the "points" link above the question. Extensions: Students will be allowed to extend the due date of any assignment by 48 hrs from the original due date, without penalty. This extension can be obtained automatically through WebAssign, after the PY 211 Course Syllabus Spring 2015 Page 3

original due date has passed. If an extension is needed after the automatic extension period has ended, students must use the Manual extension request link on the assignment. As a general rule, there will be a 25% penalty for any additional points received after the automatic extension period has ended, though each late extension requests will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis by the instructor. No manual extensions will extend beyond 11:59 pm on April 24 th (the last day of classes). Benefit: Putting quality time into homework assignments is a critical step in learning physics principles and problem solving techniques. For this reason, the extension rules above are very lenient. Students are strongly encouraged to complete all of the homework assignments with the goal of learning the underlying principles of each problem. In addition, one homework problem will typically be used on each test. Homework Grade: All assignments will count, i.e. none will be dropped. The final homework grade will be calculated by dividing the total number of points obtained by the total number of points available. Significant figures: One of the biggest problems that students have with WebAssign is that an answer is not accepted because it has been rounded off too much. The solution is to do all calculations and enter answers to at least 4-significant figures. When this is done, the vast majority of the time that an answer is marked wrong, it is because there is a calculation error, not because of rounding. Absences and Scheduled Makeup Work Students will only be excused from class or an exam for officially excused absences according to university policy http://policies.ncsu.edu/regulation/reg-02-20-03), such as a documented illness, a family emergency or a conflict with a required university-sponsored event. Conflicts with university-sponsored events should be discussed with the instructor in advance. If a mid-term exam is missed for one of these accepted reasons, either a make-up exam will be given or the results from an applicable portion of the final exam will be used, at the discretion of the instructor. Exams There will be 3 mid-term exams and a final exam. The mid-term exams will be given 7:30-9:00 PM on Wednesday evenings. Exam dates: Test 1 Wed Feb 04, 7:30-9:00 PM Test 2 Wed Mar 04, 7:30-9:00 PM Test 3 Wed Apr 15, 7:30-9:00 PM Final Exam Wed May 06, 6:00-9:00 PM All tests and the final exam will be given in the following locations: Section 001 - TBD Section 002 - TBD Section 003 - TBD Other information: Practice tests will be made available before each test. Students may bring their own equation sheet to each test. The information written down for each test should be limited to half of one side of an 8½ x 11" sheet of paper. With each test, students may bring an additional equation sheet, or in other words, for test 1, they get ½ a side of a sheet of paper; for test 2, they get 1 side of a sheet of paper; for test 3, they get 1½ sides of a sheet of paper, and for the final exam, they get both sides of a sheet of paper. Each exam will include a homework problem (or an aspect of a homework problem). Each exam (except the first one) will include one question from the preceding exam. The mid-term exams will typically consist of 20 multiple-choice problems, worth 5 points each. The final exam will typically consist of 30 to 40 multiple-choice problems, all equally weighted. PY 211 Course Syllabus Spring 2015 Page 4

What to bring to each exam: Your own equation sheet (per above specification) A calculator Spare calculator batteries A #2 pencil During an exam, students may not use (for example): A textbook or other notes except equation sheet. A cell phone for any purpose. Grade Computation and Policies Students are graded solely on how well they demonstrate knowledge and mastery of the material through test, homework, lab and final exam grades, as shown in the weighting scale below. Mid-term and final exam grades will not be curved. Final course grades will be evaluated at the end of the semester, but a curve is unusual, and students should not anticipate that final course grades will be curved. Attendance & In-class Quizzes... 3% 3 Mid-term Exams... 42% (14% each) Lab... 10% Homework... 15% Final Exam... 30% If the lowest mid-term exam grade is lower than the student s final exam grade, then that mid-term grade will be replaced with the average of that mid-term and the final exam grades. If the final exam grade is lower than any of the test grades, then no adjustments will be made. Final Grades are on the Plus/Minus system. Numeric grades will be rounded to the nearest whole number, and letter grades will be assigned as follows: 97 A+ 100 93 A < 97 90 A- < 93 87 B+ < 90 83 B < 87 80 B- < 83 77 C+ < 80 73 C < 77 70 C- < 73 67 D+ < 70 63 D < 67 60 D- < 63 0 F < 60 In accordance with university policy, a student who has elected to take the class with the S/U grading system will receive a grade of "S" if their final average is a "C-" or better on the letter grade system, and students with a final average lower than "C-" will receive a grade of "U". Information about and requirements for auditing a course can be found at http://policies.ncsu.edu/regulation/reg-02-20-04. Incomplete grades (IN) are typically only given when a student misses the final exam due to a documented illness, family emergency or conflict with a required university-sponsored event. Students encountering personal difficulties during the semester are urged to consult with their advisors and with the Student Counseling Center: http://healthcenter.ncsu.edu/counseling-center/. The burden of fulfilling PY 211 Course Syllabus Spring 2015 Page 5

an incomplete grade is the responsibility of the student. The university policy on incomplete grades is located at http://policies.ncsu.edu/regulation/reg-02-50-03. Academic Integrity Academic integrity is taken very seriously in this class. Students may neither give nor receive unauthorized assistance during a quiz or exam. While students may receive help with physics principles when working on homework and lab assignments, all problems must be completed alone unless otherwise instructed. Students are required to comply with the university policy on academic integrity found in the Code of Student Conduct found at http://policies.ncsu.edu/policy/pol-11-35-01. Also, see http://policies.ncsu.edu/policy/pol-11-35-01 for a detailed explanation of academic honesty. Your signature on any test or assignment indicates you have neither given nor received unauthorized aid on the test or assignment. Electronically-Hosted Course Components Students may be required to disclose personally identifiable information to other students in the course, via electronic tools like email or web-postings, where relevant to the course. Examples include online discussions of class topics, and posting of student coursework. All students are expected to respect the privacy of each other by not sharing or using such information outside the course. Accommodations for Disabilities Reasonable accommodations will be made for students with verifiable disabilities. In order to take advantage of available accommodations, student must register with the Disability Services Office (http://www.ncsu.edu/dso), 919-515-7653. For more information on NC State's policy on working with students with disabilities, please see the Academic Accommodations for Students with Disabilities Regulation at http://policies.ncsu.edu/regulation/reg-02-20-01. Non-Discrimination Policy NC State University provides equality of opportunity in education and employment for all students and employees. Accordingly, NC State affirms its commitment to maintain a work environment for all employees and an academic environment for all students that is free from all forms of discrimination. Discrimination based on race, color, religion, creed, sex, national origin, age, disability, veteran status, or sexual orientation is a violation of state and federal law and/or NC State University policy and will not be tolerated. Harassment of any person (either in the form of quid pro quo or creation of a hostile environment) based on race, color, religion, creed, sex, national origin, age, disability, veteran status, or sexual orientation also is a violation of state and federal law and/or NC State University policy and will not be tolerated. Retaliation against any person who complains about discrimination is also prohibited. NC State's policies and regulations covering discrimination, harassment, and retaliation may be accessed at http://policies.ncsu.edu/policy/pol-04-25-05 or http://www.ncsu.edu/equal_op/. Any person who feels that he or she has been the subject of prohibited discrimination, harassment, or retaliation should contact the Office for Equal Opportunity (OEO) at 919-515-3148. Student Evaluations Online class evaluations will be available for students to complete during the last week of class. Students will receive an email message directing them to a website where they can login using their Unity ID and complete the evaluation. All evaluations are confidential. Evaluation website: https://classeval.ncsu.edu More information about ClassEval: http://upa.ncsu.edu/eval/clev/students-info. PY 211 Course Syllabus Spring 2015 Page 6

Supporting Fellow Students in Distress As members of the NC State Wolfpack community, we each share a personal responsibility to express concern for one another and to ensure that this classroom and the campus as a whole remains a safe environment for learning. Occasionally, you may come across a fellow classmate whose personal behavior concerns or worries you. When this is the case, I would encourage you to report this behavior to the NC State Students of Concern website:http://studentsofconcern.ncsu.edu/. Although you can report anonymously, it is preferred that you share your contact information so they can follow-up with you personally. Miscellany This course does not fulfill a General Education Program co-requisite. This course does not require special transportation for field trips. This course does not have any special safety or risk considerations. PY 211 Course Syllabus Spring 2015 Page 7

Course Calendar Dates Sections Topics Jan 05 M Jan 06 T Jan 07 W Ch1 Introduction; Math Review Jan 08 H Jan 09 F Ch1; 2.1-2.3 More Math Review; Displacement; Velocity/Speed Jan 12 M 2.3-2.4 Velocity/Speed; Trip Problems; Acceleration Jan 13 T Jan 14 W 2.5-2.7 1D Kinematics; Free Fall Jan 15 H Jan 16 F 2.8; 3.1-3.3 Motion Diagrams; Vectors Jan 19 M Jan 20 T MLK Holiday Jan 21 W 3.1-3.3 Vectors; 2D Motion Jan 22 H Jan 23 F 3.4 2D Kinematics; Projectile Motion Jan 26 M 3.4-3.5 Projectile Motion; Relative Velocity Jan 27 T Jan 28 W 3.5; 4.1-4.2 Relative Velocity; Forces; 1st Law Jan 29 H Jan 30 F 4.3 2nd Law; Net Force; Mass Feb 02 M Ch1-4.3 Test 1 Review Feb 03 T Feb 04 W 4.3 Gravitational Force TEST 1 (Chapter 1-4.3) Feb 05 H Feb 06 F 4.4-4.5 3rd Law; Normal Force Feb 09 M 4.5-4.7 Tension; Applications Feb 10 T Feb 11 W 4.7 Slope; More Applications Feb 12 H Feb 13 F 5.1-5.2 Friction; Drag Feb 16 M 5.3; 6.1 Elasticity (Stress & Strain); Angular Variables Feb 17 T Feb 18 W 6.2-6.3 Centripetal Acceleration & Force Feb 19 H Feb 20 F 6.4-6.5; 7.1 Centrifugal "Force"; Newton's Law of Gravity; Energy Feb 23 M 7.2 Energy Conservation; KE; Work Feb 24 T Feb 25 W 7.3-7.6 Potential Energy; Gravitational PE; Conservation of Energy Equation Feb 26 H Feb 27 F 7.6 Spring PE; Internal Energy; Conservation of Energy Applications PY 211 Course Syllabus Spring 2015 Page 8

Mar 02 M Ch4-Ch7 Test 2 Review Mar 03 T Mar 04 W 7.7; 8.1-8.2 Power; Momentum; Impulse TEST 2 (Chapter 4-7) Mar 05 H Mar 06 F 8.3; 8.5 Conservation of Momentum; Recoil; Perfectly Inelastic Collisions Mar 09 M Mar 10 T Mar 11 W Spring Break Mar 12 H Mar 13 F Mar 16 M 8.4-8.5 Elastic & Inelastic Collisions Mar 17 T Mar 18 W 9.1-9.3 Torque; Static Equilibrium Mar 19 H Mar 20 F 9.4-9.5; 10.1-10.2 Center of Mass; Rotational Kinematics Mar 23 M 10.3-10.4 Moment of Inertia; Rotational Dynamics; Rotational KE Mar 24 T Mar 25 W 10.5 Angular Momentum; Conservation of angular Momentum Mar 26 H Mar 27 F 16.1-16.3 Simple Harmonic Motion Mar 30 M 16.3-16.6 Elastic SHM Mar 31 T Apr 01 W 16.3-16.6 Pendulum SHM Apr 02 H Apr 03 F Spring Holiday Apr 06 M 16.9-16.10 Waves; Superposition Apr 07 T Apr 08 W 17.1-17.2 Sound Apr 09 H Apr 10 F 17.3-17.4 Intensity; Doppler Effect Apr 13 M Ch8-17.4 Test 3 Review Apr 14 T 17.5 Apr 15 W Wave interference; Resonance; More Review? Test 3: Chapter 8-10, 16, 17 (thru 17.4) Apr 16 H Apr 17 F 17.5-17.6 Standing Waves on a String and in Air Column; Beats Apr 20 M 11.1-11.4 Fluids; Density; Pressure; Depth Apr 21 T Apr 22 W 11.5-11.7 Pascal's Principle; Pressure Measurement; Archimedes' Principle Apr 23 H Apr 24 F 12.1-12.3 Flow Rate; Bernoulli's Equation May 06 W Final Exam 6-9pm - Comprehensive PY 211 Course Syllabus Spring 2015 Page 9