ABOUT
the LABORATORY (Fall 2007)
Eleven experiments are scheduled (See SYLLABUS, and/or LABSCHEDULE. To complete Physics 117 you must do every experiment and hand in every lab report. Please review the principles and policies which govern the Physics 117 Laboratories on pages (i) to (vii) of your Lab Manual (Physics 117 Laboratory Manual, Department of Physics, UMCP, 2002. It is important to study the laboratory manual before each session, so that you can use the limited lab time efficiently.
Make
sure you sign the sign-in sheet for each lab you attend, since your signature
shows that you were there, in case any question arises. Also for a make-up
session indicate which lab # you are making up. (Only one lab can be made up in
a single two hour lab session.) Lab reports should be written as the lab work
progresses and handed in before the laboratory period ends. Each student in the
group should compose his own lab report. If two (or three, four, ...) essentially
identical lab reports are received, then each will get 1/2 (or 1/3, 1/4, ...)
of the credit it warrants.
A lab
report is late, and suffers a five point penalty, if not placed into the
Physics 117 Lab Mail Slot (in the wall, near the entrance to Physics
Room 3316 to the left as you emerge from our laboratory, Physics Room 3310) by
midnight of the day following the lab. In practice, this means before the TA
empties that mail slot sometime after midnight of the lab day. (Please do not
deliver delayed lab reports to any location other than the 117 Lab Mail
Slot.) The penalty grows to 10 points one week after the end of the lab
period (i.e., at the end of the subsequent lab period), and becomes total
(i.e., the score is zero) at midnight the next day, the eighth day after the
lab. (Note that even if the grade is to be zero, the report must be submitted,
since the report is a course requirement, independent of the score which the
lab report might earn.) IF YOU DO NOT HAND
IN ALL LAB REPORTS, YOU CAN NOT PASS THE COURSE.
The
basic idea is that lab reports are tasks to be finished, and not to be extended
or belabored: write it up and hand it in, preferably before you leave the lab!
Of
course, the lab experiments should generally be done at the regularly scheduled
time. However, two make-up weeks are
scheduled for doing experiments that were missed because of special and
pressing circumstances. The first lab
make-up week (Week #8) is to make up Labs I through VI (only), and the second
(Week #15)is for Labs VII through XI(only). See Syllabus. You can make up one
lab in any regularly scheduled Physics 121 lab period during lab make-up weeks,
but you should schedule your make-up with your TA at least a week beforehand,
if possible. TA's and lab technicians will be available to assist you during
the regularly scheduled lab times on those make up days.
The
sum of your semester’s laboratory report scores is your raw lab score. In
computing your course grade, your raw lab score will be replaced by your adjusted
lab score on the basis of "80%
is Enough" process
(used also for HW and Participation scores and discussed at length in GRADING
POLICY): every student who accumulates 80% or more of the maximum possible
semester total will receive the same adjusted raw lab score of 100, equal
to the maximum possible adjusted lab score; students who achieve less than
80% of the Maximum, will receive an adjusted lab score equal to the percentage
of the 80% threshold which they achieved. These adjusted lab scores will then
be renormalized (to Avg=70, Std.Dev.= +-20, as always) to define the normalized
lab score, NLS, which comprises 30% of the student’s overall Course Score,
as described in GRADING POLICY.
Note that
for Labs and for HW’s everyone should strive to meet the 80% threshold to receive the maximal grade, because the
renormalization process can aggravate the damage for the few students who fail
to do so. It’s so easy to attain the 80% that there is hardy any excuse for not
doing so.