| ABOUT 
          HOMEWORK 
          
           
          
           Homework 
          is an essential part of Physics 121, because it shows you what you really 
          know and what you really don’t know. A large part of the physics is 
          surely learned, or at least solidified, in doing homework. Therefore 
          the Homework is to be taken seriously; if it is given short shrift, 
          one’s education in physics suffers, and it will show up in one’s exam 
          scores.   
           About WebAssign   Homework 
          Assignments in this course will be managed using WebAssign, http://www.webassign.net/, a web software system for managing 
          course assignments. WebAssign will present the HW assignment schedule, 
          generate distinct individual assignments for each individual student 
          by randomizing the numerical parameters in each assigned problem, allow 
          the student to store partial results before submitting the solutions, 
          and grade the solutions immediately when submitted and report the results. 
          WebAssign will also allow the student to re-do and resubmit the assignment 
          twice more. But the third submission is the last and the grade it (or 
          the last submission before the deadline if less than three), achieves 
          will be the recorded grade. Access to WebAssign will require each student 
          to purchase an access card at a local bookstore or at the WebAssign 
          site. WebAssign is a required capacity for this Physics 121 course. 
          Note that every student is assigned similar, but numerically unique 
          problems by WebAssign, and no student’s assignment will be the same 
          as the corresponding textbook problem.   Before 
          submitting any solution to WebAssign, the student should note the WebAssign 
          conventions, which can be displayed by clicking the “GUIDE” tab on the 
          WebAssign site. Otherwise the Student’s solution may fall victim to 
          notational inconsistency and the fact that the computer is, after all, 
          merely comparing the symbols submitted by the student to the symbols 
          it generated. If they don’t match, it will reject your symbols, and 
          tell you your answers are wrong: it reads what you type, not what you 
          mean, and it reads literally and in its own language only.    Weekly HW Assignments Have Deadlines 
          for Last WebAssign Grading   A 
          homework problem set will be assigned weekly covering current reading, 
          lab and lecture material. Typically an assignment will consist of some 
          combination of five to ten conceptual questions (CQ’s), problems (P’s) 
          and quick quiz (QQ’s) questions, selected from the textbook. Out of 
          these some selected examples, labeled by asterisks in the assignment, 
          will have nonzero grading weight of about 4 points each. Thus a typical 
          HW set might have ten problems, of which five are asterisked for grading 
          with a total of about 20 points. Only the solutions submitted for these 
          asterisked problems will affectthe HW grade.   The 
          first assignments are listed on the WebAssign 
          site. Each student should keep a notebook of his actual homework work, 
          which he can make available for review by our course personnel in case 
          of difficulty or complications of the system. If he has been careful 
          to bring each solution to almost-final form as an algebraic, rather 
          than a numerical expression, then these notes will also facilitate his 
          completing any similar, but numerically randomized, assignment which 
          WebAssign might sometimes present, or identifying and correcting any 
          error which 
          causes WebAssign to reject the solution.   The 
          homework assignments are offered as a guide and an aid to the student's 
          study program, -more a learning tool than an exam. The task is not primarily 
          to get the right answer but to learn the physics and, if necessary, 
          the math to complete the problems easily and reliably. The student should 
          first understand the physics, then complete the assignment and then 
          check his methods against the posted solutions.  
          If one cannot solve a given problem, the solutions may show him 
          what he was missing.   Various Kinds of Help with Homework 
          are Available   Alternatively, 
          one might consult the Student 
          Solutions Manual and Study Guide for Serway and Faughn, 6th 
          Edition, which presents full solutions for problems whose number in 
          the textbook is enclosed by a box. Or, if the problem is labeled “web” 
          in the textbook, one can go to http://www.series.brookscole.com/serway 
          , select <College Physics, 6th edition> and click on the “Physics 
          Now” icon to see a step-by-step solution to the problem. This might 
          be especially helpful to a student who feels that he has no idea what 
          the first step is to a solution. These “web” step by step solutions 
          might also be generically helpful in solving some other problems by 
          analogy.     
           (The 
          “Physics Now” site at http://www.series.brookscole.com/serway 
          also offers animated versions of some of the diagrams in the textbook 
          which can enrich their content by allowing one to alter the assumed 
          parameters and see the consequences, or to watch things actually move. 
          (The required Access Code symbol required to reach “Physics Now” is 
          supplied in  each new Serway and Faughn 6thEd. text.) In 
          addition, the <brookscole/serway> site offers self-evaluative 
          quizzes and chapter-by-chapter 
          review summaries as self-help aids to the students using Serway and 
          Faughn's College Physics, 6th edition.   Homework 
          problems are of course primary topics for the scheduled discussion sections, 
          and for personal consultations with the TA’s or the lecturer, who will 
          all be available during specific office 
          hours. In addition, the Physics Department's Slawsky 
          Clinic offers Physics 121-122 students 
          help, especially with problem solving (MWF,10AM-3PM & Tu-Th,11AM-3PM). 
          Finally do not overlook your fellow students as a chance to clear up 
          lingering questions or get new ways of looking at the physics. There 
          is no prohibition against learning how to do HW problems from fellow 
          students, and then using what you've learned to complete the assignment 
          on your own.   Additional Problems offered for Optional 
          Exercises   In addition to the HW assignments, we will post as optional exercises blocks of problems from the text, for the sole purpose of making as many problems as possible available via WebAssign for students’ personal use. WebAssign will assess your solutions for any of these problems, but the grades will not count. For these sets many (100) repetitions are allowed. 
 Learn 
          however you can, and then do it yourself   Clearly we encourage every student to use all of the help and advice he/she can get from other people and other sources to learn how to complete every homework assignment correctly. But each student has also to carry out the solutions he submits personally and on his own. To learn how to do it, use all the help you can get; but finally you must do it yourself. To simply copy solutions, or to get others to do the assignment for you, is dishonest, and it will jeopardize your exam scores, which have the biggest effect on grades, by depriving you of the understanding you need. 
 Don't 
          resubmit before understanding previous errors   When 
          reasonably confident that you know how to solve the problems, then solve 
          them correctly, and submit your results to WebAssign for grading. Hopefully 
          all will be correct the first time. If not, WebAssign will identify 
          wrong answers, and you can analyze and overcome your errors before resubmitting 
          thesolutions.    
            “80% Threshold” Should be Surmounted 
          by All   By 
          this process we expect that every student can do nearly all of his Homework 
          assignments correctly and handily achieve the “80% is enough” threshhold 
          to obtain the maximum possible score for the Homework component of the 
          Total Course Score.    The 
          “80% is enough” philosophy is applied as follows. From the sum of all 
          of his raw Homework Scores accumulated over the semester, an adjusted 
          homework score, AHS, will be computed for each student as follows.  
          Every student who accumulates 80% or more of the maximum possible 
          score will be assigned the same maximum adjusted score of 100; others 
          will be assigned an adjusted score equal to the percentage of 80% which 
          they achieved.  The principle is that homework is a learning 
          tool, not an exam. If one does it well enough, one gets full credit 
          for it. The 80% threshold allows some margin for error during this learning 
          process.     It May Be Hazardous to Fall Short 
          of “80% Threshold”   However, 
          in order to allow it to be added properly to the Lab and Exam components 
          to form the Total Course Score, this adjusted homework scores will be 
          renormalized to an average value of 70 and a standard deviation of ±20 to 
          obtain the Normalized Homework Score (NHS). (It is NHS, not AHS which 
          contributes 15% to the Total Course Score, as described in GRADES.) 
          Under this procedure, to fail 
          to achieve the maximum is dangerous to your grade, because the renormalization 
          can produce serious reductions for a few students who fail to make that 
          threshold when nearly everyone else does so. On the other hand, the 
          80% threshold is within reach of everyone who spends the effort, so 
          that there is no reason why anyone should fail to achieve it.       |