Untitled

Web Schedules

Fall 2024
Spring 2024
Summer 2024

One Credit Courses

Fall 2024
Spring 2024
Summer 2024

No Cost Textbook/Resources Courses

Fall 2024
Spring 2024
Summer 2024

Low Cost Textbook/Resources Courses

Fall 2024
Spring 2024
Summer 2024

Course Planning by Program

2024-25

Essential Objectives

Course Syllabus


Revision Date: 03-Jan-24
 

Spring 2024 | PHY-1041-VO02S - Physics I


Synchronous Class

Synchronous courses are delivered through a combination of online and regularly-scheduled Zoom sessions. In synchronous classes, students must attend Zoom sessions and actively engage with each other and faculty in course activities and discussions.

Location: Online
Credits: 4
Synchronous Section: This course has schedule meeting dates and times online via Zoom. See below or consult Self Service - Search for Courses and Sections for specific dates and times.
In-Person Meeting Day/Times via Zoom: Monday, 06:00P - 08:00P
Semester Dates: 01-22-2024 to 04-29-2024
Last day to drop without a grade: 02-11-2024 - Refund Policy
Last day to withdraw (W grade): 03-24-2024 - Refund Policy
This course has started, please contact the offering academic center about registration
Materials/Lab Fees: $125.00

Faculty

Alan Peel
View Faculty Credentials
View Faculty Statement
Hiring Coordinator for this course: Danielle Lafleur Brooks

General Education Requirements


This section meets the following CCV General Education Requirement(s) for the current catalog year:
VSCS Natural Science
    Note
  1. Many degree programs have specific general education recommendations. In order to avoid taking unnecessary classes, please consult with additional resources like your program evaluation, your academic program catalog year page, and your academic advisor.
  2. Courses may only be used to meet one General Education Requirement.

Course Description

This course provides insight into how basic physics principles are used and applied. Students develop practical problem-solving and analytical thinking skills as applied to Newtonian mechanics, energy, fluids, and the mechanical properties of matter. Includes a laboratory. College level Pre-Calculus is strongly recommended. Prerequisite: Intermediate Algebra or above.


Essential Objectives

1. Define and apply basic problem-solving techniques.
2. Describe scalar and vector quantities, the components of a vector, and employ vector addition both graphically and analytically.
3. Explain kinematics in one and two dimensions (velocity, acceleration, and displacement) and apply to problem-solving.
4. Identify the relationship between force and motion as defined by Newton's first, second, and third laws, and apply these laws to the analysis and solution of physical problems.
5. Explain the concepts of equilibrium, circular motion, rotation, work, power, energy, momentum, and conservation of momentum, and apply these concepts to the solution of physical problems.
6. Describe the mechanical properties of matter such as density and elasticity.
7. Explain such concepts of fluid mechanics as pressure, Archimedes' Principle and fluid flow, and apply these to the solution of physical problems.
8. Explain simple harmonic motion, energy in the simple harmonic oscillator, period and sinusoidal nature of SHM, the simple pendulum, damped harmonic motion, resonance in forced vibration, wave motion and its characteristics.
9. Explain the characteristics of sound, intensity, response to sound, sources of sound, interference of sound, and the Doppler Effect.
10. Demonstrate proficiency in understanding, interpreting, evaluating, and applying quantitative data and information.
11. Explain how knowledge created in the natural sciences has contributed to the creation, maintenance and dismantling of social inequalities and discuss the impacts of diversity and inclusion on scientific research and practice.
Laboratory Objectives:
1. Apply knowledge of the scientific method to:
a. formulate and evaluate real-world scientific questions;
b. ethically plan and implement accurate data collection;
c. analyze and evaluate data;
d. generate conclusions based on analysis and justify claims with evidence;
e. integrate the related work of other scientists; and
f. propose ideas for further inquiry.
2. Communicate findings in a format appropriate to the discipline and type of investigation, such as a laboratory notebook, laboratory report, observational study, field investigation report, poster, or presentation using appropriate evidence to support these findings.
3. Understand the structure and purpose of peer-reviewed publications.
4. Evaluate scientific information for validity, accuracy, reliability, and methodology.
5. Identify and follow lab safety techniques that are aligned with CCV’s Chemical Hygiene Plan, Lab Safety Agreements and chemical Safety Data Sheets (SDS).


Required Technology

More information on general computer and internet recommendations is available on the CCV IT Support page. https://support.ccv.edu/general/computer-recommendations/

Please see CCV's Digital Equity Statement (pg. 45) to learn more about CCV's commitment to supporting all students access the technology they need to successfully finish their courses.


Required Textbooks and Resources

This course uses one or more textbooks/books/simulations.

Spring 2024 textbook details will be available on 2023-11-06. On that date a link will be available below that will take you to eCampus, CCV's bookstore. The information provided there will be specific to this class. Please see this page for more information regarding the purchase of textbooks/books.

PHY-1041-VO02S Link to Textbooks for this course in eCampus.

The last day to use a Financial Aid Advance to purchase textbooks/books is the 3rd Tuesday of the semester. See your financial aid counselor at your academic center if you have any questions.


Methods

(Pedagogical buzzwords: #activelearning #intuitionbuilding #socraticquestioning)

A weekly cycle which includes Zoom 'lecture', optional reading questions, online discussion fora, homework, lab, and a quiz:

  1. Zoom - once a week. I will "lecture" on a topic for several minutes, then challenge you with Polling questions to reinforce, challenge what you think you just heard or read; these questions open up class debate and calculations - breakout rooms may be used. "Rinse and repeat" for the class period over several such topics (with a break for stretching and hydration!).Interruptions welcome!Ask questions in the Zoom chat or by unmuting.
  2. Online asynchronous discussions- at least one of which is prompted by me and graded each week!
  3. Labs conducted at "home" using a kit and/or simple household items or online virtual labs on Pivot. Some labs toward the end of the semester will include formal writeups.
  4. Homework questions to cement analytical skills
  5. Quizzes to assess comprehension

Midterm (7th week) and Final Exam because many of you will need to remember some of this material and these analytical tools beyond the classroom and into your careers - but see evaluation criteria below to avoid panic about test anxiety!


Evaluation Criteria

Most assignments are graded on completion, thoroughness of effort, application of the learned material, avoidance of excessive (or insufficient!) significant figures, and a little bit on the "correct answer." However, a clearly impossible answer must be at least commented on to avoid any major point deduction ("e.g., I know this is unreasonable, and was expecting to get about..." (a good estimate goes here) "...but not sure where I made the mistake").

Quizzes and exams are open book, open notes, internet resources, etc., but no collaboration with anyone (your family, friends, AI, acquaintances, enemies, pets, classmates included!) please. Feedback (on the midterm especially) may include a tailored rubric. Even these assignments are still graded mostly on completion and thoroughness for each question and commentary if any unreasonable numbers are calculated.

  • Participation (Zoom polling questions and Graded Discussions) 15%
  • Labs 20% (it's a four credit course with labs after all!)
  • Homework 20%
  • Quizzes 15%
  • Midterm 15%
  • Final Exam 15%

In the event the grading seems on the harsh side based on overall class success, I reserve the right to curve your grade in your favor. (I will never curve the grade to your detriment!)


Grading Criteria

CCV Letter Grades as outlined in the Evaluation System Policy are assigned according to the following chart:

 HighLow
A+10098
A Less than 9893
A-Less than 9390
B+Less than 9088
B Less than 8883
B-Less than 8380
C+Less than 8078
C Less than 7873
C-Less than 7370
D+Less than 7068
D Less than 6863
D-Less than 6360
FLess than 60 
P10060
NPLess than 600


Weekly Schedule


Week/ModuleTopic  Readings  Assignments
 

1

NB: In the event we need more time for any topics (for any weeks), this schedule may shift slightly. I will update the schedule here as fast as I can.

(January 22nd first Zoom class - meets every week Monday 6-8 pm)

Introduction (scientific notation, units, significant figures) and Kinematics (motion in time and space in one dimension)

  

Chapters 1 and 2 in Openstax: rocketing off to a start! Various online videos

  

Class polling questions, Graded Discussions 1a-1c, Lab 1, HW 1, Quiz 1

 

2

2 Dimensional Kinematics, Galilean Relativity, Estimation skills

  

Chapter 3 Openstax; various online videos

  

Class polling questions, Graded Discussion 2a-2b, Lab 2, HW 2, Quiz 2

 

3

Dynamics: Newton's "Laws", "free"-body diagrams, an assault on your intuition

  

Chapter 4 Openstax; various online videos

  

Class polling questions, Graded Discussion 3, Lab 3a, HW 3, Quiz 3

 

4

Friction, drag, elasticity: gettin' real

  

Chapter 5 Openstax; various online videos

  

CPQ, GD4, L3b, HW4, Q4

 

5

Circular motion, gravitation (and electromagnetism foreshadowing!)

  

Chapter 6 Openstax; various online videos

  

CPQ, GD5, L4a, HW5, Q5

 

6

Energy (it's subtler than you think), Work-Energy theorem, why climate change is real

  

Chapter 7 Openstax; various online videos

  

CPQ, GD6, L4b, HW6, Q6

 

7

(Mon Mar 4th seventh Zoom class)

Momentum and collisions; conservation laws; Unit 1 review

  

Openstax Chapter 8; various online videos

  

CPQ, GD7, L5a, HW7, Midterm (due by Mon Mar 11)

 

8

Rotational kinematics and dynamics; statics and torque (the analogs to linear kinematics and dynamics are nearly perfect)

  

Openstax Chapters 9-10; various online videos

  

CPQ, GD8, L5b, HW8, Q8

 

9

Fluid statics and dynamics

  

Openstax Chapters 11-12; various online videos

  

CPQ, GD9, L6a, HW9, Q9

 

10

Temperature, heat, diffusion

  

Openstax Chapters 13-14; various online videos

  

CPQ, GD10, L6b, HW10, Q10

 

11

Thermodynamics

(Mon Apr 1st eleventh Zoom class)

  

Openstax Chapter 15; various online videos

  

CPQ, GD11, L7a, HW11, Q11

 

12

Oscillations - why waves are everywhere

  

Openstax Chapter 16; various online videos

  

CPQ, GD12, no Lab!, HW12, Q12

 

13

Sound waves, hearing

  

Openstax Chapter 17; various online videos

  

CPQ, GD13, L7b, HW13, Q13

 

14

[This week also available for some slippage in the curriculum from earlier weeks]

Review for the final exam!

  

MOSTLY YOUR NOTES (and constructing a summary of your notes for quick access during the final)

  

CPQ, GD14, L8 "Practicum", HW14, Q14

 

15

(Mon Apr 29th penultimate Zoom class;

Week "16": May 6th optional online Zoom party for lingering questions about physics)

Final Exam week

  

YOUR NOTES (and textbook, and online resources, but not direct contact with anyone)

  

Final exam (due by May 4th)

 

Attendance Policy

Regular attendance and participation in classes are essential for success in and are completion requirements for courses at CCV. A student's failure to meet attendance requirements as specified in course descriptions will normally result in a non-satisfactory grade.

  • In general, missing more than 20% of a course due to absences, lateness or early departures may jeopardize a student's ability to earn a satisfactory final grade.
  • Attending an on-ground or synchronous course means a student appeared in the live classroom for at least a meaningful portion of a given class meeting. Attending an online course means a student posted a discussion forum response, completed a quiz or attempted some other academically required activity. Simply viewing a course item or module does not count as attendance.
  • Meeting the minimum attendance requirement for a course does not mean a student has satisfied the academic requirements for participation, which require students to go above and beyond simply attending a portion of the class. Faculty members will individually determine what constitutes participation in each course they teach and explain in their course descriptions how participation factors into a student's final grade.


Participation Expectations

This is a traditionally difficult 4 credit synchronous course - be there or expect to be dropped from the course. (Again, occasionally we can make prior arrangements, and true emergencies are the exception.) We only have two hours per week to work together, though you are also encouraged to engage online with your colleagues on your own time.

Your camera must be on unless you have an accessibility or socioeconomic accommodation (if so, contact me about that ASAP). I don't care what your room looks like. Or your hair. We are forming a temporary community and psychologically it is better for all of us if we can mimic a "normal" classroom as much as possible. Please also try to use the same name every week and by all means include your pronouns.

Bear in mind, Zoom is an online conferencing tool that utilizes video, audio, and visual tools. If you will require accommodations in accessing this tool, please contact your ADA advisor before the semester begins. (And again, contact me ASAP.)

Polling questions during the Zoom sessions are a part of your participation grade (you are not graded on "correctness" though!). You will be marked absent if more than half of your polling questions are unanswered. These quesitons will be used to:

  • Stimulate discussion
  • Assess student progress and understanding
  • Assess instructor efficacy (!)

In addition, graded discussions on Canvas are part of your overall evaluation - participation in these is asynchronous, mandatory, and is subject to a due date. (However, they are also not graded on getting the right answer!)



Missing & Late Work Policy

Life happens - you must keep open lines of communication with me if there are unforeseen obstructions to your completion of an assignment. I'll have much less sympathy if you contact me after or just as the assignment is due.

Nothing accepted after the duedate without prior arrangements unless prior arrangements were not possible (i.e., emergencies are the exception - see syllabus on Canvas.)


Accessibility Services for Students with Disabilities:


CCV strives to mitigate barriers to course access for students with documented disabilities. To request accommodations, please
  1. Provide disability documentation to the Accessibility Coordinator at your academic center. https://ccv.edu/discover-resources/students-with-disabilities/
  2. Request an appointment to meet with accessibility coordinator to discuss your request and create an accommodation plan.
  3. Once created, students will share the accommodation plan with faculty. Please note, faculty cannot make disability accommodations outside of this process.


Academic Integrity


CCV has a commitment to honesty and excellence in academic work and expects the same from all students. Academic dishonesty, or cheating, can occur whenever you present -as your own work- something that you did not do. You can also be guilty of cheating if you help someone else cheat. Being unaware of what constitutes academic dishonesty (such as knowing what plagiarism is) does not absolve a student of the responsibility to be honest in his/her academic work. Academic dishonesty is taken very seriously and may lead to dismissal from the College.