Physics 106 - How Things Work - Spring, 2000
Course Rules
The rules in this list may seem rather harsh and arbitrary
but they are essential to maintaining the integrity of the
course. We have stories to tell about each rule. Some of these
stories are predictable and easy to imagine while others are
stranger than fiction. Although most of you will never come up
against any of the rules, we have a handful of students each
semester who just cannot seem to avoid them. If these rules are
going to cramp your style, then this class is probably not for
you. -- Lou Bloomfield and Mike Noel
Coursework:
- All homework must be submitted via the web, including the
problem sets and the term paper. No paper copies will be
accepted.
- You will receive a receipt via email when you submit
homework to be graded. Save this receipt in electronic
form (e.g. on a hard disk or floppy).
- Claims that we lost your homework following submission
will not be considered without the email receipt in
electronic form.
- Exam booklets and bubble sheets must be placed in the
boxes at the front of the lecture hall upon completion.
Exam materials not placed in these boxes will not be
accepted.
Grading and Regrading:
- All grading is final except in cases where the scores
were added or recorded incorrectly. However, we may, at
our option, regrade materials that are brought to us in
person during the 48 hour period after the class at which
those materials were returned. We will not regrade term
papers that were poorly proofread.
- Regrading may result in lower scores. If you bring in a
printout of your friend's work for comparison, that
person must sign the printout to indicate that they
understand that we will also regrade it and that its
score may be lowered as a result.
- No regrading will be done after the semester grades have
been sent out via email.
- The final exam will not be regraded under any
circumstances.
- We will not tell people how close they came to the next
higher semester grade. That information only promotes
grade grubbing, a practice that we strongly discourage.
Problem Sets:
- Problem sets may be submitted only via the web.
- You may discuss problem sets together but you must write
them up separately and in your own words. Points
may be deducted from problem sets that are found to have
similar answers, regardless of who obtained those answers
from whom.
- Problem sets are due on Mondays at 1:00PM, as listed in
the course schedule. We will deduct 10% of the numerical
grade for each day (24 hours) a problem set is late. Once
the solutions have been posted on the fifth day (usually
Friday afternoon), the problem sets are no longer
acceptable under any circumstances.
- If you find someone else who has a nearly identical
answer but received more credit than you, we will not
necessarily raise your grade. That person may have
received more than they deserved and the proper action
would be for us to lower that person's grade.
Term Paper:
- The term paper is due via the web on Monday, April 24,
2000. We will deduct one grade step (A becomes A-) for
each day the term paper is late (including Saturday and
Sunday). After the seventh day (Monday, May 1, 2000),
term papers are no longer acceptable under any
circumstances.
- Term papers must be written in your own words. Copying
material essentially word-for-word from another source
without crediting it as a quotation is plagiarism and
will not be tolerated. Extensive quotations make for a
very poor paper.
- You may not work together with anyone on an individual
term paper. If you are writing a group term paper, you
may work together only with the 1 or 2 other members of
your group.
- Term papers may not be written on objects that are part
of the course syllabus or the other semester of How
Things Work. A list of such forbidden topics is part of
this packet.
- We will not assist in topic selection for the term papers
after Monday, April 17, 2000.
- You may not use the same topic you used in a previous
semester of How Things Work.
Exams:
- The midterm exam will be given on Friday, March 3, 2000,
from 1:00PM to 1:50PM. The final exam will be given on ,
Friday, May 12, 2000, from 9:00AM to 12:00Noon. If you
miss either exam without prior permission from me, you
will receive a score of 0 for that exam. There are no
exceptions except fully documented medical emergencies
that prevent you from telephoning us or our answering
machines. In case of a family emergency you or the deans
must notify us at (804) 924-6595 (Bloomfield) or (804)
924-6599 (Noel) before the end of the exam.
- The exams must be taken in either Room 203, Room 204, or
Room 205 of the Physics Building, unless authorized by
me. Under no circumstances may exam materials ever leave
these rooms during the exam. If you remove your exam
materials from one of these rooms, even briefly, you will
receive a score of 0 on the exam.
- If you miss the start of an exam, you will still be
expected to turn the exam in at the regular time. If you
miss the exam entirely, you will receive a 0.
- We will consider compelling reasons for an alternative
midterm time only up until Friday, February 25, 2000.
After that time, you must take the midterm exam as
scheduled.
- We will consider compelling reasons for delaying your
final exam only up until Friday, April 28, 2000, the
College deadline for such requests. After that time, you
must take the final exam as scheduled. You must also get
permission from the Dean. All late finals will be given
as 1 hour oral examinations.
General:
- We will not sign any petitions to change the grading from
Credit/No-Credit to Letter Grade or vice versa after the
Credit/No-Credit deadline. Check your registration form
carefully.
- We will not sign any petitions to add into the course
after the Add deadline. Check your registration forms
carefully.
- Any student who does not turn in the first two problem
sets will be dropped from the course.
- We do not give any extra credit work.
- Permission for exceptions from the normal classwork
schedule must be requested in advance. We will not make
exceptions after the fact.
- We will not fail a student who makes a serious effort
at all the assigned work. If you do not submit a
homework assignment or do not take an exam, it becomes
possible for you to fail the course.
- We will immediately fail any student who submits for a
grade work that is not their own or permits another
student to do so.
- We will immediately fail any student who submits for a
regrade any work that was modified after it was graded.
- We will immediately fail any student who lies to us in an
effort to improve their grade or to obtain any special
consideration or exception from the normal classwork
schedule.
- We will immediately fail any student who attempts to
intimidate us or harass us in an effort to improve their
grade or to obtain any special consideration or exception
from the normal classwork schedule.
- We will consider any of the following actions to be an
honor violation and will submit them to the honor
committee for prosecution: (1) cheating on an exam, (2)
plagiarism on the term paper, (3) copying from another
student's term paper, (3) copying from another student's
problem set without their permission, (4) offering us a
forged receipt for electronically submitted work.
- The honor pledge is implicit for the term paper and the
exams. By turning in any one of those items, with or
without a written pledge, a student agrees to be bound by
the honor pledge and the honor system with regard to that
item.