Physics for Life Sciences (PHYS*1080)

Code and section: PHYS*1080*01

Term: Fall 2008

Instructor: Don Sullivan, Mike Massa

Details

Course Information

Important: Please retain this material and consult it regularly during the semester. This information will be important to you as the course progresses.

Prerequisites: (1 of 4U Physics, OAC Physics, PHYS*1020), one 4U or OAC Mathematics course
Restrictions: PHYS*1000

Students in this course will need to use Blackboard to write required pretests, perform a simulated experiment on diffusion for Study Guide 17, and check their term marks. As soon as possible, you should check that you can login to Blackboard:

  • Use a web browser to go to: http://courselink.uoguelph.ca/
  • Follow the Blackboard login instructions.

Instruction

Lecturers Office Extension Email
Don Sullivan MacN 435A 53983 des@physics.uoguelph.ca
Mike Massa MacN 404 52625 massam@uoguelph.ca

Quiz Room Supervisor

Name Office Extension Email
Cindy Wells SCIE1101A 52445 cindy@physics.uoguelph.ca

(Please email the Quiz Room Supervisor with course related inquiries and to report any errors in your Blackboard record.)

Final Exam Conflicts

The University’s policy regarding examination conflicts, as stated in the Undergraduate Calendar, is as follows: “Students who drop and add courses are required to consult the examination timetable in order to avoid conflicts in examination times. Written approval must be obtained from the dean or director and the instructor-in-charge of the course to register in courses that have conflicting examination times.”

Course Materials

  1. Text: Physics for the Biological Sciences: A Topical Approach to Biophysical Concepts (4th Edition); F.R. Hallett et al. Available in the University Bookstore and the Co-op Bookstore. Item (2) below is available in the Quiz Room (SCIE1101A) (CASH ONLY, please). For the sale of this item, the Quiz Room will be open on Wed/Thur/Fri/Mon/Tues Sept. 3,4,5,8 & 9 during the following hours: 9-12noon/1-4. After Sept. 9th this item may be purchased in the Quiz Room during normal Quiz Room daytime hours 9-11am and 1-3pm Monday – Friday.
  2. Study Guide/Laboratory Manual for PHYS*1080 (2007 printing): $15.00 (CASH ONLY) Note that the last page of the Study Guide section is a copy of the formula sheet that is used in the Quiz Room and supplied as part of the final examination.
  3. In addition to the pretests and the experiment for Study Guide 17, the following items are available via Blackboard:
    (a) Solutions to Self-Tests in the Study Guides
    (b) Three Sample Final Examinations
    (c) Textbook Problem Solutions for all the mechanics problems (Chapters 7-10) and for selected problems in the remaining chapters.
    (d) Computer Tutorials on various topics (list on pg. 9)
    (e) Errata for the textbook and for the Study Guide/Lab Manual.
    (f) One sample quiz for each Study Guide.
  4. Calculator (with trig functions, logs, etc.) – (graphing calculators are not allowed in the quiz room or exam)
  5. This Course Outline: includes important dates and deadlines, lecture schedule, evaluation information, personal record sheet, etc.

Drop & Add Forms: Instructor's signature to drop or add this course is not required.
Lost & Found: "Lost and Found" is in the Quiz Room (SCIE1101A).

Lecture Periods

Section Day Time Location
01 Tues., Thurs. 11:30am-12:50 MacN 105
02 Tues., Thurs. 2:30-3:50 p.m. MacN 105

Final Exam: Thur. December 4, 2008 11:30am-1:30pm

Deadlines and Important Notes

Students must show their U of G photo ID card in order to write a quiz.
Note: Only 1 quiz attempt per time slot allowed on same.
Thurs. September 4th - Quiz room opens for writing.

Week Date Quiz Notes
Wk. 1 Mon. Sept. 8 Lab Room (MacN 304A) opens.
Wk. 4 Fri. Oct. 3 Last day to write Quiz #6
Wk. 6 Fri. Oct. 17 Last day to write Quiz #7
Wk. 8 Fri. Oct. 31 Last day to write Quiz #8
Wk. 10 Fri. Nov. 14 Last day to write Quiz #9
Wk. 12 Thur. Nov. 27 Last day to write Quiz #10
Wk. 12 Thur. Nov. 27 QUIZROOM CLOSES Thursday, November 27th At 3:00pm
  • Be careful not to run out of quiz room time slots when writing quizzes. Your 1st attempt should be well in advance of the deadline point to allow for a possible 2nd or 3rd attempt.

Pretests must be passed with a minimum of 60% prior to making your 1st quiz attempt. Allow at least 1 hr. For your mark to be processed.

You are advised to sign up for and complete your required labs early in the semester to ensure all required labs are completed by quiz deadlines. Also, labs must be signed/stamped by TA in lab room no later than the day prior to attempting the related quiz.

Quiz Room Hours (SCIE1101A)

Times given are when the door opens and closes.

Day Time
Monday – Friday 9:00 – 11:00am
Monday – Friday 1:00 – 3:00pm
Monday Evening* 5:30-7:30


* Max. 250 students–room closes at max. or 7:30 whichever comes first. Monday evening quiz room sessions begin in week 3 (Sept. 22)

Lab Room Hours (MacN 304A)

Extra opening times may be added depending on enrolment.

Day Time
Monday 12:00noon – 4:00pm
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 10:00am – 3:00pm
Friday 10:00am – 1:00pm

Tentative Lecture Schedule

Lecture Day Month Date Lecture Topics Study Guide
L1 Thu SEPT 4 Kinematics 9
L2
L3
Tue
Thu
  9
11
Kinematics
Kinematics, Forces
9
9,10
L4
L5
Tue
Thu
  16
18
Forces and Torques
Momentum, Work & Energy
10
10
L6
L7
Tue
Thu
  23
25
Rotational Motion
Rotational Motion
11
11
L8
L9
Tue
Thu

OCT
30
2
Rotational Motion
Elasticity
11
12
L10
L11
Tue
Thu
  7
9
Scaling
Pressure
12
13
L12
L13
Tue
Thu
  14
16
Barometric Eq’n., Surface Tension
Surface Tension
13
13
L14
L15
Tue
Thu
  21
23
Non-Viscous Fluid Flow
Viscous Fluid Flow
14
14
L16
L17
Tue
Thu
  28
30
Pulsatile Flow, Bolus Flow, Turbulence
Turbulence, Aneurysms
15
15
L18
L19
Tue
Thu
NOV 4
6
Perrin’s Experiment
Sedimentation, Diffusion
16
16,17
L20
L21
Tue
Thu
  11
13
Diffusion
Osmotic Pressure
17
17
L22
L23
Tue
Thu
  18
20
Heat
Heat
18
18
L24 Tue   25 Review, Info re Final Exam  

How the Course Works

Introduction

Students' study schedules at University are often based on a crisis-to-crisis approach (When's my next midterm exam?) rather than on organized learning. To reduce this problem, Introductory Physics For Life Sciences is offered using a "Personalized Instruction" method which gives the student some flexibility in scheduling study time.

The central idea of this teaching method is the accommodation of both the student who needs or likes formal lecture teaching and the student who prefers guided self-instruction. Indeed, in this course, any combination of these two extremes may be mixed to the student's own taste.

Many thousands of students have taken this course and almost every semester has seen some modification, usually minor, in the operation of the course. The present version of the study materials incorporates a large number of constructive suggestions made by students. We hope you will continue to point out errors, omissions and weaknesses so that the course and its teaching materials can be regularly upgraded. We are confident that this thoroughly tested learning concept will continue to be met with enthusiastic approval from the majority of our students.

Lectures

Formal lectures will be given and you will find a detailed timetable of dates and topics in this course handout. Students may attend all of the lectures or select only those topics in which they feel they need lecture support. You are strongly advised to attend lectures until you are sure that the self-study method works for you. In any case, the entire course content will be covered in these lectures. Whether you attend lectures or not, it is your responsibility to check the door to the quiz room for important weekly notices regarding the course.

Modules

The Study Guide (SG) contains the ten modules (SG 9 to 18) for this course, which are summarized on pg. 6 of this outline. These ten modules cover the entire course and are designed so that you need never actually attend a lecture if you follow their advice scrupulously. (You must, however, do laboratory work.) Each module provides you with:

  1. a brief introductory discussion of what the module is about,
  2. the educational objectives of the module,
  3. a detailed study guide (reading and problem lists, etc.)
  4. self tests,
  5. answers to self tests, and sometimes
  6. extra problems.

These self-study modules are your chief help; the Study Guide is a teacher at your side constantly and should be studied with care.

Course and Quiz Organization and Preferred Path

Quiz #6 requirements

  • Kinematics SG. 9
  • Newton’s Laws, Momentum & Energy SG. 10
  • Experiment 10 (MacN304a)
  • Pretest 6 (on line)

Quiz #7 requirements

  • Rotational Motion SG. 11
  • Pretest 7 (on line)

Quiz #8 requirements

  • Elasticity & Scaling SG. 12
  • Experiment 12 (MacN304a)
  • Pressure & Surface Tension SG. 13
  • Experiment 13 (MacN304a)
  • Pretest 8 (on line)

Quiz #9 requirements

  • Fluids in Motion SG. 14
  • Experiment 14 (MacN304a)
  • Turbulent Flow SG. 15
  • Pretest 9 (on line)

Quiz #10 requirements

  • Boltzmann Eq’n & Sedimentation SG. 16
  • Diffusion, Osmotic Pressure SG. 17
  • Experiment 17 (computer on line lab)
  • Pretest 10 (on line)

Heat SG. 18 will be tested on the final examination (at least 2 questions)

Diagnostic Quizzes

Note that quizzes are withdrawn on specific dates (see pgs. 2-3), so these should be attempted as appropriate. Also, note that some quizzes may require knowledge of material from previous quizzes. A noncredit PRETEST must be passed before its Quiz for credit can be written. The PRETESTS are available on Blackboard. See page 10 for details. There is a PRETEST available for S.G. 18 even though there is no Quiz. This is strongly recommended for study purposes for the final exam.

Regardless of the combination of formal lectures and/or self-study you use to acquire knowledge in the course, the question is "how do you demonstrate this knowledge and receive credit for it?" When you think you have mastered the contents of the required modules, and have passed (60%) the associated PRETEST, you should go to the Quiz Room where you may request a Diagnostic Quiz.

This quiz is designed to test your mastery of the material. Note however a very important point. There are far more study guide topics than there are quizzes that you are expected to write. Consequently, most quizzes have been combined to include questions from two study guides as shown above. For example, quiz #6 contains questions from Kinematics, Newton’s Laws, Momentum & Energy and Experiment 10. It is therefore very important that you come prepared for both study guides and have passed the pretest. You will need your University of Guelph photo ID card in order to write a quiz. This quiz is designed to test your mastery of the material. The time allotted for each quiz is 20 minutes. When you have completed the quiz, it is marked immediately by a tutor in your presence (If you absolutely cannot stay to have your quiz marked, you may leave it. It will be marked at the end of the quiz period and the mark posted. It will be available for you to look at for two further quiz periods.). In this way, no time is wasted teaching you things you already know, but the quiz will isolate those things (if any) you don't know. The tutor will give you help on the spot. It is important to emphasize the diagnostic aspect of this quiz; diagnosis is its prime purpose. It is of no value to write one if you are not prepared; you are wasting everyone's time. The level at which you are considered to have "mastered" the material is 80%, i.e., the "pass mark" is 8.0 out of 10.0. Please see “Evaluation of Quiz Marks” section below.

Each quiz that is passed contributes 10% toward your course mark. If you do not get 8 out of 10 on your first attempt (and you may not), it doesn't matter. There is no stigma attached to failing this quiz; that is not its purpose. You may go away, study, and try again. The quiz will have served to show you what you must study. Obviously there must be a limit to the number of times you may write quizzes on a single group, and this has been set at three. Also, you may not attempt more than one quiz on any given group in a single quiz period.

During quizzes (and the final examination), you may use a pocket calculator (graphing calculators are not allowed). In the quiz room, each desk is provided with a sheet of formulae. A copy of this sheet will be included in the final exam, and is also included on the last page in the Study Guide and Lab Manual. No material in the form of quizzes or paper may be taken from the Quiz Room and all paper used when writing a quiz must be turned in. You should visit the quiz room during the first week of the semester to see how the system operates.

As shown above, there are 5 quizzes to be completed. There is no quiz on SG 18, although there will be at least 2 questions on SG 18 on the final examination. A sample quiz for each Study Guide is available on Blackboard.

Self-paced study is a new experience for most students. At best, it permits you to work ahead in physics early in the semester, freeing study time for other courses during heavy weeks. At worst, there is a temptation to leave things too late. To help pace students, deadlines are placed on quizzes. (Refer to pgs. 2-3.)

Graphing Review

Some quizzes will require you to sketch graphs of simple functions, or to plot graphs of data. To prepare for this graphing, you should work through the computer tutorial - Graphing Simple Functions (available via Blackboard) and also read the “Graphing Hints” at the beginning of the lab experiments section in the Study Guide and Lab Manual.

Experiments

There are 5 experiments to be done, associated with S.G. units 10, 12, 13, 14 and 17 (see above). Four of these experiments are done in the lab room (MacN 304A) and they may be performed in any order, at any time the lab is open (see page 3 for hours of operation). The laboratory operates as an open lab, but you must reserve a space. An experimental station may be reserved up to three weeks in advance by signing a sheet posted just inside the laboratory door. There is also one computer simulation (Expt. 17) which is done on Blackboard.

To obtain credit, there is a certain minimum amount of each experiment which must be completed during the lab period (see detailed instructions in lab manual). Once your lab is complete you must have the laboratory instructor sign and stamp your Lab Pass Sheet (back pages on your lab manual) which you take to the quiz room when making your first attempt at related quiz. Notice that the lab instructor does not assign a mark to your lab work, although he/she may refuse to accept it if he/she judges the work to be inadequate. Your understanding of the material is tested in the quiz on the associated Study Guide.

You are encouraged to visit the lab early in the semester in order to see how it operates.

Remember that, for Study Guides with an associated experiment, you cannot write the quiz until the experiment is stamped and signed as complete.

Evaluation of Quiz Marks

Quizzes are marked out of 10
Quiz marks 8/10 or higher receives 10%(highest possible mark)
between 4.0/10 and 7.5/10 (inclusive) receives 2%†
less than 4/10 receives zero
† This 2% mark does not add to a mark of 10. It is awarded on the condition you do not receive a “pass” on any attempt on a unit quiz. Four examples below:

  1. A student earns 4.0/10 on the first quiz attempt, 6.0/10 on the second quiz attempt, and 8.0/10 on the third quiz attempt. Mark received: 10 out of 10.
  2. A student earns 4.0/10 on the first quiz attempt, 5.5/10 on the second quiz attempt, and 7.5/10 on the third quiz attempt. Mark received: 6 out of 10.
  3. A student earns 2.5/10 on the first quiz attempt, 4.0/10 on the second, and 7.5/10 on the third. Mark received: 4 out of 10.
  4. A student earns 7.5/10 on the first quiz attempt and tries no further quizzes. Mark received: 2 out of 10.

Summary of Marks: quiz marks 50% (5 x 10.0) + 50% (final exam) = 100%

Accuracy of Records

It is your responsibility to use Blackboard to check that your marks are recorded correctly. Please check your record often and report any discrepancies immediately to the Quiz Room Supervisor (see above). As an aid, a `Personal Record Form' is attached to this handout. You should use this form to record your quiz attempts, etc., and from time to time check the computer record against your personal record.

Course Policies

Illness

If you are away for brief periods of time due to illness or for compassionate reasons, see the quiz room supervisor re: consideration of extension of deadlines, etc. For an extended illness, etc. (> 1 week), you should obtain a medical certificate or similar documentation and consult the quiz room supervisor. If you miss the final examination because of illness or for other reasons, consult the Academic Consideration regulations in the current Undergraduate Calendar and see your Program Counselor.

Course Notices

From time to time, notices pertaining to the course will be given in lectures and/or posted by the Quiz Room door or inside the quiz room. You should check weekly for notices and reminders, etc. It is your responsibility to keep yourself informed regarding these special announcements.

Obtaining Help in the Course

  1. Room MacN 318 – Help Room. The hours will be posted on Blackboard. The help room will open in week three. Help will be provided in the quiz room during weeks 1 and 2 as required.
    NOTE: This Help Room is for help in physics courses PHYS*1070, 1080 and 1130.
  2. Help may be obtained from the lecturer. Short questions can often be handled in the lecture room just before or after lectures. For other times, the lecturer’s office hours will be announced in lecture.
  3. Help may be obtained in rooms MacN 304A or 304. These are the lab rooms for this course and PHYS*1070. When these rooms are open you may obtain help with course-related problems from the instructors, but remember that their first priority is to help students who are doing experiments and to check lab reports, etc.
  4. The following items are available via Blackboard:
  • Several computerized tutorials are available. The useful tutorials for this course are:
  • Vectors
  • Exponential growth and decay
  • Logarithms
  • Trigonometry
  • Free body diagrams
  • Graphing log paper
  • Graphing simple functions
  • Dimensional analysis
  • Torque and rotational motion
  • A set of 3 final examinations from previous semesters.
  • Complete solutions to all Study Guide Self Tests.
  • Complete solutions for all the textbook problems on mechanics (Chapters 7-10) and for selected problems in the remaining chapters.
  • Errata for the textbook and for the Study Guide/Lab Manual.

The Pretests

Before any Quiz can be written for credit, a Pretest must be taken and passed at the level of 60%. These Pretests are designed to permit a self-examination of the basic concepts and objectives of the modules in question. Each Pretest consists of a variety of simple questions in one of 4 formats:

  1. multiple choice
  2. true or false
  3. pairwise matching
  4. enter a number or symbol

The Pretests are delivered using Blackboard and so can be taken from any location which has computers connected to the internet (MacN 315, Library, home, etc.).

Follow the login instructions and the instructions which follow enabling you to take the Pretest. Upon completion it will be marked and an explanation provided for every question for which you selected the wrong answer. These should be studied carefully.

When you obtain at least 60% on the Pretest (allow 1 hour for your mark to process), you may then proceed to the Quiz Room (SCIE1101A) to write a Quiz for credit.

If you failed to get 60%, you must repeat the Pretest until 60% is obtained. Pretests are allowed every 4 hours. The Pretest must be recorded as a pass before a Quiz for credit may be written.

Of course, you get the maximum advantage from these Pretests if you do them without help and, as much as possible, without aids (textbook, etc.).

Also available on the Backboad is a SAMPLE QUIZ for each Study Guide, similar to quizzes that you will write in the Quiz Room.

It is a serious academic offence to copy, print or otherwise store this material or to attempt to alter it in any way.