PSci 168 Environmental Impact of Energy Demands by Society - 2001 Spring

Course syllabus: please read carefully.

Instructor: Dr. Ringwald
E-mail: ringwald[at]csufresno.edu and replace [at] with @

Phone: 278-8426
Also: 278-2371 (secretary)

Office hours: MWF 1-1:50, MW 4:30-5:20, and by appointment.
Office: McLane Hall, Room 011, in the new Building J (or "J-wing").
This is across the outdoor "hall" from McLane 149 and 151.

You don't need an appointment to come in during office hours. This is time set aside for you, when I will be in.


Please feel free to contact me, if you have any problems whatsoever in this course: or if you're doing well, and just want to talk about energy and the environment. It's in our interest, and it matters to me, that you do well!



Course Description (from the CSUFresno 2001-2002 General Catalog): (3 credits). Analysis of energy crisis; introduction to various forms of energy, energy conversion processes and environmental effects; present energy supply and energy projections; future energy demands and ways of evaluating alternatives.

Class objectives:

(1) To serve as a conceptual physics course, with special emphasis on energy generation and use, and their effects on the environment.
(2) To run the course as a seminar, encouraging student participation.
(3) To promote student understanding of scientific method, emphasizing how we know what we know, and what we don't know.
(4) To practice critical thinking and reasoning skills, useful both in and outside of science.
(5) To provide experience with quantitative reasoning and graphics, again useful both in and outside of science.

Mathematics: This course will require the use of some algebra and basic geometry, but mainly a lot of arithmetic. We will also use scientific notation, units conversions, and proportions.

Course meeting times and location: Schedule 27613 (section 1): MW 3-4:15 p.m., in McLane 280.

Holiday: February 18 (Presidents Day)

Required Course Text: Energy: Its Use and the Environment, 3rd edition (2002), by Roger A. Hinrichs and Merlin Kleinbach
It should be available at the campus Bookstore, in the University Student Union building.

Required Course Equipment: (1) Clear plastic ruler; (2) Scientific calculator (that has scientific notation, and can calculate logarithmic and exponential functions)

Course web page: http://zimmer.csufresno.edu/~fringwal/ps168.html

Course grades will be assigned for the following final percentages: 85-100% = A; 70-84% = B; 55-69% = C; 40-54% = D; 0-39% = F.
These percentages will be computed with the following weights:
2 Midterm Exams: 20% (10% each)
Weekly reading quizzes: 10%
Homework and projects (please note: no late assignments can be accepted): 20%
Paper titles and summaries, two copies of which are due Wednesday, April 24: 5%
4000-word paper, two copies of which are due on the last day of instruction, on Wednesday, May 15: 20%
Final Exam, which will be comprehensive (covering all material in the entire course), which will be Monday, May 20, 3:30-5:30 p.m. in the regular classroom: 25%

Please note: