ASTRONOMY 301
Fall 1996
Unique #42440
TTh 9:30 a.m.-11:00 a.m., WEL 3.502
Dr. Frank Bash. Office: RLM 15.208
TA: Cynthia Froning, 471-3432
TEXT: HORIZONS, Exploring the Universe, Michael A. Seeds,
Wadsworth Publishing Co., 1995 (1995 Edition)
GRADING, EXAMS, AND HOMEWORK
- There will be two one-hour exams. Each exam counts 25% of your
final grade, and thus exams represent 50% of your final grade.
One of the hour exams will be given at mid-term and one at the
end of the term.
-
You will be required to answer an approximately bi-weekly
question set. Help will be available on the question sets each week in
help sessions. Part (2) counts 50% of your final grade. We will give
you all the help you need.
-
Each student in this class will receive a mid-term letter grade
computed as above and using the same "curve" as will be used at the end
of the semester.
HELP
The TA and I will do everything we can to help you do well in the
course. Help will be available outside of class several times every
week. We will announce times and places of the help sessions about
one week after the class begins. Extra help sessions will be held
before exams. Since we will be going over the problems in the homework
assignments, we ask you not to be late to the help session if you
want to hear a discussion of the first problem in the assignment.
Endless repeating of the first problem discussion for the benefit of
latecomers bores the students who were on time and drives the
instructor crazy.
OBSERVING
If you wish, there is a 9-inch telescope available for observing
planets and stars, operated by an astronomy graduate student. It is
available to you each clear Friday night 9-10 p.m. and each clear
Saturday night 8-10 p.m. If you would like to learn how to operate the
telescope so that you can use it by yourself, see me.
LEVEL OF THE COURSE AND OTHER REQUIREMENTS
This is a course for non-science majors. If you are one of these
people, you should have no trouble. If you are a math major with
several college math and physics courses, you are in the wrong course.
The course introduces students to modern astronomy with a special focus
on how stars work. The course uses some mathematics on homework, for
which lots of help is available, and no mathematics on exams.
HELP SESSIONS, GENERAL REQUIREMENTS, AND DISCIPLINE
The help sessions are extremely important and very helpful. You are
urged to plan to attend at least one of them each week. You may
attend as many as you wish. We will work through each assigned problem
and go over any problems which students have with the lecture material.
Again, I urge you to attend a help session.
We understand that people do their homework together. Nevertheless,
we will not accept homework which is a direct copy of another paper.
Both papers will get a grade of zero.
Cheating on exams will not be tolerated!
On both exams and homework we require complete answers which include
the method you used to get the answer. Answers without an explanation
of the method used will get no credit.
I also expect your answers to be expressed in legible, lucid, correctly
spelled English sentences. If not, you will have points deducted from
your homework score.
Because this class is large we must have your homework papers turned in
by the time they are due and in the correct place. Late homework
papers or papers left in the wrong place will not be graded. If you
ask a friend to turn in your paper, make certain that he/she knows
where to leave it. The time each homework set is due will be posted
(usually Fridays by 5:00 p.m.).
Turn in your homework in class or leave it in the box, labeled for this
class, on the 13th floor of RLM. The turn-in box is the one with a slot
in its top near the floor. (See the drawing below.) But there are
turn-in boxes for all astronomy classes. Be sure to find the one for
our class.
Here is a map to help you find the homework boxes. The boxes are on the
13th floor of the RLM building (26th and Speedway streets).