ISP 205 Lab     Syllabus     Fall 2001

The FIRST LABS meet week of TUESDAY September 4.


Location: 331B North Kedzie Laboratory

Lab Manual: Visions of the Universe, by Beers, Daly, Kuhn, Loh, Parker, Simkin, & Stein
          Hayden-McNeil, 10th edition

Web Page: http://www.pa.msu.edu/courses/ISP205L/

Supervisor: Robert Stein, PA 310, 353-8661, email steinr@msu.edu

Office Hours: Tuesday: Noon-1 pm, Wednesday: 3-4 pm.

Instructors: Room PA 318, Phone 353-9920

  Instructor     email  
  Amanda Bayless     baylessa@msu.edu
  Lynn Carlson     carls147@msu.edu
  Jianjun Chen     chenjian@pa.msu.edu
  Eric Eslinger     eslinge4@msu.edu
  YouJuan Li     liyj@pa.msu.edu
  Brian Marsteller     marsteller@pa.msu.edu
  Michael Sheppard     sheppa28@msu.edu
  Daniel Van Wasshenova     djvanwas@pa.msu.edu
  David Wiggins     wiggins@pa.msu.edu
















Laboratory Sections:

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
9:10-12:00
Amanda
sec 1
8:00-10:50
Eric
sec 4
8:00-10:50
Brian
sec 8
8:00-10:50
David
sec 12
8:00-10:50
Lynn
sec 15
12:40-3:30
Jianjun
sec 2
11:30-2:20
Eric
sec 5
11:30-2:20
Bob
sec 9
11:30-2:20
Dan
sec 13
11:30-2:20

sec 16
4:10-7:00
Youjuan
sec 3
3:00-5:50
Brian
sec 6
3:00-5:50
David
sec 10
3:00-5:50
Youjuan
sec 14
 
  6:00-8:50
Michael
sec 7
6:00-8:50
Dan
sec 11
   

Questions, Comments, and Discussion
Comments, criticism, complements, questions and discussion can be submitted via the web at http://www.pa.msu.edu/courses/ISP205L/comment_file.html.
The comments of others can be viewed at http://www.pa.msu.edu/courses/ISP205L/commentpage.html.

ISP 205L is the laboratory part of ISP 205, "Visions of the Universe." The goals of ISP 205L are to reinforce concepts introduced in ISP 205 lecture with concrete examples, to illustrate what astronomers do and how one makes deductions from observations, and to enhance reasoning and problem solving skills. The laboratory meets once a week for 2 hour 50 minutes. Each lab runs for one week (Tuesday through Monday before spring break and Monday through Friday after spring break). The dates for the labs are shown below.





















Laboratory Schedule

 
  Lab         Dates         Topic   Discussion Questions  
  1   9/4 -- 9/10     Observing the Night Sky   Questions for Lab 1
  2   9/11 -- 9/17     Appearance of the Night Sky   Questions for Lab 2
  3   9/18 -- 9/24     Math, Measurements, and Making Plots   Questions for Lab 3
  4   9/25 -- 10/1     The Solar System   Questions for Lab 4
  5   10/2 -- 10/8     Measuring Distances with Parallax   Questions for Lab 5
  6   10/9 -- 10/15     Moon/Image Lab   Questions for Lab 6
  7   10/16 -- 10/22     Spectra   Questions for Lab 7
  8   10/23 -- 10/29     Solar Rotation   Questions for Lab 8
  9   10/30 -- 11/5     Light Curve of a Variable Star   Questions for Lab 9
  10   11/6 -- 11/12     Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram of a Star Cluster   Questions for Lab 10
  11   11/13 -- 11/19     Galaxies and Galaxy Clusters   Questions for Lab 11
  12   11/26 -- 11/30     The Big Bang   Questions for Lab 12



Success

To succeed in ISP 205L, YOU MUST PREPARE BEFORE COMING TO THE LAB. Read the lab manual and assignments in the lab textbook and answer the homework questions on the lab manual answer page. Laboratories are very different from lecture classes. Much of the initiative rests with the student and it is easy to "go through the motions" of each lab without understanding the underlying concepts. The lab time is surprisingly short, so to make the best use of the time you must prepare for the lab beforehand. Read the lab once to get a general understanding of what you will be expected to accomplish, then read it again in order to obtain a more detailed understanding. There will be a short QUIZ at the beginning of each lab based on the lab manual for the current lab and on the what you learned in the previous lab.

To succeed in ISP 205L, talk to your lab partners and the lab instructor. You will be working in groups of two students for most of the labs (in exceptional cases you may be asked to work in groups of more than two). Make the most of your partner: ask him/her for help; test your understanding of by explaining ideas to him/her. However, each student is must write up their own answers (even if they are the same as your partners). Your lab instructor will help by clarifying any confusing instructions and explaining any confusing concepts. Ask them for help when needed.

To succeed in ISP 205L, YOU MUST TAKE PART IN THE CLASS DISCUSSION at the end of each lab. You can ask questions, make comments or answer questions. You can not remain quiet and get a good grade.

Grade

The course grade for ISP 205L is separate from your grade for ISP 205 lecture.

Your ISP205L grade is based (5%) on your answers to the QUIZZES at the beginning of each lab which test your reading the lab manual and your understanding of the previous lab.

Your ISP205L grade is based (70%) on your LAB ANSWERS that are handed in at the end of each lab. Your lowest lab score will be dropped. Their will be NO makeup labs permitted. If you DO miss a lab, this is the one which will be dropped with no penalty. If you miss MORE than one lab, then you will receive a 0.0 for each lab missed beyond the one which is dropped penalty free. Missed labs are very costly in terms of your final grade: each missed lab drops the final grade by about 0.5.

The remainder of your ISP205L grade (25%) is based on your participation in the DISCUSSION at the end of each lab. To get full credit for the discussion part of the lab you must particpate TWICE in each lab. You will receive one point (up to a maximum of 2 in each lab) for each time you participate in the discussion with a relevant comment, question or answer to a question. A list of discussion questions will be handed out at the previous lab and will be available as a link from the web home page.

The grading scale for the Quizzes, Lab Answers and Discussion Participation is:

  Score     Grade  
  94-100%     4.0  
  90-94%     3.5  
  85-90%     3.0  
  80-85%     2.5  
  75-80%     2.0  
  70-75%     1.5  
  65-70%     1.0  
  < 65%     0.0  

For general information see http://www.pa.msu.edu/courses/ISP205L/intro.1stday.html

For information on arithmetic with numbers in scientific notation, see Scientific Arithmetic at the University of Oregon.


Updated: 2001.12.11 (Tuesday) 22:12:16 EST

Bob Stein's home page, email: steinr@pilot.msu.edu