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| Physics 221 | Sections 1 and 2: Fall, 2009 |
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Homework
Homework is turned in
using WebAssign. You will need an access
code purchased through the Cadet Store to use the system. If you do not have it at the beginning of
class, the system gives you a two-week grace period to acquire it. To log in, go to www.webassign.net,
and fill out the Log In form
on the right side of the page.
Your user-id is your first initial and last name,
your institution is Citadel, and your password is the last four digits of your
Citadel ID number. For example, if your
name is John Smith and your ID number is Instructions for
answering WebAssign questions are provided by the system. Please take the time
to read them, because you normally only have five attempts to answer a
questions, and errors in entering the answer count toward the total. WebAssign will understand answers only in a
very specific format. Do not guess what
this format is. The first problem set
has some questions designed to illustrate some common answer types. WebAssign is particularly fussy about
symbolic answers: remember that capitalization counts, and parentheses must be
properly positioned. The formula previewer ("eyeball" button) helps, but does
not catch all errors. No submissions are accepted after 7:00:00 AM on the due date, by WebAssign's clock. After that, the answers are available on-line. Extensions for known conflicts require previous approval, and are given only in rare cases. Emergency extensions are possible only if you have not viewed the set after it was due, when the answers are available. Do not wait until the
last minute to start a problem set.
Normally, you should try to have the problems completed before class, to leave time to ask
questions in the next class if you have any serious problems. If you are routinely waiting until the last
day, or worse, until the last night, to do the problems, you have a serious
scheduling problem. Successful students
often begin work on the problems as soon as they are posted. WebAssign will not give credit for incorrect
answers, so you must allow time for multiple attempts, in case your first
attempts are wrong. In the event of a
wrong answer, don't be overconfident: grading errors are very rare, and the
problem is almost always with the answer. A common error is to enter too few
digits, or to keep too few in intermediate calculations. WebAssign normally expects an answer to be
correct within 1%, which requires at least three digits to be used throughout
calculations. If you are in doubt about an answer, you can send me an e-mail if
you start early enough to leave time for an answer. (The last night the set is open is probably
too late.) Do not expect to solve
all of the problems while seated at the computer. Most are too difficult for
this. A successful strategy is to do all
your work symbolically on paper first, and put in numbers only in the later
stages. This makes it easier to check
and understand your work, and makes it easier to review for an exam. Keep a record of all of your problem-solving
steps, and draw a lot of pictures: much of physics problem solving is
geometrical. |
| Dr. S.A. Yost | Dept. of Physics | The Citadel |