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Physics 211 (welcome! ) Instructor : Chris Coffin Wngr 283 [email protected] u

Physics 211 (welcome!) Instructor: Chris Coffin Wngr 283 [email protected]

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Page 1: Physics 211 (welcome!) Instructor: Chris Coffin Wngr 283 coffinc@physics.oregonstate.edu

Physics 211(welcome!)

Instructor: Chris CoffinWngr 283

[email protected]

Page 2: Physics 211 (welcome!) Instructor: Chris Coffin Wngr 283 coffinc@physics.oregonstate.edu

Classroom Courtesy

Spend your tuition as you wish, but you must let

others hear and see for the entire 50 minutes. So…

Don’t be late. Class starts at the top of the hour.

Silence your phone/tablet/computer

Do NOT start packing up before the lecture ends.

Page 3: Physics 211 (welcome!) Instructor: Chris Coffin Wngr 283 coffinc@physics.oregonstate.edu

What are you going to do in this course?

1. Practice using your own words to express the ideas of physics and the methods of science.

2. Practice using your own words to translate from a real-life situation to a mathematical model.

3. Practice using your own words to reason through a situation you’ve never encountered before—but using principles you already know.

Page 4: Physics 211 (welcome!) Instructor: Chris Coffin Wngr 283 coffinc@physics.oregonstate.edu

Using your own words is a major portion of the credit in this course. Guessing is not rewarded.

No exam answer (not even a T/F/N question) is accepted as correct until/unless you explain in your own words/methods why and how it’s correct.

Why? Because in the real world (any profession, almost any endeavor), simply being right isn’t enough.

You have to convince others that you’re right.

Page 5: Physics 211 (welcome!) Instructor: Chris Coffin Wngr 283 coffinc@physics.oregonstate.edu

Evaluate the following statement (T/F/N):

“February has 29 days.”

1. True

2. False

3. Not enough information.

Page 6: Physics 211 (welcome!) Instructor: Chris Coffin Wngr 283 coffinc@physics.oregonstate.edu

How to Do Well in This Course

(and see also the Syllabus)

Stay caught up! Use the resources offered on the

Course Calendar; budget enough time/energy).

Be prepared! Do the guided study!

Be an active learner. What’s that? For one

thing, it means, “Use your own words.”

Page 7: Physics 211 (welcome!) Instructor: Chris Coffin Wngr 283 coffinc@physics.oregonstate.edu

Can you finish this common saying?

“You never really understand something until

you can ___________________________ .”

Page 8: Physics 211 (welcome!) Instructor: Chris Coffin Wngr 283 coffinc@physics.oregonstate.edu

Why MUST you use active learning

to succeed in this course?

Because physics is all about understanding—not

memorizing.

Think about it….

Page 9: Physics 211 (welcome!) Instructor: Chris Coffin Wngr 283 coffinc@physics.oregonstate.edu

The forest… the trees… the roots…

Biology is staggeringly complex: untold billions of

organisms and relationships—all formed by fewer

than 100 chemical elements.

But what governs the chemistry—and the universe

it sloshes around in? How does it hold together?

Or move? Or expand?

Just a few very powerful principles.

Page 10: Physics 211 (welcome!) Instructor: Chris Coffin Wngr 283 coffinc@physics.oregonstate.edu

(zoom in….)

Page 11: Physics 211 (welcome!) Instructor: Chris Coffin Wngr 283 coffinc@physics.oregonstate.edu

And how do we express those principles? How

do we describe the few deep consistencies of the

universe? With mathematics.

Math is the language. Physics is the story. It’s a

story of principles, not facts: unraveling those few

principles requires deductive reasoning (yet a third

“language” or way of thinking). You’re not here to

memorize facts. Your goal is to understand how

the facts arise—even predict them—from the

principles.

Page 12: Physics 211 (welcome!) Instructor: Chris Coffin Wngr 283 coffinc@physics.oregonstate.edu

Concentrate on the Principles

Your study should never be verbatim “rehearsal”

for the exams. The exam questions/problems will

be ones you’ve never seen before.

So if you understand the principles—and if you can

translate your words into mathematical language —

you’ll be able to handle those questions. You’ll be

at least “conversational” in the language and logic

of the universe. This takes practice.

Page 13: Physics 211 (welcome!) Instructor: Chris Coffin Wngr 283 coffinc@physics.oregonstate.edu

And you must choose your words well:

Let them enhance, rather than obscure, your meaning.

“To be or not to be…”

“Four-score and seven years ago,…”

“There is no frigate like a book…”

“When in the course of human events,…”

“I pledge allegiance to the flag…”

“Two roads diverged in a yellow wood…”

“Keep things as simple as possible—but no simpler.”

Page 14: Physics 211 (welcome!) Instructor: Chris Coffin Wngr 283 coffinc@physics.oregonstate.edu

Don’t forget: All language has context

(definitions, assumptions, references, syntax, etc.)

“Bleen viptelmorger fixa quocedj sheka wuzzy g’hadthl.”

(“It will be mostly fair today, with highs in the mid-70’s.”)

So when you use math to describe the universe, equations are useless

unless you know (i) what you’re saying with them (so you must know

how to translate—how to say it in your words!); and (ii) when/how

the equations apply—and when they don’t.

Page 15: Physics 211 (welcome!) Instructor: Chris Coffin Wngr 283 coffinc@physics.oregonstate.edu

Again, this reminder: The exam questions/problems will

always be new—you won’t have seen them before.

Why? Two reasons:

(1)So that I know you’re understanding the principles, not

memorizing solutions. That’s the “school” reason.

(2) Because new problems are the only kind you’ll ever get

paid to solve. That’s the real-life reason.

Page 16: Physics 211 (welcome!) Instructor: Chris Coffin Wngr 283 coffinc@physics.oregonstate.edu

And new problems aren’t simple. And they don’t have a big label stuck to them, saying “Use this tool or that tool!” You have to diagnose what’s involved—what combination of tools actually apply. And every situation will have a different, unknown mix of features. (Welcome to real life.)

And usually, you have to decide what kind of solution is appropriate—so you know what tools are appropriate—because real-life problems don’t generally have one solution or one answer. In fact, your assumptions will govern how you approach the problem.

Page 17: Physics 211 (welcome!) Instructor: Chris Coffin Wngr 283 coffinc@physics.oregonstate.edu

How long is the Oregon coast?

Discuss this in small groups until each of you could...

• Clearly state your assumptions

• Succinctly explain why your result is reasonable