Dr. Wade B. Worthen
Office: Townes South 171B
Phone: x-3390
Lecture: Plyler 129, 1:00-2:20 pm, Tuesday and Thursday
Laboratory: Plyler 129, 2:30-5:20 pm, Tuesday
Text: The Economy of Nature, Ricklefs, 6th ed.
I expect you to attend every class, lab, and field trip, and to be ON TIME.
I cannot emphasize enough how important it is to attend every class, laboratory,
and field trip. I have taught for 20 years, and folks who miss class do poorly.
However, you are adults and are responsible for your own education and life,
so I won't punish you for not coming to class... but you will probably earn
a poorer grade. I expect you to be in class each day, when the period begins;
it is distracting for everyone when someone comes in late. If you have a disability
and you need academic accomodations, you should contact the Office of Disability
Services in the Basement of Earle Infirmary (294-2322). Do this in a timely
manner, early in the term. Then, you should bring this request to me so I can
honor and implement your accomodation. Although their are some dates labeled
as "NO LAB", I do not want you to schedule anything during these periods.
If weather is really nice, we may move an activity up into those slots. There
is also a saturday when a field trip is scheduled that is too long to squeeze
into a lab period. If you have a conflict with these dates, let me know.
Grading Policy:
I will assign grades in the following manner. There are 700 available points,
and final letter grades will be assigned such that grades of 90% or above earn
at least an "A range" grade, 80%-89% at least a "B range" grade, and so forth.
Determination of these letter grade cutoffs will be at the sole discretion of
the professor; "curving", if warranted, will be on total points accumulated
and not individual assignments. +/- grades will be assigned based on total percentage
of points earned, as well as more subjective criteria such as improvement through
the term and performance on the final.
There will be three "unit" exams given during lab. The final is comprehensive, with 50 points on 'new' material and 100 points on old material from the first three units.
There will be two quizzes before the first exam, and a quiz during each of the other units.
There will be lab assignments associated with most laboratories; some will be worth more than others depending on the effort required. Most will simply be a list of questions to answer, but a couple will involve data analysis.
You will also write a very short paper (3-5 pages, 12 pt. font, 1.5 line spacing, 1" margins), on some aspect of the "state of the world". You will describe both positive and negative aspects. You will also give a short 10 minute ppt presentation on your topic during our last lab period. Suitable topics are listed here. If you want to do a different topic, check with me first.
POINTS | |
---|---|
Lecture Exams, 3 @ 100 each | |
Quizzes, 4 @ 25 each | |
Final Exam (comprehensive) | |
Lab Assignments | |
State of the World Presentation | |
TOTAL |
Air Quality (Pollution) - Theo | Drinking Water Availability - Tiffany | Atmospheric Composition |
Global Temperature Patterns | Precipitation Patterns | Invasive Species - Amy |
Storm Intensity Patterns | Forest Coverage | Emergent Diseases - Marian |
Changes in Glacial Ice | Arable Land Usage - Adrian | Biodiversity: Top Predators - Parker |
Sea Level Changes | Fossil Fuel Usage | Biodiversity: Insects - Grace |
Fisheries - Jack | Ecological Refugees - Coralia | Genetic Diversity of Crops - Kara |
Studying for this Class:
I distribute study questions with each lecture. USE THEM LIKE THIS:
1) Study the material before looking at the questions. When you are confident you understand the material, put your notes aside and take out some paper.
2) Write out answers to each question without looking at your notes.
3) Check your answers against the notes/book. Add what you missed, and correct your errors.
4) Basically, use the notes as a way to practice for quizzes and tests... this way, you can really see what you DO know and what you DON'T, and not fool yourself into thinking "oh yeah, I know that..." without actually committing to a written answer.
5) Also, do not begin studying by answering the questions, because then you will only focus on this information and will ignore the rest. Although MANY TEST QUESTIONS will be THE SAME AS or SIMILAR TO the study questions, there will be other questions on the rest of the material, too. You can probably earn a grade in the B range by just knowing all the answers to the study questions. But an A will require that you know the other stuff, too. Fair warning.
Here's a little aside. One of the most frequent comments on "rate my professor" or on my course evaluations is "he is very hard". You know, I really find that hard to believe. Basically, I give you 80% of the exam questions beforehand!! Yes, I do want specific answers to these questions, that show as detailed an explanation as was presented in class. But really, why else would I discuss something in class at a given level of detail if I wasn't going to test you at that level of detail? If you answer a study question and you are not sure if you have answered it correctly, or if the question is awkwardly worded and you don't understand what I am asking, please send me an e-mail. I'll happily review SOME of your answers (most you should be able to check yourself), and I will ALWAYS clarify the question.
I want you to learn this material, and I want you to do well. I hope we have a fun term!