PHY230 Physics II (AG)

Grant Campus Course Adoption Proposal

September 2016

SUFFOLKCOUNTYCOMMUNITY COLLEGE

LETTER-OF-INTENT

T0 COLLEGE ASSOCIATE DEAN FOR

CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT

PROPOSER E-MAILS LETTER-OF-INTENT AS WORD DOCUMENT TO JENNIFER BROWNE, COLLEGE ASSOCIATE DEAN FOR CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT. Dean Browne determines which campuses are affected by proposal and fills out the Response to Proposal Form below. Dean Browne returns the Letter-of Intent and Response to Proposal forms to proposer with copies to the appropriate Executive Deans.

Email Letter of Intent to Dean Browne at

ProposerJanet Haff_____ Campus: A____ E____ G__X__

(name)

Department/Discipline__Natural Sciences______

___

Name of Course Proposal___Physics I, Physics I lab, Physics II, Physics II lab___

Date___September 11, 2015______

College Associate Dean for Curriculum Development completes form below this line.

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Type of Proposal

Course

New______

Revised______

Adoption______X______

Curriculum

New______A.A._____ A.S. _____ A.A.S _____

Revised______Certificate __

Expedited Revision______

This proposal requires the following approval(s)

Single Campus _____*College__X__

*College approval is required when the proposal has an impact on more than one campus.

SUFFOLKCOUNTYCOMMUNITY COLLEGE

LETTER-OF-INTENT

T0 COLLEGE ASSOCIATE DEAN FOR

CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT

Description of proposal idea and rationale.

(Proposer should present description of proposal idea on this page along with a

rationale for the proposal.)

The Department of Natural Sciences would like to adopt the following courses:

Physics I, PHY 130

Physics I lab, PHY 132

Physics II, PHY 230

Physics II lab, PHY 232

This proposal is in response to the growth of physics on the Grant campus. Seven years ago, we offered two physics courses per year, one in fall and one in spring (PHY 101, 102). We presently offer five or six sections per year and every semester every section fills. However, we have only offered College Physics I/II, a non-calculus based physics, which may have some transferability problems and PHY 112 Technical Physics (forHVAC and Manufacturing Tech students). We have also had complaints from students, usually LA&S Science Emphasis majors (biology emphasis), that they have to drive to Ammerman to take Physics I and II. They prefer this calculus-based physics class as students know it will transfer to any SUNY college toward a biology degree. Our biology majors have the choice to take physics or organic chemistry but many do opt for the physics sequence. Most students however have opted for organic chemistry to avoid the drive to Ammerman for the physics. We hope to be able to give our students better options in future semesters.

We are proposing to change our schedule to offer one each of PHY 101 and PHY 130/132 during the fall semester in 2016. In the spring of 2017 we will offer one section of PHY 102 and one section of PHY 230. Implementation of Physics II lab will be delayed several semesters until funds can be acquired to properly fit the present physics lab. This was decided after discussion with our physics professor. Until that time, students will continue to take the physics II lab on the Ammerman campus. Our department will be in close contact with the Ammerman department every semester to ensure the students’ needs are met adequately.
The physics chair on the Ammerman campus (Professor T. Breeden) has been notified of our intent.

SUFFOLK COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE

RESPONSE TO PROPOSAL

FROM COLLEGE ASSOCIATE DEAN FOR CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT

College Associate Dean for Curriculum Development uses this form to respond to the proposal with instructions for further developing proposal (e.g., which forms to use, the campuses and departments who need to be consulted, items to be considered when developing the proposal.)

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TO: Dr. Janet Haff, Department Chair, Grant Campus

FROM: Jenn Browne, College Associate Dean for Curriculum Development

DATE: September 18, 2015

***********************************************************

Comments:

I have reviewed the letter of intent to adopt the following physics courses for the Grant campus:

PHY130: Physics I

PHY132: Physics I Lab

PHY230: Physics II

PHY232: Physics II Lab

Please proceed with the proposal by completing a Course Adoption Proposal Form for each course. Once the forms are complete, including the department vote, email the completed proposal forms along with an Executive Dean's Acknowledgement of Support Form to Executive Dean Keane.

As course adoptions are considered multi-campus proposals and are reviewed by the College-wide Curriculum Committee, after receiving Executive Dean Keane’s approval, email the entire proposal packet to Dr. Tina Good, Chair of the College-wide Curriculum Committee.

Please do not hesitate to contact me if you should have any questions at 451-4101 or .

Cc:Executive Dean Keane

Tina Good, College Curriculum Committee Chair

SUFFOLK COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE

INTER-CAMPUS COURSE-ADOPTION PROPOSAL

STOP!!

Unless you have submitted your Letter-of-Intent to the College Associate Dean for Curriculum Development, Jennifer Browne at , and received a Response form back from her, do not continue with this proposal form.

This form is to be used for adopting a course that is already in existence at another campus. Course adoptions are multi-campus proposals and must be approved by the College Curriculum Committee. If possible, please attach an electronic copy of the original documentation establishing the course. If the proposer wishes to initiate an inter-campus curriculum adoption, the New Curriculum Proposal Form should be used. Guidelines and General Procedures for developing a Course-Adoption Proposal can be found on the Governance Curriculum website.

Proposal Checklist

Please be sure you send ALL of the below documents and information in a single email to the College Curriculum Chair, Tina Good, when you are ready to have the proposal considered by the College Curriculum Committee.

(X )Electronic Letter of Intent with Response from College Associate Dean for Curriculum Development

(X)Vote of Department at Adopting Campus:

For: __16__Against: __0___Abstentions: _0____

Date of Vote: _3/8/16_____Proposer's Initials: __VK___

Check One:__X___APPROVED_____NOT APPROVED

( X )Completed Inter-Campus Course Adoption Proposal Form

( X )Completed Course Syllabus

( X )Sample Course Outline with 15-week topic outline

( X )Executive Dean's Acknowledgment-of-Support Form from the Executive Dean at Adopting Campus

cc:Jennifer Browne. Associate Dean of Curriculum Development

Executive Deans of affected campuses

Academic Chairs of affected departments at all three campuses

NAME OF PROPOSAL: PHY 230-Physics II

Requesting Campus: _____Ammerman ___X__Grant ___East

Course Currently Given On: ___X__Ammerman _____Grant _____East

Name of Proposer: _____Dr. Janet M. Haff, Dr. Vivek Kumar____

I.GENERAL RATIONALE

Discuss reason(s) for teaching existing course at additional campus.

PHY230 is the lecture component of the second semester of Physics I/II sequence and supports the LA&S Science Emphasis AS degree. This course sequence satisfies the options listed for the LABI- AS, LAFR- AS and a requirement for LASC- SC that were recently approved by the CCC and College Governance.

Over the last 10 years, the Grant campus has experienced unprecedented growth, especially in the sciences where typically all sections fill each semester. The Department of Natural Sciences needs to expand to accommodate that growth.

The Physics I/II sequence is one catalog choice for the science electives toward a LA&S Science Emphasis; Biology Option AS degree (there are over 200 biology majors on the Grant campus). Presently there are only 2 choices for completion of Science electives; Organic Chemistry I/II or PHY101/102. As the PHY 101/102 will only transfer as an elective, biology majors are required to retake physics upon transferring. Taking a calculus-based physics course will give them additional options and better prepare them for transfer.

Grant campus students taking Physics I/II courses presently drive to the Ammerman campus to do so. This is often a costly inconvenience for most and impossible for many Grant students. Additionally, with adoption of the Physics I/II sequence, Grant students would be able to complete a full Chemistry Option AS degree on their home campus as well as two of the Earth and Space Options (geology sequence and astronomy sequence).

The first semester physic courses PHY130 (Lecture) and PHY 132 (Lab) have already been approved by the curriculum council and are scheduled to run in fall 2016. The proposed course is necessary for the completion of the sequence.

The proposed course, if approved, will run in spring 2017. The enrollment is expected to be enough to fill a class of 24 students with many continuing students enrolling from the preceding semester.

II.RELATIONSHIP TO STUDENTS

A. Proposed cycle for offering (e.g., fall, spring, and summer)

PHY 230 will be offered each spring semester.

B. Estimate of student enrollment 24

III.COSTS

A.List costs and space requirements

There will be no additional costs. PHY 130 is a lecture class and would be replacing one of the two PHY 102 sections in the Grant campus schedule.

B.Number of faculty available to teach course

One new full time faculty member would be hired if demand for the course is realized as expected. A current physics full time or adjunct faculty member in collaboration with Ammerman campus discipline faculty and administrators will initially teach the course.

IV.Course Syllabus

(Complete Course Syllabus Form below.)

V.SAMPLE COURSE OUTLINE

(See the Faculty Handbook online at Faculty Handbook for guidelines. Be sure to include a 15- week topic outline. Please note: The audience for the Sample Course Outline is not your students. It is the College Community, other colleges and universities, and possibly SUNY System Administration and the New York State Education Department. A modified excerpt of a Sample Course Outline is below to help you with providing the necessary information. It is NOT a form but merely a guideline for drafting an example of a course outline for the course.)

COURSE OUTLINE
Course Number and Title: PHY 230 Physics II
1. OUTCOMES OF THE COURSE:
Upon completion of this course, students will be able to:
  1. Solve word problems in the areas of gravity, electrostatics, DC Circuits, capacitors, inductors and resistors, the effect of magnetic fields on charged particles and current elements and the origins of magnetic fields.
  2. Understand the concepts of fields and potentials at a level appropriate to someone beginning the study of engineering or physical science.
  3. Apply the laws of physics to describe electricity and magnetism at a level appropriate to someone beginning a study of engineering/physical sciences.
  4. Apply the use of integral calculus using a problem-solving approach in each of the areas listed in the catalog description.
  5. Understand how physical phenomena can be organized into a few qualitative and quantitative models.
  6. Transfer successfully into an engineering/physical science program at a four-year institution.
  7. Apply critical thinking skills in order to analyze multi-step word problems to formulate solutions.
2. PROCEDURES FOR ACCOMPLISHING THESE OUTCOMES:
List of possible methods to be used for achievement of the course’s outcomes:
Lectures, classroom discussions, analyzing and solving word problems in-class, assigning & checking homework, use of visual aids (including online videos and/or simulations), demonstrations.
3. STUDENT REQUIREMENTS FOR COMPLETION OF THE COURSE:
List of possible requirements (subject to the specific procedures chosen above) for completion of the course:
  • Complete all non-optional lecture tests (STRONGLY REQUIRED).
  • Submit periodic homework assignments on time.
  • Complete periodic quizzes.
  • Read all of the assigned chapters in the textbook.
  • Participate in classroom discussions.
  • Participate in analyzing and solving analytical problems in class.
4. TEXTBOOK:
Required Textbook:
  • Physics for Scientists and Engineers, by Giancoli, pub. Pearson
5. WEEKLY OUTLINE TOPICS TO BE COVERED:
This is a suggested schedule, with exams. Instructors always have the flexibility to adjust the timeline of this schedule and number of exams according to their needs. However, the topics listed below should be followed closely.
Week 1 /
  • Applications of Newton’s law of gravity to extended sources (integral approach)

Week 2 /
  • Introduction to electrostatic; Coulomb’s law; use Coulomb’s law to calculate the electric force between charges

Week 3 /
  • Electric field; use Coulomb’s law to calculate the electric field at a point in space due to different distribution of charges
Exam
Week 4 /
  • Gauss’s Law and applications

Week 5 /
  • Electric potential; calculate electric potential due to any charge distribution; electrostatic potential energy

Week 6 / Exam
  • Capacitance; dielectrics; electric energy storage

Week 7 /
  • Electric currents and resistance

Week 8
Week 9 /
  • DC circuits in series and parallel; Kirchhoff’s rules; ammeters and voltmeters
Exam
Week 10 /
  • Magnetic field; force on electric charges moving in magnetic field; Lorentz equation; Hall effect

Week 11
Week 12 /
  • Ampere’s law; Biot-Savart law

Week 13 /
  • Faraday’s law; electromagnetic induction; inductors; inductance; magnetic field energy; LR circuits

Week 14
Week 15 / Exam(s)
6. LIST OF SUPPLEMENTARY READINGS: None.

SUFFOLK COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE

COLLEGE COURSE SYLLABUS FORM

To meet the ideals of Suffolk County Community College, new courses should, if appropriate, consider issues arising from elements of cultural diversity in areas of textbook choice, selection of library and audio-visual materials, and teaching methodology. (Please note that a course syllabus is not the same as a course outline. A course syllabus outlines the general requirements for a course. A course outline is the specific document created by the individual faculty member to distribute to a specific course section. Please see the Faculty Handbook for further details as to what to include in a course outline. A SAMPLE course outline should be attached below.)

I.Course Number and Title:

(Be sure to consider whether this course is a 100- or 200-level course and give a rationale for the decision.)

PHY230 Physics II

II.Catalog Description:

PHY230: Introduction to electricity and magnetism, Coulombs Law, Gauss’s Law, potential, Lenz’s Law, Ampere’s Law, Faraday’s Law, inductance, magnetic materials. (4 hrs, lecture/recitation.) Prerequisites: MAT142, PHY130. Corequisite: PHY232.

Note: Fulfills SUNY General Education Requirements for Natural Sciences.

.

III. *Learning Outcomes: (Main concepts, principles, and skills you want students to learn from this course)

Upon completion of this course, students will be able to:

  1. Solve word problems in the areas of gravity, electrostatics, DC Circuits, capacitors, inductors and resistors, the effect of magnetic fields on charged particles and current elements and the origins of magnetic fields.
  2. Understand the concepts of fields and potentials at a level appropriate to someone beginning the study of engineering or physical science.
  3. Apply the laws of physics to describe electricity and magnetism at a level appropriate to someone beginning a study of engineering/physical sciences.
  4. Apply the use of integral calculus using a problem-solving approach in each of the areas listed in the catalog description.
  5. Understand how physical phenomena can be organized into a few qualitative and quantitative models.
  6. Transfer successfully into an engineering/physical science program at a four-year institution.
  7. Apply critical thinking skills in order to analyze multi-step word problems to formulate solutions.

IV. Programs that Require this Course: (List or indicate none.)

  • Engineering Science / A.S. Degree
  • Liberal Arts and Sciences: Science Emphasis – Physics option / A.S. Degree
  • Liberal Arts and Sciences: Science Emphasis – Chemistry option / A.S. Degree
  • Liberal Arts and Sciences: Science Emphasis – Astronomy option / A.S. Degree
  • Liberal Arts and Sciences: Science Emphasis – Geology option / A.S. Degree
  • Liberal Arts and Sciences: Science Emphasis – Environmental Science Forestry option / A.S. Degree

V.Major Topics Required:

  1. Application of Newton's Law of Gravity to extended sources (integral approach)
  2. Charge and the motion of charged particles
  3. Electric field and potential
  4. Fundamentals of DC circuits, including resistors and capacitors
  5. Laws: Coulomb, Gauss, Ampère, Biot-Savart, Faraday, Lenz
  6. Magnets and magnetic field
  7. Electromagnetic induction, inductors

VI. Special Instructions:

  1. Prerequisite(s) to this Course: (List or indicate none)

MAT142, PHY130

B. Course(s) that Require this Course as a Prerequisite: (List courses or indicate none)

PHY245, PHY247

C. External Jurisdiction: (List credentialing organization/association if appropriate or indicate none.)

None.

VII. Supporting Information: (Examples – newspapers, journals, Internet resources, CD-ROMS, Videos, other teaching materials, textbooks, etc.)

Required Textbook:

  • Physics for Scientists and Engineers, by Giancoli, pub. Pearson

VIII. Optional Topics: (List or indicate none)

None.

IX. Evaluation of Student Performance:

List possible methods to be used for evaluating students’ achievement of the course’s learning outcomes.

Lecture tests/midterm/final, homework assignments, quizzes.

SUFFOLK COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE

EXECUTIVE DEAN’S ACKNOWLEDGMENT-OF-SUPPORT

The Proposer should email completed proposal packet along with the Executive Dean’s Acknowledgment-of-Support Form. The Proposer should complete the top half of the form and the Executive Dean should check the “Support” or “Do Not Support” line based on the Campus’ ability to commit to implementing the proposal if it is approved through the Governance process.

Criteria to consider for supporting this proposal are listed below. If the Executive Dean is in general support of the proposal but has specific concerns related to the proposal, these concerns should be stated in the comment section. If the Executive Dean does not support the proposal, specific reasons should be listed in the comment section.

The Executive Dean should email completed form to Proposer so that it can be included in the proposal packet to be submitted to the College Curriculum Committee Chair.

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The Executive Dean’s Acknowledgement-of Support is a commitment to support the implementation of the course adoption in terms of:

Academic Merit

Availability of Personnel

Adequacy of Facilities

Budgetary Needs for Supplies and Equipment

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This section to be filled out by Proposer:

Name of Proposal: ______ Physics II, PHY 230______

Adopting Campus: A____ E____ G___X__

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This section to be filled out by Executive Dean:

____X______Support

______Do Not Support

Name of Executive Dean:______James M Keane______

Date____6/7/16______

Comments:

1