
| Dr. J. Steven Kite |
Teaching Assistants (= TAs) |
|
| jkite@wvu.edu |
||
| G43 Brooks Hall | *@mix.wvu.edu
|
*@mix.wvu.edu |
| 293-5603 ext. 9819 | *** Brooks Hall | *** Brooks Hall |
| Office hours: TBA *Or by appointment |
Office hours: TBA *Or by appointment |
Office hours: TBA *Or by appointment |
| www.geo.wvu.edu/~kite/teaching.html |
|
|
GEOL 101 is a
3 credit course with
two
75 minute lectures per week. It fills WVU General Education
Curriculum Objective 2B:
Basic Mathematical Skills and Scientific Inquiry and Objective
4: Contemporary Society. It also meets Liberal Studies
Program
Cluster
C (science and math) requirements. Taken with GEOL
102, GEOL 101 meets
WVU Lab Science requirements. A
student may not get credit for both
GEOL 101 and GEOL/GEOG 110.
The prime objective of Geology 101 is
to characterize the earth and explore
the processes acting on and within our seemingly unique planet. The
course examines natural
phenomena
that influence humankind (floods,
landslides,
earthquakes, and volcanoes) and natural resources that contemporary
society requires
to exist. As students, you will apply basic math and analytical skills
to explore the earth, but our objectives differ somewhat from other
scientific inquiry classes because the enormity of geologic time and
a scientific
method drawing upon multiple
working hypotheses are integral to how geoscientists think.
I may share personal beliefs on the
interaction
between people and the earth. I present these opinions not as gospel
for
you to accept without question, but rather as one view that will help
you
come up with your own solutions on how to best sustain the planet and
our resource-dependent lifestyles.
My teaching web page, www.geo.wvu.edu/~kite/teaching.html,
will be used heavily. Alternative
web pages may be developed on e-campus later this semster; more
information will be provided in class.
If you take all of the tests and exams in this
class, each will
count
as 20 percent of your final grade (a total of 80 percent). All regularly
scheduled tests and the final exam will be made up of 33 four-choice
multiple-choice questions. Regularly
scheduled tests and the final exam will be given in the Geology &
Geography Department computer labs on the 4th floor of Brooks
Hall (rooms 415, 416, 419, or 420.)
The first three
tests
will
be
held outside
of the regularly schedule class time on Thursday (4 to 7 p.m.) or
Friday
(2 to 5 p.m.). The final exam will be given during the regularly
schedule exam period. See the class
schedule (www.geo.wvu.edu/~kite/GEOL101Schedule.html)
for exact dates and times.
| How to take a test in the 4th floor Brooks computer center and wildlife management area: |
| 1. You MUST know how to log on to eCampus before taking the exam. |
| 2. Bring your WVU STUDENT ID . The G&G game wardens (test proctors) do NOT accept any other form of ID. |
| 3. Report to the hallway outside rooms 415 & 419 during the scheduled test period to check in with the game wardens . Arrive at least a half hour before the end of test period when the test software shuts down. If you arrive at a high volume time, you may need to wait for an available computer. |
| 4. Tell the the game wardens you are in Kite's Section 2 GEOL 101. (Other classes may be taking tests at thes same time.) |
| 5. You may NOT
have any materials whatsoever (including papers, notes, textbooks,
memory sticks/cards,
cell phones, or other electronic devices, etc.) with you at the
computer. If any of these items are found with you at
the computer, we will assume you are attempting to cheat and we will
treat this infraction as academic dishonesty. You may leave these
items with your coat or backpack on the floor around the perimeter of
the room. |
| 6. Do NOT open up any other computer program while testing. The computers are locked down to prevent other programs from opening and there is monitoring software installed on the computers. |
Final Exam. The
final exam is 2/3 “comprehensive” (i.e. covering material from earlier
test
units) and 1/3 on material covered after Test 3. You
are not
required
to take the final exam if you take
both
of the last two quizzes, which will be given during the last week
of classes (a.k.a. "dead
week"). These last two quizzes are an incentive for everyone in
the class to participate to
the end of the semester.
If you choose not to take the final exam, but do complete both
of the last two quizzes, then each
test and your quiz
average
will each constitute 25 percent of your grade. Everyone is
encouraged to take the final exam, but
many find the final exam grade will
not pull up their course grade unless they put significantly more
effort into preparing for
the final than
they did for earlier tests. It is possible to drop a letter grade
or more if one takes the final exam poorly prepared.
Students who fail
to take both of last two quizzes and do not take the final
exam may lose two letter grades or more from their final course grade.
(Ouch!)
The moral of
this story
is "build" your grade in this class from the beginning of the semester,
show up for class, don't miss the last two quizzes, and don't count on
the final
exam
helping your grade without a change in work habits or circumstances.
GRADING
SCALE
Grading in this class differs from
other
sections of Geology 101. I have certain expectations
and you must earn the grade you receive. Compared to other sections of
Geology 101, it may be easier to
earn an A,
but may be easier to get an F. I give + and - grades,
even though they are not figured into the WVU GPA; they may be factored
into a recalculated GPA at other schools if you transfer or apply to
graduate school elsewhere. "Incompletes" are not given, except
in truly exceptional circumstances beyond a student's control. No
"standard
curve" is applied to test scores, but scores are evaluated
based on other
physical geology
sections in previous years and the difficulty of
questions on each test. The three tests and the final exam will
not be easy. Some multiple-choice questions will require critical
thinking skills beyond recall and understanding of basic concepts; 100
percent is a very rare
score, and at least 50 percent is required for a passing
grade. The grading scale
will be as follows: "A" = >88.00, "B" = 75.0 to 87.99, "C" = 62.0 to
74.99, "D" = 50.0 to 61.99, and "F" = < 49.99.
Generally extra credit must be
student-designed,
student-directed projects dealing with aspects of geology. Book reports
and the like are not appropriate for extra credit in this course. All
extra-credit
work
will be averaged into the rest of the class grade, rather than added
on. Thus, extra-credit work must be of superior quality to
improve
your grade. Extra credit will be graded under the same rigorous
standards
as other work in class. Students who want to do extra credit work must
submit a formal typed 100-200 word proposal describing the project
no later than the 2nd Tuesday in April. The proposal will be
approved or denied within 1
week of
receipt.
Historically, many, if not most, completed extra credit projects did
not actually improve the student's final
letter grade in this course.