Physics 451/Women 485 Course Requirements
Last Update: 6 January 2002.
This URL: http://courses.washington.edu/wost/Win02/AssignDetail.html
This is a reading, writing, and
discussion
course. These are the major requirements:
-
participating in class discussion (with evidence
of having completed the readings) (10% of final grade)
-
leading/facilitating a class presentation, and a
report on this presentation (20% of final grade, partly by peer evaluation)
-
preparing four short reports (32% of final grade)
-
summary of one of the panels or visiting speakers
(8% of final grade)
-
final project and paper (30% of final grade)
Submission Format:
-
All electronic submissions should be submitted at
the Electronic
Submission Site or emailed to wost@u.washington.edu.
Admissible formats are text, html source, MSWord97/98 and pdf.
-
All hard-copy submissions should be handed in in
duplicate. If not turned in during class, one hard copy should be
given to Prof. Olmstead (PAB B433 or her mailbox in the Physics department
office) and one to Prof. Ginorio (Padelford B110P or her mailbox in the
Women Studies department office).
Written products (details include
in-class requirements as well):
-
Class Participation (details)
-
an evaluation of each student presentation
[due within a week of the
presentation; submitted on web-based form through the class
web page]
-
Class Presentation (details)
-
one-page summary or abstract of the presentation,
to be posted in the web page, submitted as a group.
The summary should include the main references used for the presentation.
[due one week before the
presentation; electronic
submission]
-
list of readings the class should complete before
the presentation, submitted as a group.
[due one week before the
presentation; electronic
submission]
-
copy of viewgraphs or other materials used in presentation,
submitted as a group
[due one week after the
presentation; electronic
or hard-copy submission]
-
three page report on the class presentation / topic
of the presentation, submitted individually.
Groups should divide the topic among themselves for the information to
be summarized in the reports.
[due one week after the
presentation; electronic
or hard-copy submission]
-
Short Reports (each
maximum three pages in length) (details)
-
report on status (numerical
statistics and individual)
[due Monday 28 January;
either electronic
or hard-copy submission]
-
report on UW program
[due Friday 15 February;
either electronic
or hard-copy submission]
-
personal reflection on climate
issues
[due Monday 25 February;
either electronic
or hard-copy submission]
-
report on policy issue in
memo format
[first draft due Friday
8 March; Final draft due Monday 18 March; either electronic
or hard-copy submission]
-
Speaker Summary (details)
-
report on of one of the panels or visiting
speakers, to be posted in the web page, submitted
as a group
[due one week after the
panel or speakerís talk; electronic
submission]
-
Final project (details)
-
proposal for project (maximum one page)
[due Monday 4 February; either
electronic
or hard-copy submission]
-
full project (18-25 pages)
[due Monday 18 March; ;
hard-copy submission.
Students taking course
for W-credit must submit first drafts by Friday 1 March]
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Class Participation
(10%)
Class participation refers to your:
participation in class discussions,
asking questions of speakers and panel members, and
completion of the peer
evaluations in a timely, fair and thoughtful manner.
participation in class chat
room
Your class participation should follow from
the readings and the speakerís presentations. You are expected to complete
assigned reading(s) before each class. Participation that is grounded on
the readings -- whether reporting on them or critically assessing them
against other knowledge your have or your own experiences -- will be considered
of a high quality. Thoughtful responses to othersí comments, reflections
from your own experiences, sharing of materials that you have observed
on TV or read in the paper are also forms of class participation, but participation
that consists only of these forms is not sufficient. Questions for
class discussion or for the speakers may also be submitted electronically
by 11 a.m. on the day of the class, and follow-up discussion may take place
in the class chat
room.
[NOTE: If you find active class participation
very difficult but want to stay in this class we might explore other alternatives.
You need to consult with instructors immediately about this issue.]
As part of your class participation you will evaluate
each student presentation. Using a form that lists the criteria to be used,
you will evaluate the presentations. This form is to be submitted through
the web page within a week of the presentation. (Because your classmatesí
grades are affected by this rating, no delays are possible. If you miss
a class presentation, turn in an evaluation of the readings.) Giving the
same rating to all criteria and/or all respondents does not qualify as
a fair or thoughtful evaluation.
We require everyone in this class to use e-mail
and the world-wide web regularly. Minimally the e-mail will be used to
forward information that is pertinent to the class. Optimally, students
will continue class discussion (or initiate discussions of the readings
before class) in the class chat
room.
Your class participation will be assessed both
in terms of quantity and quality using the criteria listed
in the second paragraph of this section.
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Class presentation
(20%)
Each student will make a class presentation on one
of the topics marked with square bullets in the syllabus. Students will
work in teams of two or three people; students must agree about grading
by the time that the abstract for the presentation is submitted. In your
presentation you will provide
-
definitions of the issue under consideration
-
relevant statistics about the issue, if appropriate
-
frameworks or theories behind the readings chosen
-
results or conclusions reached by the authors
-
your own critical analysis or interpretation of the
readings
These presentations should take about 15 minutes
per student presenting, including time (1/3 total) for a class discussion.
A typical group of three will use a 50 minute class period, including 15-20
minutes for discussion, while a group of 2 will present for 20 minutes,
with 10-15 minutes discussion.
Students must agree among themselves about the
division of labor for all of the steps below since 2/3 of your grade on
class presentation will be graded jointly with your co-presenters. As part
of your class proposal please describe what agreements you have made among
yourselves regarding division of labor. If after reaching this agreement
difficulties arise, please communicate with the instructors before
the graded activities (writing of the abstract and list of readings, presentation)
are due. If you wish separate evaluations and grading of your oral
presentation, this must be announced before your presentation.
One half of your grade for the presentation will
be based on your in class presentation, as evaluated by both your peers
and the instructors. The remaining half will be allocated to the
written materials: abstract and choice of assigned readings (1/6), and
summary report (1/3).
Because many students have never made a class
presentation, we detail the steps under four headings: preparation, mechanics
in preparation for the presentation, presentation, and summary of the presentation.
You should keep in mind the evaluation form of the presentation as you
prepare each of the steps below.
PREPARATION
1. Select a topic. It is likely that some
topics will be selected by more than one person. In that case you can choose
to form a team or to switch to another topic. Because of the number of
days and topics available for student presentations in this class, most
people will work in groups of three. General topics and their dates
may be found in the schedule of classes.
The specific topic(s) covered by your presentations are chosen by your
group, in consultation with the instructors.
2. Decide on partition of labor within
your group. Meet as a group to define the topic and subdivide
the effort. Set definite times for meetings and deadlines for preparing
parts of the presentation.
3. Find background material. Start with
a computer library search. Review reference lists of materials assigned
by instructors or visiting speakers--these may lead you to other references.
You may also consult with the instructors.
4. Consult with the instructors about the
approach you want to take and the readings that you want to include in
your presentation. The student(s) will base their presentation on at least
three readings.
[NOTE: If you borrow materials from the instructor:
Materials that you assign for your presentation must be returned a week
before the presentation. All materials must be returned by the last day
of classes. If material is not returned, course requirements will be considered
as incomplete.]
5. Select the bibliography. The reading(s)
should be selected because of centrality to the issue and to the approach
that you want to pursue, it should serve to frame your presentation. Readings
need not be in agreement with each other, when this is the case you must
address in your presentation these disagreements or discrepancies. The
suplemental readings should be selected because they clarify, expand, challenge,
etc. the core reading(s). Determine which material should be read
by the entire class before your presentation.
Materials that address issues of gender and race
in the context of science and engineering are central to the concerns of
this course. Materials that address socially defined identities that may
also characterize ethnic minorities or women (for example: disabilities,
sexual orientation) and that have also affected their participation
in science or engineering in the U.S. Reports on the scientific or engineering
work by ethnic minorities or women and their impact on the disciplines
or professions are also relevant to some topics.
Popular journals can be used to illustrate issues,
but should not be chosen as main sources of information. Videos or other
audio-visual aids are appropriate; speak to the instructor about how to
use and obtain these.
6. Decide on the format of the presentation.
Presentations can follow any format: lecture, conference-style with a poster
or overheads, role playing, debates, inclusion of poetry, video, etc. Do
what feels most appropriate to the task; feel free to consult with the
instructors about this.
7. Prepare the one-page abstract of the presentation.
Describe your presentation in less than 200 words. You should include
the major topics to be discussed and enough information to guide the class
as they read the assigned material before your presentation. This
abstract, to be submitted
electronically,is due one week before the presentation and will be
posted in the web page.
8. Prepare the list of assigned readings.
The list of readings should be prepared in American Psychological Association
style. Examples of this style will be distributed in class. For each reading,
include a one sentence summary of what the students should concentrate
on in the reading. The list should be submitted
electronically one week before the presentation and will be posted
in the web page.
ONE WEEK BEFORE THE PRESENTATION
1. Submit an electronic version of the abstract,
major references used for your presenation, and the reading assignment
for the class.
2. Bring six copies of each reading
to class. Four of these will be placed in reserve in the Odegaard Undergraduate
Library and in the reserve section of the Physics Library.
3. Return to the instructor any
materials lent to you that you decided to assign as readings.
4. Meet as a group to practice your
presentation.
PRESENTATION
[NOTE: You should anticipate having no more than
15 minutes/presenter for the entire presentation. Assume students have
read the assigned material, and divide time fairly between topics/students.
Allow ample time (about 1/3 of the total) for class discussion.]
1. Introduction. Each presentation should
begin with an introduction of the topic and an explanation for the approach
chosen in discussing it. A rationale/context should be provided for the
choice of the readings.
2. Main Body of Presentation.
-
Format You are free to format the presentation
in any way you feel is most effective. You may have a single student
present the entire report, or divide the time among yourselves. Regardless
of the format that you choose, the content of the presentation should cover
the items listed in the next bullet.
-
Content. Address all of the following:
-
definition of the issue under consideration
-
relevant statistics about the issue, if appropriate
-
frameworks or theories behind the assigned readings
-
results or conclusions reached by the authors
-
your own critical analysis or interpretation of the
issue
Clearly discuss the relevant materials in the readings,
and delineate differences among them. You can go from the broad to the
detailed or vice versa. Keep in mind the course goals presented in the
first-day handout. Feel free to draw comparison between your readings and
others assigned in the course.
3. Class Discussion. Facilitate all studentsí
participation. Be sure to pay attention to all studentsí contributions.
If someone has not participated you may want to be particularly encouraging
of their participation. Answer questions clearly and succinctly.
WEEK FOLLOWING PRESENTATION: SUMMARY REPORT
Each student will prepare (and be graded separately
on) a 3-page summary of the part of the presentation that they were most
involved in preparing. If the group worked equally on all parts,
then they should agree how to split the material for the summaries.
The report may be submitted either electronically
or in hard copy within one week of the presentation.
Your report should summarize the presentation
and the conclusions you reached. This summary will flow from the readings
and the approach you have selected, and makes reference to the assigned
readings and other literature. You may also note any substantial
points raised during the class discussion. The abstract you submitted may
serve as an outline to use for this summary.
Attach to this summary
copies of any handouts or overheads that you used.
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Short reports (32%)
Each student will prepare four short reports with
a maximum of three pages. You will choose the content of the report. Reports
may be submitted either electronically or in hard copy.
Report 1. Status of Ethnic
Minorities and Women in Science and Engineering (8%)
[Due Monday 28 January]
This report will complement the information you have
learned about the status of ethnic minorities and women with information
that is of interest to you. This report will have two parts:
1. a statistic or number about a group (one -
two pages)
2. a number about an individual (one - two pages)
The statistical/group part of the report will
focus on a number or figure of interest to you that you would like to explore
over at least eight instances. It should include at least two related
items over at least two time points. The following are examples of
the kinds of statistics that may be used for your short report; feel free
to develop your own question about any such figure or statistic.
-
what has been the proportion of women undergraduate
students in US physics and biology departments in 1970, 1980, 1990 and
2000?
-
how many ethnic minorities received degrees from
four different physical science departments at the UW in 1975 and 2000?
-
what are the four institutions with the highest percentage
(or total number) of women of color in engineering in the U.S. at two different
time points?
-
what fraction of girls from four ethnic groups took
calculus (or physics) classes in high school at two different time points?
-
what is the number (or fraction) of assistant, associate
and full professors of a particular field at three time points?
You should report the statistic, and then discuss
its relevance and reasons underlying it. Also, address its significance
with regards to the topics of this class. Give full citations for
all sources used.
The number about an individual refers to
something about that individual that makes them unique or of historical
significance. The following are examples of the kinds of numbers about
an individual that may be used for your short report; feel free to develop
your own question about any individual.
-
who was the first woman of color to graduate
with a degree in a particular science or engineering field in the U.S.
OR at the UW?
-
who is the only woman or ethnic minority to
hold a particular position in science (for example, full professor in a
department, or the dean of engineering in the West Coast)?
-
who is the first female chemist or physicist
to receive a major prize from the American Chemical or Physical Society?
-
who is the highest ranking woman in a science-related
job in the national government?
Frame your question, identify the individual, and
write a report that documents your claim about their uniqueness or historical
significance. Give full citations for all sources used.
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Report 2. UW Program
Statistics (8%)
[due Monday 11 February]
Choose a Department or Program (done in class, Monday Jan 25) in the Natural
Sciences Division of the College of Arts and Sciences, the College of Engineering,
College of Ocean and Fisheries Sciences, College of Medicine or College
of Pharmacy, and find the following (tell us your source):
-
Name, Year of Ph.D., Year of Hire, Year left University (if no longer
here) of:
-
First Tenured or Tenure-Track Faculty Member
-
First Chair
-
First Graduate with BS/BA; MS/MA; Ph.D.
Who was
-
white male
-
white female
-
ethnic minority male
-
ethnic minority female
-
Find for most recent year available (include year):
-
number of graduates (BA/BS; MA/MS; Ph.D.) in each of the above categories
-
number of faculty (Assistant; Associate; Full Professor) in each of the
above categories
If there have been no women or minorities in a particular position (e.g.,
chair), or if the information is not available, state this explicitly.
Detail the sources you used to determine that there is no information,
as well as those from which you found information.
These statistics will be summarized and posted on the web page.
If a student is interested in extra credit for collating this information,
please contact the instructors.
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Report 3. Personal Reflection
on Climate Issues (8%)
[due Monday 25 February]
This report will be a personal reflection on climate
issues as described in the classes and readings of the section on Climate
issues and Successful Interventions. This section begins with the
discussion of climate issues at the university on February 4, and ends
with Ramon Lopez' presentation February 22.
A personal reflection is intended as an opportunity
to use both cognitive and affective aspects of your experience in
and out of the classroom. For example,
-
a reading or presentation in this class reminded
you of some experience you have had in a science or engineering or math
class and now you find yourself re-interpreting that earlier experience
and perhaps re-experiencing the emotions of that first experience
-
during a discussion in this class you did not feel
free to share your thoughts about a topic because you were concerned with
your classmatesí reactions, but you can see the tie between that experience
and the experiences of ethnic minorities or women in science or engineering
settings
-
you found a statement in an article that contradicted
what you have learned in another context through readings or personal experience
-
you see a TV report or news or listen to a radio
program and find yourself arguing with what youíre seeing because of what
you are learning in the class
Using incidents such as those described above as
the basis for the report, you will then reflect critically on the incidents
or experience. Make reference to the specific article, presentation, discussion,
TV news, or conversation, etc. What were your thoughts or feelings at the
time? Do you have a sense of what may account for that: your own personal
knowledge, your awareness of some kinds of behaviours or systems that are
considered normative by some people? What is your position in this context--are
you in a position to make a difference, or to just be a critical observer?
A good reflection (that will receive a high grade)
will be clear in its references to incidents or articles, will indicate
that reflection has occurred about the what/why/how for what is being described.
A good reflection will indicate how the knowledge you are gaining from
your participation in this class has grown as the quarter has gone by--for
example, something that seemed obscure or difficult in the beginning is
clearer now; or the knowledge has served to question things that you may
not have given a second thought to previously. It will also state clearly
what your position is.
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Report 4. Policy Issue
in Memo Format (8%)
[1st draft due Friday 8 March; Final draft due Monday
18 March)
Using what you have learned in this class and in
the previous reports about the status and the issues for ethnic minorities
and women in science and engineering, prepare a report on a a policy issue
affecting UW using a memo style. In this report you must choose an
issue and write an argument for what could be done to make a positive difference
for ethnic minorities and women in science and engineering. You can choose
to target your proposed action or agenda for action at the level of the
experiences of individuals or of groups, at any level of the educational
or professional development, or at any discipline in science and engineering.
Since this is an agenda for action at the UW, address your memo to a particular
person or officer in the UW or the state that has the power to implement
your proposal. Examples may be:
-
to address the issue of retention of women in the
physics major at the UW you write a memo to the chair of the department
arguing for a proposed action that--based on your learning in this class--can
be argued will very likely increase the retention of women in physics
-
to address the issue of reduced participation of
minorities and women in calculus-based physics relative to the university
population, you write a memo to the deans for undergraduate education and
engineering with suggestions of improvements to the freshman advising process
that will remediate this situation.
-
to address the shortage of qualified science teachers
in low-income school districts, you write a memo to your state legislator
and the chair of the appropriate legislative committee suggesting a plan
to enable science Ph.D.'s (post-doctoral fellows) to spend a limited time
teaching in the school system without a degree in education.
-
to address the decline in interest in science and
engineering by minorities and women during middle and high school, you
write a memo to the dean of the graduate school and the dean of the college
of education detailing ways to entice science and engineering majors and
graduate students to volunteer in the public schools.
Thus, in this report you must identify an issue relevant
to a particular population, identify the level at which you want to work,
organize the information learned from the class into a coherent argument
for a particular proposal for action. The grade on this report will
depend on how well you fulfill this description. The discussion of the
last two days of classes will focus on these memos and the class as a whole
will categorize and prioritize these agendas for actions.
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Summary of one of the
panels or visiting speakerís presentations (8%)
Submitted electronically either at the Electronic
Submission Site or emailed to wost@u.washington.edu
Due one week following presentation.
Submitted as a group. Graded jointly unless
otherwise arranged beforehand.
Pairs of students will prepare summaries of presentations
made by visiting speakers and panels. These summaries will be posted in
the web page, thus they should succintly convey the basic information about
the presentations. These summaries will include:
full name and titles of presenters and of their presentation
the focus (issue, or population, or policy, etc.)
of their presentation
summary of essential information in their presentation
frameworks or theories behind the information they
presented
methods used in collecting the information they presented
definitions they used
important statistics they presented
results or conclusions reached by the authors
If the presenter or panelist does not address the
issues above you may want to ask them about it during the question and
answer session. Write this report in 600 words or less. Your grade
will depend on an accurate and complete summary of the panel or presentation
you have chosen that meets all of the appropriate items listed above.
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Final project (30%)
[Proposal due Monday 4 February;
1st Draft (for W-credit or general input) due Friday
1 March;
Final Draft due Monday 18 March]
Each student will pursue a special project and write
a report on this project. The project offers another opportunity
to deepen your knowledge and understanding about one particular topic.
The following are examples of special projects,
offered to give you some idea of the range of projects that are possible:
-
do a project in conjunction with one of the offices
or projects on campus that work to support or do research on issues for
ethnic minorities and women in science and engineering, such as the Northwest
Center for Research on Women (NCROW), Center for Women in Science and Engineering
(WISE), or Center for Institutional Change. Write a summary of this
work and its context in relation to material in the course.
-
analyze science textbooks at K-12 or university level
for how they present or consider women or ethnic minorities
-
survey your peers about some aspect related to ethnic
minorities and women in science and engineering and interpret the results
(****This requires Human Subjects approval--you will need to start right
away)
-
thoroughly investigate issues raised in your policy
memo, including reporting on implementation of similar program elsewhere,
and deliver your memo to its intended audience
-
traditional paper on an issue relevant to this course.
This should be a 15-20 page paper based on at least ten bibliographic sources,
at least five of which were not readings for the class. This paper cannot
be used (or have been used) for a different class without significant changes
or additions AND permission of instructor.)
-
your own idea of a special project
Topics must be chosen with approval from the
instructor. A written proposal (no longer than 3-4 paragraphs) must be
submitted by Monday, February 4. In that proposal you must specify what
is your goal in doing this project and how it ties to the goals of the
class. The special project is due the day when the final examination would
have been held, and it must be typed, and submitted (in duplicate) in hard
copy.
You may work in teams on a project (such as a
survey), but separate reports should be written. If you wish part
of your grade to be joint on a project, please discuss with the instructors
as you submit your proposal.
The following factors will be considered for your grade:
1. clear thesis or purpose for your project
2. accurate information, clearly presented
3. appropriate format for the task
4. thorough coverage of relevant issues--if a
traditional paper, include a thorough literature review
5. presentation fulfills the thesis/purpose and
arrives at conclusions that can be deduced from the materials presented
6. creative and/or critical approach to the question
or the issues
7. appropriate and complete references in consistent
bibliographic style (for example, American Psychological Association style).
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