|
BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE * Fall 07
Breedlove, S.M., Rosenzweig,
M.R., & Watson, N.V. (2007). Biological
Psychology5th
Ed, Sinauer Associates, Inc.
Diamond, M.C. & Scheibel, A.B. (1986) The Human Brain Coloring Book, Collins.
I'm usually in the lab on Tuesday, Thursday, and Sunday evenings. If you can catch me, day or night, I'll be more than happy to chat (I actually get paid to do what I'd do for free--talk). OBJECTIVES: STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES: In order to receive appropriate accommodations, students with disabilities must register with the Center for Teaching and Learning Excellence and provide relevant documentation. Students should contact Mary Ellen Pichiarello (Extension 4039) or Jim Muniz (Extension 4218), 5th floor, St. Thomas Hall, for an appointment. CLASS ATTENDANCE:
TESTING-GRADING: Read Ahead Quizzes: This course incorporates Read Ahead Quizzes. You will be given light and lively quizzes almost every week that are intended to assess whether you have read each chapter at least once. They will consist of five questions per chapter (2 points per question) from the assigned readings for that week. With one exception (see schedule) quizzes will be taken during the first 5-7 min of Tuesday classes (don't be late). The lowest score for quizzes covering chapters for each exam will be dropped and the remaining quiz points added to the total points earned on each exam before scores on that exam are curved. Grades: The results of each test will be "curved" (see below) on a 4.67 point scale. Typically, the top grade on each defines "4.67." Chance performance (that which could be earned merely by stabbing a pencil at the answer sheet) defines "0.0". For each test, additional raw scores will be announced that determine "1.0", "2.0", "2.67", "3.67", and "4.67". You can calculate your precise curved score by interpolation. For example, if 40= 2.67, 45 = 3.67, and you earned a score of 44 on Exam I, then your curved test score would be 3.47 (that is 2.67 + 4/5 = 3.47). If you are unsure about what your grade is, or question if you calculated it correctly, come visit. Note: My curve is not based on number of people, rather, on percentage of earned points. Therefore, there is no limit to the proportion of students who can earn A's (or any other grade). At the end of the course, your final grade will be converted from averaged number to letter grade based upon the numeric values of letters in calculating the GPA. For example, a B+ = 3.33 and an A- = 3.67; therefore, the A- range would be from 3.67 to 3.99. A grade of A would be earned for a course average of 4.0 and above. The 3.47 you received in the earlier example would be a B+, leaving you .2 below the A- range and .14 above the B+ range.
Numbers to Letters: For each exam you will receive a grade that ranges from "0.0" to "4.67", such as the 3.47 mentioned above. You can convert these numeric grades to letter grades using the following table. On the table below, a 3.47 equates to a grade within the B+ range:
There will be 3 semester exams and a comprehensive final. All students must take the final in its entirety. Examinations will be given during the designated class periods, no exceptions. Your overall examination grade will be defined by these tests--67% for the semester exams and 33% for the final. There will be no extra credit assignments, nor will there be any make ups for midterms. Should you miss a midterm, the procedure outlined below will allow you to replace this grade. Do not miss the final. Tests will consist of: text figures, your reproductions of drawings, coloring book plates, multiple choice, fill-in, and very short answer essay questions drawn from both lecture and ALL assigned readings. Students should not overlook the latter source of information. NOTE WELL, there will be comprehensive components to exams 2 and 3. As the semester progresses, I will identify material that is so fundamental to the course that it may appear on every subsequent exam. By the end of the course, this fundamental information should be second nature to you. The net effect of this Rolling Thunder cumulative testing procedure is that it will make the overall course much easier because you will remain fluent in the basic concepts necessary to understand all course content. Trust me, you'll like it! The Final:
You may opt to challenge (i.e., replace) one and only one semester exam grade with the appropriate curved score from the final. The midterm and final sub-part grades will be compared and the HIGHER used in calculating your course grade. Therefore, the challenge option cannot lower your score. If you have missed a semester exam, you must use your challenge to replace this grade. ASSIGNED READINGS: GROUP "KIDS JUDGE NEUROSCIENCE PRESENTATION OR INDIVIDUAL WEB-BASED--ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY WITH REACTIONS : NOTE: YOU MUST CHOOSE AND COMPLETE ONLY ONE OF THE FOLLOWING TWO ASSIGNMENTS.
Kids Judge:
ANGEL-BASED-THAT
SHOULD HAVE BEEN ON THE EXAM QUESTIONS: IN THE NEWS: In alternate weeks (assigned alphabetically), you should find a link to a news story on the Web that relates to some aspect of Neuroscience. There will be threads on the Discussion Forum for your link postings. Please include a very brief (2-3 sentence) description of each link. These postings will be considered part of class participation and we will discuss a few each week. Postings should be made before noon each Friday. Be sure to post something that hasn't already been posted and don't wait until the last minute!CHAPTER ERRORS AND/OR IMPROVEMENTS: No textbook is perfect.
I'll award a .5 bonus to the first student who posts (and
explains/corrects the mistake) a
mistake found in the text. The posting should be on the thread
for that week's reading. This bonus will be applied on the exam
covering the offending chapter. Similarly, if you can improve a
section of the chapter in the same number of words, or less, I'll award
you a .25 bonus using the procedures just described. If others
feel that they can improve on your improvement,
and succeed, you may both receive a .25 bonus. I'll have to be
the
final mediator regarding whether submissions have actually improved
things. You may receive bonuses for no more than one
mistake and two text re-writes for each exam. That is, you cannot
improve a single test score by more than 1.0. You may only submit
one error and two re-writes for each exam, regardless of whether bonus
points are awarded. That is, you can't just keep firing off
potential errors and re-writes hoping something works - be thoughtful.
CHAPTER/LECTURE QUESTIONS:Students are required to read all such postings. There will be a 1.0 overal course grade reduction for failure to remain current. As you read each chapter and experience each lecture, I'd like you to share anything that is causing confusion. There will be a forum-thread for each week and you should share what topics require additional attention so I can adjust my lectures to be of the greatest value. Students are required to read all such postings. There will be a 1.0 overal course grade reduction for failure to remain current. Over the summer the department purchased student response clickers for class use. For the nominal one time fee of $5 the deparcment will lend you a clicker for class use in any departmental class using a clicker during your undergraduate career. (We accept cash only and require non-sequential unmarked bills.) The clickers will be distributed and collected during each class period - you don't get to take them home. You could order a clicker of your very own from the company for about 10 times as much and then you could have it for all time. But we're the only department using this technology on campus at the moment. It's unlikely that purchasing your own clicker would be a wise investment. I have no attendance policy, but if you are in class and clicker questions are asked - you MUST respond (technical difficulties do happen and that's no problem). If you don't respond to the vast majority of questions asked when you are in class, a 1.0 overal course grade reduction will be imposed. These clickers are intended to improve our collective dialogue. This will improve both instruction and learning - this is a collaborative effort we're engaged in - you must collaborate - it'll be fun!
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||