SYLLABUS
Meteorology 100
Introduction to Meteorology
Spring 2008
(a) Warm-ups
(b) Daily Quizzes
(c) Lecture Exams
(d) Final Grades
KNOW POLICY: What you must know about class policies is in the syllabus. If you have questions, please ask me.
KNOW SCHEDULE. You must read the syllabus, consult the website, read your email, ask other students or ask me. If you have trouble, please ask me. The most important dates are in the section called Important Dates.
CHANGE HAPPENS: I reserve the right to alter the syllabus within reason.
PLAGIARISM AND CHEATING: Don't! UWS 14.03 describes conduct subject to disciplinary action. UWS 14.04 describes the procedures for handling academic misconduct.
ASSESSMENT AND RESEARCH: The UW-Colleges assessment program enhances the quality and effectiveness of curriculum, programs, and services. Because they are of primary importance for student learning, this department may assess this course. I provide further information in class.
| Instructor | Alan Paul Price | ||||
| Office | Rm 222 | Or check 246 and 247 | |||
| paul.price@uwc.edu | The best way to reach me | ||||
| Phones | Rm 222 | 262-335-5235 | Leave a message on my machine | ||
| Main Office | 262-335-5200 | ||||
| Websites |
Main:http://washington.uwc.edu/about/faculty/price_p/default.html D2L:http://d2l.uwc.edu/ |
The school website also links to D2L. | |||
| Office | Monday | 02:00pm-03:00pm | I may be in 246 and 247. | ||
| Hours | Tuesday | 09:00am-10:00am | You can talk to me during Lab. | ||
| Wednesday | 02:00pm-03:00pm | ||||
| Thursday | 09:00am-10:00am | ||||
| Friday | 02:00pm-03:00pm | ||||
| Class | GEO124 Lecture | 09:00-09:50am | MWF | RM 201 | |
| Schedule | GEO124 Lab 1 (MW) | 10:00-11:50am | MW | RM 247 | |
| GEO124 Lab 1 (MW) | 10:00-11:50am | TR | RM 247 | ||
| MLG100 Lecture | 02:25-03:40pm | TR | RM 246 | ||
| LIB311 | 06:30-09:30pm | T | RM 246 | April 1 - May 13 | |
There are no prerequisites for this course. This class partially fulfills a natural science credit for both an AAS and a Bachelor degree. To see how this course transfers to other Universities, go to the University of Wisconsin Transfer Information System.
Knowledge and Understanding: On completing this course, students will be able to:
Define and can apply the basic tenets of systems theory to meteorology;
Recall and explain earth-sun relationships and how it controls energy input to the earth;
Recall and explain the basic structure of the earth’s atmosphere;
Describe and explain energy balance and its relation to temperature;
Describe and explain the relationships between temperature, pressure, wind and humidity;
Explain lifting and stability and describe their relationship with condensation and precipitation;
Explain formation of air masses and fronts and describe their effect on weather;
Explain formation, structure and effect of midlatitude cyclones;
Describe and explain the origins of tropical weather;
Explain formation, structure and effect of hurricanes;
Describe the process of weather forecasting.
Skills: On completing this course, students will be able to:
Read, summarize and interpret the appropriate texts;
Communicate ideas orally;
Interpret diagrams and graphs pertaining to weather and climate;
Interpret photographic and other images pertaining to weather and climate;
HARDCOPY TEXT: Understanding Weather and Climate (4e) by Aguado and Burt is in the bookstore. Most of your readings come from this text. I will assign readings by email after each lecture. You must find the assignments by reading email or using D2L. Readings are prefaced with a A.
WEB TEXT: Readings from Fundamentals of Physical Geography by Pidwirny are online at http://www.physicalgeography.net/fundamentals/contents.html. Find the assignments by reading email or using D2L. Readings are prefaced with a P.
OTHER: As necessary, I will provide handouts, direct you to other websites through this website, or provide links through email.
| COMPONENT | DATES | POINTS | PERCENTAGE | |
| Lecture Exam 1 | 02-19 | 100 | 17.241 | |
| Lecture Exam 2 | 03-13 | 100 | 17.241 | |
| Lecture Exam 3 | 04-17 | 100 | 17.241 | |
| Final Exam | 05-17 1-3pm | 142 | 24.483 | |
| Warm-up | Daily (except exam day) | 25 warm-ups; 2 points each; drop 2 lowest; no more than 9 by email | 46 | 7.931 |
| Daily Quiz | Every day (except exams) | 25 quizzes; 4 points each; drop 2 lowest | 92 | 15.862 |
| CLASS TOTAL | 580 | 100.000 |
ATTENDANCE: I do not grade attendance.
However, if you are absent, you get no points for missed warm-ups or Daily
quizzes (see WARM-UPS, or
DAILY QUIZZES). You
are responsible for finding out what you missed.
ABSENCE DURING EXAM: If you miss a lecture exam, I give a new one (see LECTURE EXAMS).
EXTENDED ABSENCE: I automatically drop
the two lowest grades for warm-ups and the two lowest grades for the Daily quiz. While I do no allow make-ups on any of these I
do make allowances for extended absences. If you are absent longer than a week, see me!
SCHEDULE: The syllabus and Website has a
complete schedule (see CLASS SCHEDULE).
READINGS: Readings are from the text
and, occasionally, other sources. A list is in the
CLASS SCHEDULE.
GRADING: I estimate class grades after
every lecture exam, at midterm, and, sometimes, after lab exams. I will
provide this on paper and through email. A 65% on an exam is a C. For
all other work a 75% is a C. See FINAL GRADE for the grading for the entire
course. I adjust the grading if tests are more difficult than I intended.
QUESTIONS ON GRADES: See me about your
grades at any time. However, if you think there is any problem with the
grading, please see me immediately!
EXTRA CREDIT: I give extra points on
warm-ups. I may give extra credit for certain types of University Lectures and
or Community service. It never
accounts for more than 3% of your grade. I will not take research or other
papers for extra credit.
DROPS: It is better to drop the class
than to simply stop attending and earn a failing grade. But this is a decision
better made sooner than later. The deadline is April 13.
INCOMPLETES: UWWC grants incompletes to those in good standing when illness of the student or a family member prevents the student from taking the Final. You must talk to me before I can give an I.
DESCRIPTION: After class, I email questions and post them on D2L. You answer the questions and turn them in at the beginning of class. We discuss the answer in class so you can make corrections.
PURPOSE: I base questions on material you read before class. I use warm-ups as a source of Exam questions. Thus your answers are both research and a rough draft for answering exam questions.
SUBMISSION: Write or type answers on a clean sheet. Make two copies. Turn in one copy at the beginning of class. Keep one copy. No questions accepted after first 10 minutes. If you cannot get to class, you can email answers until 2:35pm. I accept only 6 emailed answers a semester.
FORMAT: Most questions include a multiple choice question. Then they ask for explanations of features and processes in outline form. A few questions involve original thinking.
CITATION: Always state your sources. If you use the assigned text, list the authors’ last names, the date and the title. For any other source, use a complete citation.
GRADING: Warm-ups are worth 2 points (see IMPORTANT DATES). A good faith effort gets 2 points. You lose points when do not turn in answers or because your questions are inadequate. For extremely detailed outlines that include drawings, I give extra credit of 0.5 points.
MISSED WARM-UPS: I do not accept late warm-ups. Instead, I drop the three lowest scores to provide for excused absences. If you are absent longer than a week, please see me.
DESCRIPTION: These are short (1-2 question) multiple-choice or short answer quizzes at the
start of each class. Come in late and you miss the quiz.
I do not give make-ups. I drop the lowest quiz automatically. On the first class
day after a major exam, the quiz consists of an evaluation of the exam.
PURPOSE:
I base questions on
material covered since the last
quiz. I use these questions to get you to review your notes, practice test
questions and attend class.
GRADING: Each quiz is worth 4 points (see
IMPORTANT DATES).
ABSENCES: I drop the lowest two scores. That should provide for a weeklong absence. If for some reason you are absent longer than a week, please see me.
DESCRIPTION: Exams take an entire period. Bring a pencil for multiple choice. You can use a pen on the rest. Exams cover material listed in the schedule (see CLASS SCHEDULE). Each is a mix of multiple choice, short answer, fill-in-the-blank, matching and and/or essay questions. Daily questions are the most important source of test questions.
QUESTION FORMAT: Each exam has a mix of multiple choice, short answer, diagrams, fill-in-the-blank, and essay questions. Many questions involve interpretation or creation of images and diagrams. NOTE: Warm-ups provide most of test questions.
REVIEW QUESTIONS: There is a section for REVIEW QUESTIONS on the website. These cover significant topics. Use questions to organize relevant information from the book and the lecture. I provide some sample answers with the first set of questions.
ONLINE REVIEW: Reviews are run as discussion boards on D2L so that everyone can see the answers that I provide. The boards are also open all year so that you can start asking questions on the very first day of class. I tend to sign off no later than 1:30pm the day of an exam.
RETURNING TESTS: I return tests as quickly as possible. I discuss written questions in class. If there is a problem with the grading, tell me as soon as possible.
EXAM CURVE: I have curves on all graded work, but I adjust this curve based on the difficulty of the exam. The final curve for the course is the weighted sum of all previous curves.
LATE LECTURE EXAMS: Contact me after you miss an exam and keep in contact until you take it. I will try to create the exam as soon as possible, but I cannot make it a higher priority than regularly scheduled class preparation. Late exams have new questions that are short answer and essay.
FINAL EXAM: The Final is comprehensive. Part of it derives from the first three exams. I provide review questions. I do not return Finals but you can see yours up to a year after the end of class.
NO FINAL OPTION: Whoever has 96% of the total points on the last day of class OR whoever has an A and the highest point total does not take the final and will get an automatic A in the course. In the latter case, anyone within 1% of the top grade also gets out of the Final Exam.
DESCRIPTION: I calculate the total points you accumulate divided by the total points possible. Your grade then depends on the curve. The curves I use are below. The difficulty of a particular test or other factors may affect the actual curve.
|
Letter Grade |
Exam Curve |
All other |
Final Curve |
|
A |
88% |
94% |
89% |
|
A- |
84% |
90% |
85% |
|
B+ |
80% |
87% |
81% |
|
B |
76% |
84% |
77% |
|
B- |
72% |
80% |
73% |
|
C+ |
68% |
77% |
69% |
|
C |
64% |
74% |
65% |
|
C- |
60% |
70% |
61% |
|
D+ |
56% |
67% |
57% |
|
D |
52% |
64% |
53% |
|
D- |
48% |
60% |
49% |
| WEEK | DATE |
DAY |
LECTURE TOPIC | READING | ASSIGNMENT |
| 1 | 01/28/08 | M | |||
| 01/29/08 | Tu | Introduction and Systems | Pidwirny (P)4a-4f | None | |
| 01/30/08 | W | ||||
| 01/31/08 | Th | Systems and the Atmosphere | Pidwirny (P)4a-4f, Aguado and Burt (A) 1-23 | Warm-up (WP) 1; Quiz (Q) 1 | |
| 02/01/08 | F | ||||
| 02/02/08 | Sat | ||||
| 02/03/08 | Sun | ||||
| 2 | 02/04/08 | M | |||
| 02/05/08 | Tu | Energy and Earth-Sun Relationships | P6g-6i, A 30-53 | WP 2; Q 2; Seasons Handout | |
| 02/06/08 | W | ||||
| 02/07/08 | Th | Energy and Earth-Sun Relationships | P6g-6i, A 30-53 | WP 3; Q 3 | |
| 02/08/08 | F | ||||
| 02/09/08 | Sat | ||||
| 02/10/08 | Sun | ||||
| 3 | 02/11/08 | M | |||
| 02/12/08 | Tu | Energy Balance | A 54-70 | WP 4; Q 4 | |
| 02/13/08 | W | ||||
| 02/14/08 | Th | Energy Balance | A 54-70 | WP 5; Q 5 | |
| 02/15/08 | F | ||||
| 02/16/08 | Sat | ||||
| 02/17/08 | Sun | ||||
| 4 | 02/18/08 | M | |||
| 02/19/08 | Tu | Exam 1 | None | None | |
| 02/20/08 | W | ||||
| 02/21/08 | Th | Energy Balance | A 54-70 | WP 6; Q 6 (Eval) | |
| 02/22/08 | F | ||||
| 02/23/08 | Sat | ||||
| 02/24/08 | Sun | ||||
| 5 | 02/25/08 | M | |||
| 02/26/08 | Tu | Temperature | A 70-86 | WP 7; Q 7 | |
| 02/27/08 | W | ||||
| 02/28/08 | Th | Temperature | A 70-86 | WP 8; Q 8 | |
| 02/29/08 | F | ||||
| 03/01/08 | Sat | ||||
| 03/02/08 | Sun | ||||
| 6 | 03/03/08 | M | |||
| 03/04/08 | Tu | Temperature | A 70-86 | WP 9; Q 9 | |
| 03/05/08 | W | ||||
| 03/06/08 | Th | Pressure and Wind | A 92-115 | WP 10; Q 10; Winds Handout | |
| 03/07/08 | F | ||||
| 03/08/08 | Sat | ||||
| 03/09/08 | Sun | ||||
| 7 | 03/10/08 | M | |||
| 03/11/08 | Tu | Pressure and Wind | A 92-115 | WP 11; Q 11 | |
| 03/12/08 | W | ||||
| 03/13/08 | Th | Exam 2 | None | None | |
| 03/14/08 | F | ||||
| 03/15/08 | Sat | ||||
| 03/16/08 | Sun | ||||
| 8 | 03/17/08 | M | Spring Break | ||
| 03/18/08 | Tu | Spring Break | |||
| 03/19/08 | W | Spring Break | |||
| 03/20/08 | Th | Spring Break | |||
| 03/21/08 | F | Spring Break | |||
| 03/22/08 | Sat | ||||
| 03/23/08 | Sun | ||||
| 9 | 03/24/08 | M | |||
| 03/25/08 | Tu | Atmospheric Circulation | A 210-253 | WP 12; Q 12 (Eval) | |
| 03/26/08 | W | ||||
| 03/27/08 | Th | Moisture | A 120-155 | WP 13; Q 13; Adiabatic Hanout | |
| 03/28/08 | F | ||||
| 03/29/08 | Sat | ||||
| 03/30/08 | Sun | ||||
| 10 | 03/31/08 | M | |||
| 04/01/08 | Tu | Moisture | A 120-155 | WP 14; Q 14 | |
| 04/02/08 | W | ||||
| 04/03/08 | Th | Lifting and Stability | A 156-168 | WP 15; Q 15 | |
| 04/04/08 | F | ||||
| 04/05/08 | Sat | ||||
| 04/06/08 | Sun | ||||
| 11 | 04/07/08 | M | |||
| 04/08/08 | Tu | Clouds and Precipitation | A 169-211 | WP 16; Q 16 | |
| 04/09/08 | W | ||||
| 04/10/08 | Th | Clouds and Precipitation | A 169-211 | WP 17; Q 17 | |
| 04/11/08 | F | ||||
| 04/12/08 | Sat | ||||
| 04/13/08 | Sun | LAST DAY TO DROP | |||
| 12 | 04/14/08 | M | |||
| 04/15/08 | Tu | Air Masses and Fronts | A 254-275 | WP 18; Q 18 | |
| 04/16/08 | W | ||||
| 04/17/08 | Th | Exam 3 | None | None | |
| 04/18/08 | F | ||||
| 04/19/08 | Sat | ||||
| 04/20/08 | Sun | ||||
| 13 | 04/21/08 | M | |||
| 04/22/08 | Tu | Midlatitude Cyclones | A 276-305 | WP 19; Q 19 (Eval); | |
| 04/23/08 | W | ||||
| 04/24/08 | Th | Midlatitude Cyclones | A 276-305 | WP 20; Q 20 | |
| 04/25/08 | F | ||||
| 04/26/08 | Sat | ||||
| 04/27/08 | Sun | ||||
| 14 | 04/28/08 | M | |||
| 04/29/08 | Tu | Thunderstorms | A 306-351 | WP 21; Q 21 | |
| 04/30/08 | W | ||||
| 05/01/08 | Th | Thunderstorms | A 306-351 | WP 22; Q 22 | |
| 05/02/08 | F | ||||
| 05/03/08 | Sat | ||||
| 05/04/08 | Sun | ||||
| 15 | 05/05/08 | M | |||
| 05/06/08 | Tu | Tropical Storms | A 352-385 | WP 23; Q 23 | |
| 05/07/08 | W | ||||
| 05/08/08 | Th | Tropical Storms | A 352-385 | WP 24; Q 24 | |
| 05/09/08 | F | ||||
| 05/10/08 | Sat | ||||
| 05/11/08 | Sun | ||||
| 16 | 05/12/08 | M | |||
| 05/13/08 | Tu | Weather Forecasting | A 386-427 | WP 25; Q 25; Course Evaluation | |
| 05/14/08 | W | ||||
| 05/15/08 | Th | ||||
| 05/16/08 | F | ||||
| 05/17/08 | Sat | Final Exam 1-3pm | |||
| 05/18/08 | Sun | ||||
| 17 | 05/19/08 | M | |||
| 05/20/08 | Tu | ||||
| 05/21/08 | W | ||||
| 05/22/08 | Th | ||||
| 05/23/08 | F | ||||
| 05/24/08 | Sat | ||||
| 05/25/08 | Sun |
Created by Alan Paul Price
mailto:paul.price@uwc.edu
D2L Class Website:
http://d2l.uwc.edu/
UW-Washington County Website:
http://washington.uwc.edu/default.asp
Last Modified
February 07, 2008