Information
for Session 1, 2006
-
Consultation:
room 129 Old Main Building.
Brief Syllabus
The aim of the course
is to give you some appreciation of the wonder of the universe. We will
do this by describing the nature of different elements of the cosmos – the solar
system, the stars and the galaxies, and challenge you to understand these in relation
to the world around you. The course is designed to give students from a
non-scientific background an appreciation of the techniques, the discoveries and
the excitement of modern astronomy and astrophysics.
The history of
civilisation has been inextricably linked to our perception of our physical
environment. Our understanding of that environment and our attempts to
control it have been the driving force behind our technological development
as a species. Astronomy is the oldest science and it is through a consciousness
of the heavens that we first came to recognise our place in the universe.
This has developed from an initial flat-Earth, homosapien-centred view of the
universe, to one dominated on the large scales by the processes of clustering
and voids of galaxies, to the small scale of the fundamental forces and elementary
particles. The lecture material is divided into three main parts, dealing in
turn with astronomical phenomena at ever increasing distance from us:
- The Solar
System: the planets, comets, asteroids and the Sun.
- The Stars
and their Environment: the types and stars within our Milky Way galaxy, and
their formation, evolution and death, including end-products such as supernovae,
white dwarfs, neutron stars and black holes.
- Galaxies and
Large-Scale Structure: the fundamental building blocks of the universe on
the largest scales.
In
addition there will be discussion on special topics such as observatories around
the world, Astronomy in Antarctica (which UNSW is pioneering) and current hot
topics in astronomy.
Assumed knowledge
None.
Timetable
Week
|
Component
|
1
|
No lecture
(due to illness of lecturer)
|
2-5
|
Lectures
on the solar system
|
6
|
No lecture
(lecturer overseas)
|
7-8
|
Lectures
on stars and their environment
|
9-10
|
Lectures
on galaxies
|
11-14
|
No lectures
(tutorials and night observing instead)
|
Assessment
To pass you
must achieve a satisfactory performance in each of:
| Assessment
Component |
Weighting |
| On-line
test |
40% |
| Oral
Presentation |
20% |
| Observing
Class |
20% |
| Portfolio |
20% |
| Overall |
100% |
Online Test
40%
A set of multiple-choice
questions will be set on the material covered in the lectures (i.e. on Solar
System, Stars and Galaxies). While this is based on the lectures, it extends
beyond just the material covered in the lectures. You will need to research
the answers for yourself. The test will be available online by means of the
course WebCT Vista site, and details will be e-mailed to you. It needs
to be completed by the advertised deadline.
Oral Presentation
20%
You are required
to privately research an issue or topic and present your findings in the form
of a 10-12 minute oral presentation to a tutorial group of your fellow students,
who will then ask you questions. Marks will be awarded on the basis of
the overall plan for the talk, the quality of the presentation and the handling
of questions. Marks will also be awarded for your contribution to the
discussion following other student's talks.
Oral presentations
take place during two of the final four weeks of the course. You need
to attend two tutorials, if you only attend one, your mark for the oral presentation
will be halved. You will be divided into tutorial groups based on an availability
form that you complete. When this is done you can choose your topic for presentation
from a list provided by the tutor.
For your talk
you may use either the blackboard or an overhead projector. However slide projectors
or computer displays are not available. Do not try to cover too much material
in your talk. Use no more than one overhead transparency per minute of your
talk, and make sure all transparancies are easily read from the back of the
room. Remember you are trying to give a brief, but entertaining talk to your
fellow students. Anyone simply reading from a script will be scored poorly!
Night Observing
Classes 20%
You will be
given the opportunity to do some real observing of astronomical objects and
to learn how to use a telescope. These classes take place in the UNSW Observatory
on the roof of the Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) building, uphill from
the Old Main Building, adjactent to the lower campus parking station, during
two of the final weeks of session (the alternate two weeks from your oral presentation).
You need to
complete an availability form and return it to the lecturer to indicate which
classes you can attend.
Assessment for
these classes is based upon participation and the completion of a work sheet.
Access to the
Observatory is via the elevator to the top floor, and then through two locked
doors. You must be accompanied by your tutor, and will normally assemble at
the lecture room prior to walking to the Observatory.
The Observatory
contains one C14 (Celestron 14") Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope, housed inside
the dome, and four portable Meade 8s (8") telescopes, which can be mounted on
stands on the roof of the CSE building.
You will generally
be doing your exercises in groups of 3-4 students using the C8 telescopes, while
your tutor will point the C14 to sources of interest in the sky. There is an
electronic (CCD) camera for the C14, though it is not normally possible to set
this up during group classes. The C14 is connected to a computer with planetarium
software, which allows one to readily find objects of interest.
You will be working
at night and in the dark, so please bring warm clothing and a torch, as well
as your study materials. To access the Observatory, all students must be wearing
hard-soled shoes, without high heels.
Classes are not
cancelled due to bad weather! In the event of particularly inclement wseather
your tutor will have prepared an alternative project for you.
If you are interested
in using the observatory at other times, the Science Outreach
Centre holds regular observing nights, usually on Fridays. Further information
can be obtained from the Outreach manager, on 02-9385-7307 in the Faculty of
Science Student Office.
Portfolio 20%
Each student
is required to maintain a journal containing articles from the media on astronomy
and related space sciences. These may be scientific, technical, political or
even historical in nature. Your own concise analytic comments about each
article should be included. You can also include discussion of points
from the lectures which might have particularly interested you and which you
researched further. This needs to be completed by the final week of the
course.
Articles should
be taken from a selection of sources, current during the session. Typical articles
include clippings from newspapers. Long articles from Astronomy magazines can
be used, but their number should be limited, and they should be from several
sources. Similarly the internet and the web may be used to source articles,
but their number should comprise no more than one third the total number selected.
The only exception to this is newspaper articles collected from on-line issues
of Australian newspapers - these may be counted as equivalent to the printed
edition of that article.
Typically you should aim to collect, and comment on, six articles during session.
The most important element in assessment is the quality of the the comment on
the articles. These don't have to be long, perhaps a couple of paragraphs on
average, but they should discuss the merits of the journalism, what you learnt
from it, what you think about it (including whether you disagree or think it
is bad journalism), etc etc.
You may include photocopies of the journal articles instead of the original
copy if you wish. The quality and insight of your commentary is the most important
element of the assessment.
Portfolios are to be handed in by the deadline at the end of session. Please
include the cover sheet with your submission.
You may also which to enter your portfolio for the Heinz Harant Challenge Prize.
A prize of $1,000, awarded twice yearly, has been established especially for
work done by students in the UNSW General Education Program. The prize commemorates
one of the University’s earliest alumni and most devoted supporters, the late
Heinz Harant, a long-serving member of the University Council and board member
of University Union until his death in 1992. It is called ‘The Heinz Harant
Challenge Prize’ because challenging orthodoxy was the driving spirit of Heinz
Harant’s life and the prize attempts to recognise this belief.
The prize recognises
challenging and original thinking in work submitted for assessment in a General
Education course. Students may submit their own work of high standard if they
feel that it meets the spirit of the prize. Entry forms are available from NewSouth
Q and work must be submitted within one month of the close of the session in
which the course is offered (note this only applies for the Session 1 and 2
courses, not the Summer Session course for which the prize is not available).
The first Heinz-Harant prize was won by Nicola Flint, a Commerce student, for
her portfolio in the 1998 Session I Astronomy course.
Summary of what
you have to do to pass the course!
- Attend lectures.
- Buy or otherwise
establish access to a recommended textbook. Note that some of the content
of the Discovering the Universe textbook
is available on-line at http://bcs.whfreeman.com/dtu7e/
- During the
session, maintain steady progress on your portfolio.
- Fill out and
return (by about week 7) the availability form for tutorials and night classes.
- Complete the
online test.
- Attend night
classes and hand in the worksheet.
- Prepare the
10-12 minute oral presentation.
- Attended two
tutorials, and give your oral presentation in one of them.
- Hand in your
completed portfolio, with an attached assignment cover sheet obtainable from
the lecturer.
Resources
Text and Reference
Books
There are several
excellent text books available (listed below) which complement the lectures.
It is recommended that you use one of these when attempting the assignments.
Lectures will be based on Discovering the Universe, which also contains
an interactive CD that accompanies the text.
- Discovering
the Universe (Freeman) (recommended) (with CD) [$110.70 from
UNSW Bookshop, July 2005]
- N.F. Comins
& W.J. Kaufmann Universe (Freeman) (with CD) [$114.30 from
UNSW Bookshop, July 2005]
- R.A. Freedman
Exploration of the Universe (Saunders)
G. Abell, D. Morrison S. Wolff
- Voyages
Through the Universe (Harcourt College) Fraknoi, D. Morrison S. Wolff
- Horizons
Exploring the Universe (Brooks Cole) M. Seeds
You may also want to check out what else is available in
the UNSW Bookshop and the UNSW Library (e.g. try typing "astronomy" in the catalogue
search engines to see what is available).
Availability
This course is available to students from the Faculty of
Science.
The course is not available with PHYS2160 (Astronomy) or
PHYS3160 (Astrophysics). Note that GENS4003 (Cosmology) is no longer
an exclusion for this course. You may like to take this if you wish to
learn about Cosmology, the study of the Universe as a whole. If you have
enjoyed this course you may also like to do GENS4014 (Are We Alone?) and/or
GENS4015 (Brave New World). Further information on these can be found on the
School of Physics website at www.phys.unsw.edu.au.
Continual course improvement
Please note that periodically we will gather student evaluative feedback
on the course, using among other means, UNSW's Course and Teaching Evaluation
and Improvement (CATEI) Process. Student feedback is taken seriously, and continual
improvements are made to the course based in part on such feedback.
Administrative Matters
- We expect you
to attend lectures, tutorials and night classes.
- Course information
will be provided by WebCT Vista and e-mail, and both should be consulted.
- The online
test needs to be submitted using WebCT Vista by the relevant dates set by
the course lecturer.
- Written assignments
(e.g., the night class worksheet, the portfolio) must be placed in the box
kept in the Astrophysics Department (near room 129, First Floor, School of
Physics, Old Main Building) by the relevant deadline (normally 5 p.m. on the
Friday of last day of the course). Unfortunately, work received after
the deadlines will not be marked.
- Information
on relevant Occupational Health and Safety policies and expectations can be
found at: http://www.riskman.unsw.edu.au/ohs/ohs.shtml
- If you are
absent from a University class for a legitimate reason, e.g., illness, you
should report that fact using the Special Consideration form available from
NewSouthQ, together with any supporting documents, for example, medical certificates.
This is of particular importance if your absence may affect your final assessment
grade in a subject. For further information, read the University web
pages if you are applying for Special Consideration. These can be found at
http://my.unsw.edu.au/student/atoz/SpecialConsideration.html
- If you wish
to discontinue the subject you should complete and lodge the appropriate form
with the NewSouthQ by the appropriate deadline for withdrawing from a course.
- Equity and
diversity: those students who have a disability that requires some adjustment
in their teaching or learning environment are encouraged to discuss their
study needs with the course convener prior to, or at the commencement of,
their course, or with the Equity Officer (Disability) in the Equity and Diversity
Unit (9385 4734 or http://www.equity.unsw.edu.au/disabil.html).
Issues to be discussed may include access to materials, signers or note-takers,
the provision of services and additional exam and assessment arrangements.
Early notification is essential to enable any necessary adjustments to be
made. Information on designing courses and course outlines that take
into account the needs of students with disabilities can be found at: http://www.secretariat.unsw.edu.au/acboardcom/minutes/coe/disabilityguidelines.pdf
What is Plagiarism?
Plagiarism
is the presentation of the thoughts or work of another as one’s own.*
Examples include:
- direct
duplication of the thoughts or work of another, including by copying material,
ideas or concepts from a book, article, report or other written document (whether
published or unpublished), composition, artwork, design, drawing, circuitry,
computer program or software, web site, Internet, other electronic resource,
or another person’s assignment without appropriate acknowledgement;
- paraphrasing
another person’s work with very minor changes keeping the meaning, form and/or
progression of ideas of the original;
- piecing
together sections of the work of others into a new whole;
- presenting
an assessment item as independent work when it has been produced in whole
or part in collusion with other people, for example, another student or a
tutor; and
- claiming
credit for a proportion a work contributed to a group assessment item that
is greater than that actually contributed.†
For
the purposes of this policy, submitting an assessment item that has already
been submitted for academic credit elsewhere may be considered plagiarism.
Knowingly permitting your work to be copied by another student may also be considered
to be plagiarism.
Note that an assessment item produced in oral, not written, form, or involving
live presentation, may similarly contain plagiarised material.
The inclusion of the thoughts or work of another with attribution appropriate
to the academic discipline does not amount to plagiarism.
The Learning Centre website is main repository for resources for staff and students
on plagiarism and academic honesty. These resources can be located via:
http://www.lc.unsw.edu.au/plagiarism
The Learning Centre also provides substantial educational written materials,
workshops, and tutorials to aid students, for example, in:
- correct
referencing practices;
- paraphrasing,
summarising, essay writing, and time management;
- appropriate
use of, and attribution for, a range of materials including text, images,
formulae and concepts.
Individual
assistance is available on request from The Learning Centre.
Students are also reminded that careful time management is an important part
of study and one of the identified causes of plagiarism is poor time management.
Students should allow sufficient time for research, drafting, and the proper
referencing of sources in preparing all assessment items.
* Based on that proposed to the University of Newcastle by the St James Ethics
Centre. Used with kind permission from the University of Newcastle
† Adapted with kind permission from the University of Melbourne.
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