Difference between revisions of "CS382:Unit-foundation"

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== Lecture Outline ==
 
== Lecture Outline ==
 +
How to build a model
 +
* What data do you get?
 +
** Establishing a feeling for what is significant
 +
*** Bring in a jar of Jelly beans.  Ask students to guess how many there are.  Ask for which measurements are necessary to get a good guess.
 +
*** Ask a big question... IE what is the area of the Heart.  Brainstorm. (This provides a theoretical background to the measuring lab.
 +
** Establish a feeling for what is too detailed
 +
*** Explain what the difference is between a back of the napkin calculation and an exhaustive one
 +
*** Provide an example of a model and how to make it tractable.
 +
**** Dropping a ball 10 meters (useful data: Gravity not really useful: Drag, Gravity at our altitude ball surface etc.)
 +
** Introduce the idea of orders of magnitude
 +
*** Talk about fermi-problems
 +
* Where do you get data?
 +
** Making all your own data is hard.
 +
*** Unlike in high-school copying is good, just remember to cite
 +
*** We don't want to reinvent the wheel each time we build something.
 +
*** Ask how many piano tuners there are in Chicago
 +
**** Work through the fermiproblem
 +
** But do we trust other people's data?
 +
*** Discuss the notion of vetting sources
 +
*** explain scientific rigor
 +
* What do you do with your data?
  
  

Revision as of 11:09, 18 February 2009

Fermiproblems - Use fermiproblems to encourage students to be comfortable making estimates and discovering ways to estimate with only limited data available. Worked examples are available here

  • A list of Problems is available here

Skill-set

  • Using available sources to find information
  • Quickly vetting sources
  • Acquiring a feel for how to determine what factors are significant
  • Learning how to make estimates where figures are not available
  • Learning how to show and defend the reasoning behind extrapolations
  • Being able to make quick back of the napkin calculations
  • Understanding of what significant figures are and how to calculate them
  • Understanding the difference between accuracy and precision

Materials needed

  • Problems which are relevant to the models which the students will later be constructing in the class
  • Worked through examples showing a complete model and demonstrating which information is necessary for a ballpark estimation and which is not.
  • Problem sets for the students to work through
  • A quick example of scale such as powers of 10

Lecture Outline

How to build a model

  • What data do you get?
    • Establishing a feeling for what is significant
      • Bring in a jar of Jelly beans. Ask students to guess how many there are. Ask for which measurements are necessary to get a good guess.
      • Ask a big question... IE what is the area of the Heart. Brainstorm. (This provides a theoretical background to the measuring lab.
    • Establish a feeling for what is too detailed
      • Explain what the difference is between a back of the napkin calculation and an exhaustive one
      • Provide an example of a model and how to make it tractable.
        • Dropping a ball 10 meters (useful data: Gravity not really useful: Drag, Gravity at our altitude ball surface etc.)
    • Introduce the idea of orders of magnitude
      • Talk about fermi-problems
  • Where do you get data?
    • Making all your own data is hard.
      • Unlike in high-school copying is good, just remember to cite
      • We don't want to reinvent the wheel each time we build something.
      • Ask how many piano tuners there are in Chicago
        • Work through the fermiproblem
    • But do we trust other people's data?
      • Discuss the notion of vetting sources
      • explain scientific rigor
  • What do you do with your data?


Comments

Pros

  • What makes a good model vs. what makes just a model

Cons

Comments

  • Is this included in all of the other units, or also use this and then use these skills in lots of other places?
    • We need to make sure that this - if it's a unit on its own - that it isn't a very boring first unit
  • Include talking about orders of magnitude, scale, significant figures, accuracy vs. precision, pattern recognition

To Do

  • Sam has a high school teacher who has a list of many examples, he is going to get in contact with them.
  • Think about and perhaps talk to Fitz/Brad about how much from Fire could be used to address this foundation unit