Department of Physics and Astronomy

Cornerstones of effective teaching:
1.  Mutual Respect.  My students deserve my respect as much as I deserve theirs.  I expect that my students appreciate my attitude towards the class which, in turn, helps their attitude in the class.
2.  Active learning:  Real learning requires active participation of the student.  Giving the students questions at the start of a course gives them a pursuit, during which much of the material is learned.  Lectures should be interactive; if students end up spaced-out and miss the key points of a lecture the class was merely a waste of time for everyone.
3.  Inspiration and Challenge:  If I succeed in turning the students on and inspiring them to learn on their own, then they'll learn much more than I can hope to teach myself.  Inspired students that are challenged will discover the true wonder and power of analytical physics and will succeed at the next level.  
 

Courses

Current Courses (Spring 2016)

Astronomy 50 (General Education course on the Solar System)

Other Courses previously taught at Union
Physics 100 (quasars module for possible physics majors freshmen)
Physics 110 lab (introductory physics for life-sciences majors)
Physics 111 (2nd term of general physics for life-science majors)
Physics 120 (Introductory Mechanics for Science and Engineering Majors
Physics 121 (Introductory Electromagnetics for Science and Engineering Majors)
Physics 122 (Introduction to Modern Physics:  Relativity, Quantum, Solids, Nuclear)
Physics 270 (Electrodynamics for Physics and Math majors)
Physics 490(Senior thesis seminar for physics majors)

Astronomy 50 (General Education course on the Solar System)
                Click -->here<-- to learn of a full set of Ancient Astronomy Labs in which the students
                measure all the different types of parameters in the Solar System without reference to
                prior knowledge in a textbook.)
Astronomy 51 (General Education course in Astronomy and Astrophysics)
Astronomy 52 (Relativity, Black Holes, and Quasars--for the General Education Curriculum)
Astronomy 200 (Stellar Structure and Evolution for science majors)
Astronomy 220 (Cosmology--for physics and other science majors
Astronomy 240 (Radio astronomy--for physics and other science majors) 

Independent Studies:  Radio Astronomy; Cataclysmic Variables; Relativity; Active Galactic Nuclei; Observations of Globular Clusters; IR Photometry of Nearby Small Galaxies

href="http://www1.union.edu/marrj/srtheses.html"> Senior Theses advised

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WebAssign

Nexus

Jonathan Marr's Home Page

Home Page for the Department of Physics and Astronomy


Last modified: 22 March 2016