PRINCIPLE
OF TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT
LMGT 2334
Fall Semester
2004
Student Syllabus
| Instructor: | Ruben Johnson |
| Office Room # | T134 |
| Office Hours: | By appointment |
| E-mail Address: | rxj7410@dcccd.edu |
| Mailing Address: | North Lake College, 5001 N. MacArthur Blvd., Irving, TX 75038 |
| Office Phone: | 972-273-3191 |
| Mobile Phone: | 214-334-1277 |
Keep this syllabus as a
guide throughout the semester. Contact your instructor for a replacement
if you lose this copy.
OBJECTIVES
The objectives
of this course are as to:
The required textbook for this
course is Fundamentals of Transportation Engineering, A Multimodal
Systems Approach by Jon D. Fricker and Robert K. Whitford (Upper
Saddle River, Peartson/Prentice Hall, 2004).
GENERAL
INFORMATION
During the next 16 weeks, we will cover a great deal of material as we explore the subject of Principle of Traffic Management.
Due to the fact that I am on-line a lot at home, from time to time you will receive e-mails from my home e-mail address: (rubenjohnson@earthlink.net).
I am looking forward to working with each of you. Unless you have a strong preference to be more formal -- please call me 'Ruben.'
If you have a nickname or preferred name which you would like me to use when I address you, please let me know.
A copy of the syllabus will also be posted in eCampus.
In accordance with the "Americans with Disabilities Act" and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, any student who feels that he or she may need special assistance or accommodation because of an impairment or disabling condition needs to contact the North Lake College Disability Services Office at (972) 273-3165. It is the policy of NLC to provide reasonable accommodations as required to afford equal educational opportunity. It is the student's responsibility to contact the Disability Services Office.
North Lake College will provide
reasonable accommodations for qualified individuals who are students
with disabilities. Because of legal implications, it is imperative that
all students requesting academic accommodations first notify and provide
appropriate documentation of their disabling condition to the Disability
Services Office. Disability Services staff will evaluate this information
and develop an individualized academic accommodation plan that will
then be shared with the students' instructors.
COURSE REQUIREMENT
To complete this course successfully,
you should do the following:
1. Complete all reading assignments.
2. Prepare to take five (5) tests and one (1) final exam.
3. Complete all homework, individual, and group assignments.
4. Submit all assignments for instructor evaluation on or before the due date to avoid deduction of grading points.
5. Prepare and submit
a group project.
COURSE SCHEDULE/CALENDAR
|
DATE |
TOPIC |
READING
ASSIGNMENTS |
| 24 Aug 04 & 26 Aug 04 | Week #1 Introduction/Syllabus Review Lecture Discussion Questions |
Chapter 1a |
| 31 Aug 04 & 02 Sep 04 | Week #2 Lecture Discussion Questions |
Chapter 1b & 2a |
| 07 Sep 04 & 09 Sep 04 | Week #3 Lecture Discussion Questions Test #1 |
Chapter 2b & 3a |
| 14 Sep 04 & 16 Sep 04 | Week #4 Lecture Discussion Questions |
Chapter 3b & 4a |
| 21 Sep 04 & 23 Sep 04 | Week #5 Lecture Discussion Questions Test #2 |
Chapter 4b & 5a |
| 28 Sep 04 & 30 Sep 04 | Week #6 Lecture Discussion Questions |
Chapter 5b & 6a |
| 05 Oct 04 & 07 Oct 04 | Week #7 Lecture Discussion Questions |
Chapter 6b & 7a |
| 12 Oct 04 & 09 Oct 04 | Week #8 Lecture Discussion Questions Test #3 |
Chapter 7b & 8a |
| 19 Oct 04
& 21 Oct 04
|
Week #9 Lecture Discussion Questions |
Chapter 8b & 9a |
| 26 Oct 04 & 28 Oct 04 | Week #10 Lecture Discussion Questions Test #4 |
Chapter 9b & 10a |
| 02 Nov 04 & 04 Nov 04 | Week #11 Lecture Discussion Questions |
Chapter 10b & 11a |
| 09 Nov 04 & 11 Nov 04 | Week #12 Lecture Discussion Questions |
Chapter 11b & 12a |
| 16 Nov 04 & 18 Nov 04 | Week #13 Lecture Discussion Questions Group Project Due Test #5 |
Chapter 12b & 13a |
| 23 Nov 04 & 25 Nov 04 | Week #14
Discussion Questions Holiday (25th) NO CLASS |
Chapter 13a |
| 30 Nov 04 & 02 Dec 04 | Week #15 Lecture Discussion Questions |
Chapter 13b |
| 06 Dec 04 & 09 Dec 04 | Week #16 Review Discussion Questions Final Exam |
Five tests and a final exam will be given during the semester. A review before each test or exam will be provided. The format for each test and the exam will be similar.
Students who
anticipate the necessity of being absent from the class due to the observation
of a major religious observance must provide notice of the date(s) to
the instructor, in writing, by the second-class meeting.
ACADEMIC DISHONESTY
The Student Code of Conduct prohibits activities and prescribes penalties for academic dishonesty. According to North Lake College Policy, adopted by the President's Cabinet and printed in NLC Operational Memoranda, students found guilty of any form of academic dishonesty, including (but not limited to) cheating, fabrication, facilitating academic dishonesty, plagiarism, and collusion, may receive an F on the assignment and/or an F in their course(s) from the instructor and may be suspended from college by administrative action.
Students' rights to appeal grades and/or other disciplinary action and the procedures which students must follow for appeals are published the College Catalog under the Student Code of Conduct and at the NLC Web Site under Operational Memoranda.
In determining
grades, each student will be judged solely on the following criteria.
The student will take a total of four tests and one exam. One
test with the lowest grade will be dismissed. The final exam
will not be comprehensive. There is no extra credit or additional
items beyond the list below:
| Test #1 | 100 | 0 | -100 | A | 540 - 600 | |
| Test #2 | 100 | 0 | -100 | B | 480 - 539 | |
| Test #3 | 100 | 0 | -100 | C | 420 - 479 | |
| Test #4 | 100 | 0 | -100 | D | 360 – 419 | |
| Test #5 | 100 | 0 | 100 | F | 359 and below | |
| Final Exam | 100 | 0 | -100 | |||
| Class Participation | 50 | 0 | -50 | |||
| Group Project | 50 | 0 | -50 | |||
| Grand Total | 700 | 0 | -700 |
LATE ASSIGNMENTS
The good news is -- late assignments are accepted. The bad news is that late assignments receive a discount. The late discount is ten percent (10%) of the possible points per day. Don't wait until the last minute. Assignments are due anytime during the relevant week. Late assignments are accepted only up to one week after their due date. All assignments must be completed by the last day of the last week.
CONDUCT
The objective of classroom is to be collaborative, not combative. Even an innocent remark in the classroom environment can be misconstrued. However, your points of view are encouraged and we will have occasion to disagree on issues. This is OK as long as we can reasonably defend our positions and refrain from personal attacks and insults.
LEARNING TEAMS
The Learning Team is a cooperative
group of 3-5 students who work together for the duration of a course.
By sharing talents, experiences, and learning resources, learners individually
achieve greater self-direction and responsibility for their own learning
and an increased capacity for self-assessment. Learning Team members
are interdependent and share responsibilities; this arrangement allows
information to be generated and assimilated in a shorter period of time
than an individual learner could achieve working alone. The Learning
Team simulates cooperative workplace groups and provides a safe environment
in which to experiment and practice a wide range of interpersonal behaviors,
communication techniques, and roles. In a Learning Team, no superiors
or subordinates exist; all learners are equal and are free to make mistakes
and learn from them.
STATE OF RESPONSE
The instructor will response to the student’s inquires via phone call and/or e-mail within a 24 hour response time, Monday through Friday. If a response is NOT provided within the specified response time, please contact Chip Ates, Dean of Business & Computer Information Technology at 972-273-3451.
ATTENDANCE
POLICY
The student is expected to be in class regularly and to consult with the instructor when an absence is necessary. Attendance is necessary and considered apart of the student’s class participation grade.
Educational opportunities are offered by the Dallas County Community College District without regard to race, color, age, national origin, religion, sex, disability or sexual orientation.
Change of Address
If your address changes, you must immediately notify (in person or in writing) the campus admissions office where you are enrolled in order to be certain that you receive all necessary information. This is important. If you have enrolled before and your address has changed since then, please point this out to the register.
Students in Receipt of Financial Aid (Grants or Loans)
If you are receiving Financial Aid grants or loans, you must begin attendance in all classes. Do not drop or stop attending any class without consulting the Financial Aid Office. Changes in your enrollment level and failing grades may require that you repay financial aid funds."
Drop/Withdraw Policy
The student is expected to be in class regularly and to consult with the instructor whenever an absence is necessary. If the student is unable to complete the course, official withdrawal is required. Withdrawing from the course is a formal procedure which the student must initiate; the instructor cannot do it! The student may initiate the drop procedure in Admissions or counseling. If the student stops attending and does not drop, a performance grade, usually an "F" will be awarded. Please consult the college Catalogue for the exact procedure. .
LAST
DAY TO WITHDRAW WITH A GRADE OF “W”: THURSDAY, 11 November 2004!