PH1 Query 4

#$&*

course PHY 201

09/19/2011 3:52 PM

004. `Query 4NOTE PRELIMINARY TO QUERY:

** Questions about velocity, average velocity,

acceleration, etc. can be very confusing because so many

of the concepts have similar definitions. People have

trouble distinguishing things like average velocity,

which for uniform acceleration can be obtained in a

process that adds two velocities, from average

acceleration, which involves subtracting two velocities;

one of these processes involves dividing by 2 and the

other dividing by the time interval `dt.

It is essential to keep the definitions and the meanings

of the terms very clear and to work everything from

definitions. It is equally important to have a good

common-sense understanding of every definition so you

can develop the intuition to make sense of everything

you do.

That inevitably takes people a little time. But in the

process you develop the habits you will need to succeed

in the course. **

*********************************************

Question: How is acceleration an example of a rate of

change?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

Acceleration is the rate of change in velocity with

respect to time.

confidence rating #$&*: 3

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

** Velocity is the rate of change of position with

respect to clock time. Acceleration is rate of change

of velocity with respect to clock time.

To find the acceleration from a v vs. t graph you take

the rise, which represents the change in the average

velocity, and divide by the run, which represents the

change in clock time.

note that the term 'average rate of change of velocity

with respect to clock time' means the same thing as

'acceleration' **

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary):

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique Rating:OK

*********************************************

Question: If you know average acceleration and time

interval what can you find?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

You can find the average velocity. aAve = dv/dt so dv =

aAve * dt.

confidence rating #$&*: 3

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

** Accel = change in vel / change in clock time, so if

you know accel and time interval (i.e., change in clock

time) you can find change in vel = accel * change in

clock time.

In this case you don't know anything about how fast the

object is traveling. You can only find the change in

its velocity.

COMMON ERROR (and response): Average acceleration is

the average velocity divided by the time (for the change

in the average velocity)so you would be able to find the

average velocity by multiplying the average acceleration

by the change in time.

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE: Acceleration is rate of change of

velocity--change in velocity divided by the change in

clock time. It is not average velocity / change in

clock time.

COUNTEREXAMPLE TO COMMON ERROR: Moving at a constant 60

mph for 3 hours, there is no change in velocity so

acceleration = rate of change of velocity is zero.

However average velocity / change in clock time = 60 mph

/ (3 hr) = 20 mile / hr^2, which is not zero. This

shows that acceleration is not ave vel / change in clock

time.

COMMON ERROR and response: You can find displacement

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE: From average velocity and time

interval you can find displacement.

However from average acceleration and time interval you

can find only change in velocity. Acceleration is the

rate at which velocity changes so average acceleration

is change in velocity/change in clock time. From this

it follows that change in velocity = acceleration*change

in clock time. **

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary):

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique Rating:OK

*********************************************

Question: Can you find velocity from average

acceleration and time interval?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

You can only find the change in velocity. There is not

enough information in aAVe to find the actual velocity.

confidence rating #$&*: 3

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

** Ave accel = change in vel / change in clock time. If

acceleration is constant, then this relationship becomes

acceleration = change in velocity/change in clock time.

Change in clock time is the time interval, so if we know

time interval and acceleration we can find change in

velocity = acceleration * change in clock time =

acceleration * change in clock time.

We cannot find velocity, only change in velocity. We

would need additional information (e.g., initial

velocity, average velocity or final velocity) to find an

actual velocity.

For example if we know that the velocity of a car is

changing at 2 (mi/hr) / sec then we know that in 5

seconds the speed will change by 2 (mi/hr)/s * 5 s = 10

mi/hr. But we don't know how fast the car is going in

the first place, so we have no information about its

actual velocity.

If this car had originally been going 20 mi/hr, it would

have ended up at 30 miles/hr. If it had originally been

going 70 mi/hr, it would have ended up at 80 miles/hr.

Similarly if an object is accelerating at 30 m/s^2

(i.e., 30 (m/s) / s) for eight seconds, its velocity

will change by 30 meters/second^2 * 8 seconds = 240 m/s.

Again we don't know what the actual velocity will be

because we don't know what velocity the object was

originally moving.

ANOTHER SOLUTION:

The answer is 'No'.

You can divide `ds (change in position) by `dt (change

in clock time) to get vAve = `ds / `dt.

Or you can divide `dv (change in vel) by `dt to get

aAve.

So from aAve and `dt you can get `dv, the change in v.

But you can't get v itself.

EXAMPLE: You can find the change in a quantity from a

rate and a time interval, but you can't find the actual

value of the quantity. For example, accelerating for 2

sec at 3 mph / sec, your velocity changes by 6 mph, but

that's all you know. You don't know how fast you were

going in the first place. Could be from 5 mph to 12

mph, or 200 mph to 206 mph (hopefully not down the

Interstate).

COMMON ERROR: Yes. Final velocity is average velocity

multiplied by 2.

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE: We aren't given ave velocity and

time interval, we're give ave accel and time interval,

so this answer is not valid.

Note also that final velocity is average velocity

multiplied by 2 ONLY when init vel is zero. Be sure you

always state it this way.

ANOTHER EXAMPLE:

You can't find velocity from ave accel and time

interval--you can only find change in velocity from this

information. For example a velocity change of 10 mph

would result from ave accel 2 m/s^2 for 2 seconds; this

change could be between 10 and 20 mph or between 180 and

190 mph, and if all we know is ave accel and time

interval we couldn't tell the difference. ONE MORE

RESPONSE:

You can find the change in velocity. The actual

velocity cannot be found from ave accel and time

interval. For example you would get the same result for

acceleration if a car went from 10 mph to 20 mph in 5

sec as you would if it went from 200 mph to 220 mph in

10 sec. **

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary):

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique Rating:OK

*********************************************

Question: `qCan you find change in velocity from

average acceleration and time interval?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

Yes, aAve = dv / dt. A time interval indicates a change

in time.

confidence rating #$&*: 3

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

Average acceleration is ave rate of change of velocity

with respect to clock time, which is `dv / `dt.

Given average acceleration and time interval you

therefore know aAve = `dv / `dt, and you know `dt.

The obvious use of these quantities is to multiply them:

aAve * `dt = `dv / `dt * `dt = `dv

So with the given information aAve and `dt, we can find

`dv, which is the change in velocity.

From this information we can find nothing at all about

the average velocity vAve, which is a quantity which is

completely unrelated to `dv .

`a**Good student response:

Yes, the answer that I provided previously is wrong, I

didn't consider the 'change in velocity' I only

considered the velocity as being the same as the change

in velocity and that was not correct.

Change in velocity is average accel * `dt.

CALCULUS-RELATED ANSWER WITH INSTRUCTOR NOTE(relevant

mostly to University Physics students)

Yes, you take the integral with respect to time

INSTRUCTOR NOTE:

That's essentially what you're doing if you multiply

average acceleration by time interval.

In calculus terms the reason you can't get actual

velocity from acceleration information alone is that

when you integrate acceleration you get an arbitrary

integration constant. You don't have any information in

those questions to evaluate c. **

IMPORTANT INSTRUCTOR NOTE: Always modify the term

'velocity' or the symbol 'v'.

I do not use v or the unmodified term 'velocity' for

anything at this stage of the course, and despite the

fact that your textbook does, you should at this stage

consider avoiding it as well.

At this point in the course the word 'velocity' should

always be modified by an adjective.

Motion on any interval involves the following

quantities, among others:

initial velocity v0, the velocity at the beginning of

the interval

final velocity vf, the velocity at the end of the

interval

average velocity vAve, defined as average rate of change

of position with respect to clock time, `ds / `dt

change in velocity `dv, which is the difference between

initial and final velocities

(midpoint velocity vMid), which is the same as vAve

provided the v vs. t graph is linear (i.e., provided

acceleration is constant); since most motion problems

will involve uniform acceleration this quantity will be

seen than the others

If you aren't specific about which velocity you mean,

you will tend to confuse one or more of these

quantities.

The symbol v, and the unmodified term 'velocity', have

more complex and ambiguous meanings than the specific

terms outlined above:

The symbol v stands for 'instantaneous velocity', a

concept that is challenging to understand well without a

calculus background (which isn't expected or required

for your the General College Physics or Principles of

Physics courses). Your text (along with most others)

uses v to stand for the instantaneous velocity at clock

time t, but sometimes it uses the symbol v for the

average velocity.

To denote an instantanous velocity I consider it more

appropriate to use the functional notation v(t)., which

clearly denotes the velocity at a specific instant.

The ambiguous use of the word 'velocity' and the symbol

'v' are the source of almost universal confusion among

students in non-calculus-based physics courses.

(Students in calculus-based courses are expected to have

the background to understand these distinctions, though

most such students can also profit from the specific

terminology outlined here.

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary):

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique Rating:OK

*********************************************

Question: `qCan you find average velocity from average

acceleration and time interval?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

No, you can however find change in velocity. dv = aAve

* t.

confidence rating #$&*: 3

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

`a** CORRECT STATEMENT BUT NOT AN ANSWER TO THIS

*********************************************

QUESTION:

The average acceleration would be multiplied by the time

interval to find the change in the velocity

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE:

Your statement is correct, but as you say you can find

change in vel, which is not the same thing as ave vel.

You cannot find ave vel. from just accel and time

interval. There is for example nothing in accel and

time interval that tells you how fast the object was

going initially. The same acceleration and time

interval could apply as well to an object starting from

rest as to an object starting at 100 m/s; the average

velocity would not be the same in both cases. So accel

and time interval cannot determine average velocity.

CALCULUS-RELATED ERRONEOUS ANSWER AND INSTRUCTOR

CLAIRIFICATION(relevant mostly to University Physics

students:

Yes, you take the integral and the limits of integration

at the time intervals

CLARIFICATION BY INSTRUCTOR:

A definite integral of acceleration with respect to t

gives you only the change in v, not v itself. You need

an initial condition to evaluate the integration

constant in the indefinite integral.

To find the average velocity you would have to integrate

velocity (definite integral over the time interval) and

divide by the time interval. **

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary):

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique Rating:OK

*********************************************

Question: `qYou can find only change in velocity from

average acceleration and time interval. To find actual

velocity you have to know at what velocity you started.

Why can't you find average velocity from acceleration

and time interval?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

You can only find average velocity from average

acceleration and time. Without knowing your initial

velocity you cannot find the terminal velocity, only the

change in velocity.

confidence rating #$&*: 2

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

** Average velocity is change in position/change in

clock time. Average velocity has no direct relationship

with acceleration.

CALCULUS-RELATED ANSWER you dont know the inital

velocity or the final velocity

INSTRUCTOR COMMENT:

. . . i.e., you can't evaluate the integration

constant. **

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary):

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique Rating:OK

*********************************************

Question: Give at least three possible units for

velocity, and at least three possible units for clock

time.

Give at least three possible units for the slope between

two points of a graph of velocity vs. clock time.

Explain how you reasoned out the answer to this

question.

Explain the meaning of the slope of this graph.

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

For velocity: meter per second, centimeter per second,

millimeter per second. For clock time: hours, minutes,

seconds. For slope: m/s/s, cm/s/s , mm/s/s. Slope is

going to be the change in velocity divided by the change

in time so if your velocity is measured in meters per

second, the slope, or rate of change in velocity with

respect to time, will be meters per second per second,

or m/s^2.

confidence rating #$&*: 3

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

(Remember that it is essential for most students to

write out the more complicated expressions on paper, in

standard notation. There are two reasons for this. In

the first place, this will make them be easier to read

and comprehend. In the second place, this writing

things on paper reinforces the process better than

viewing it on a screen. Some students can read and

understand these expressions from the 'typewriter

notation' form given here, and with practice everyone

quickly gets better at reading this notation, but at

this stage most will need to write at least some of

these expressions out.)

Possible units for velocity might include millimeters /

hour, kilometers / second, or meters / minute. The

standard unit is meters / second.

Possible units for clock time might include

microseconds, minutes, years. The standard unit is the

second.

The slope between two points of a graph is the rise of

the graph divided by its run.

The rise between two points of a graph of velocity vs.

clock time represents the change in the velocity between

these points. So the rise might have units of, say,

millimeters / hour or meters / minute. The standard

unit would be meters / second.

The run between two points of a graph of velocity vs.

clock time represents the change in the clock time

between these points. So the run might have units of,

say, microseconds or years. The standard unit is the

second.

The units of slope are units of rise divided by units of

run. So the units of the slope might be any of the

following:

(millimeters / hour) / microsecond, which by the rules

for multiplying and dividing fractions would simplify to

(millimeters / hour) * (1 / microsecond) = millimeters /

(hour * microsecond).

(meters / minute) / year, which by the rules for

multiplying and dividing fractions would simplify to

(meters / minute) * (1 / year) = meters / (minute *

year)

or the standard unit, (meters / second) / second, which

by the rules for multiplying and dividing fractions

would simplify to to (meters / second) * (1 / second) =

meters / (second * second) = meters / second^2.

Note on expected levels of understanding for various

courses:

Principles of Physics students should understand the

following from the preceding:

meters / second, millimeters / hour, kilometers /

second, or meters / minute are all possible units for

velocity, and microseconds, minutes, years are all

possible units for clock time, and therefore

(millimeters / hour) / microsecond, (meters / minute) /

year, (meters / second) / second are all possible units

of the slope of a velocity vs. clock time graph

and will hopefully understand the simplifications. If

the simplifications are not clear, or if the units are

not understood, it is very important to follow the usual

instructions and give a detailed and focused self-

critique demonstrating what is understood and what is

not.

Some Principles of Physics students (usually those with

more extensive mathematical backgrounds) typically

understand the subsequent process for conversion of

units, but most students who haven't had mathematics

courses beyond Algebra II will have some difficulty with

the complexity of the expressions.

General College Physics students, who have had a

precalculus or high school analysis background, are

expected to fully understand this solution, but

nevertheless might still have some difficulty in places,

and should give focused self-critiques if this is the

case.

University Physics students, with their calculus

prerequisite, should have the mathematical background

and experience to understand everything in this solution

very easily; if not they should be very sure to include

detailed and specific self-critiques, and immediately

take steps to address this issue.

Note that a unit like millimeters / (hour * microsecond)

could be converted to standard units.

Since 1000 millimeters = 1 meter we can use conversion

factor (1000 millimeters) / (1 meter) or (1 meter) /

(1000 millimeters)

Since 1 hour = 3600 seconds we can use conversion factor

(1 hour) / (3600 seconds), or (3600 seconds) / (1 hour)

Since 10^6 microseconds = 1 second we have conversion

factors (10^6 microseconds) / (1 second) and (1 second)

/ (10^6 microseconds).

If we understand the rules for fractions, we can easily

apply these conversion factors to get the following:

millimeters / (hour * microsecond) =

mm / (hr microsec) * 1 m / (1000 mm) * 1 hr / (3600 sec)

* 10^6 microsec / (1 sec) =

mm * hr * 10^6 microsec m/ (hr microsec mm * 3600 sec *

sec) =

(10^6 / 3600) * (mm hr microsec m) / (hr microsec mm sec

sec) =

(10^6 / 3600) * m / sec^2

In the second step

we use 1 m / (1000 mm) to convert the original mm in the

numerator to meters (the mm in the denominator of the

conversion factor 'matches up' with the mm in the

numerator of our original expression so the two will

later 'divide out' and leave us with m in our numerator)

we use 1 hr / (3600 sec) to convert the original hr in

the denominator to second (the hr in the numerator of

the conversion factor 'matches up' with the hr in the

denominator of our original expression so the two will

later 'divide out' and leave us with sec in our

denominator)

* we use 10^6 microsec / (1 sec) to convert the

original microsec in the denominator to second (the

microsed in the numerator of the conversion factor

'matches up' with the microsed in the denominator of our

original expression so the two will later 'divide out'

and leave us with sec in our denominator)

In the simplification the third step simply multiplies

all the numerators from the second step, and all the

denominators, to get the numerator and denominator of

the third step.

The fourth step breaks the fraction into the product of

two fractions, the first being 10^6 / 3600 to represent

all the numbers in the fraction, the second being (mm hr

microsec m) / (hr microsec mm sec sec) to represent all

the units.

In the last step all we do is divide out units of the

numerator which are matched by units of the denominator

(a process you have seen referred to as 'cancellation').

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary):

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique Rating:OK

*********************************************

Question: If the velocity of an object changes at a

uniform rate from 5 m/s to 13 m/s between clock times t

= 7 s and t = 11 s then on this interval what is its

average velocity, and what is the average rate at which

its velocity changes with respect to clock time?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

aAve = dv / dt = (8 m/s) / 4 s = 2 m/s^2

If the velocity is changing at a uniform rate you can

find the average velocity by averaging the initial and

terminal velocities. 5 m/s + 13 m/s = 18 m/s, (18

m/s)/2 = 9 m/s = average velocity.

confidence rating #$&*: 3

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

*********************************************

Question:

Explain how to solve the relationship

aAve = `dv / `dt

for `dt.

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

Multiply each side of the equation by dt so that you

have dt * aAve = dv. Now divide each side by aAve so

you end up with dt = dv/aAve.

confidence rating #$&*: 3

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary):

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique Rating:OK

Question for University Physics Students: What is the

instantaneous rate of change of v with respect to t at t

= 2, given that v(t) = 2 t^2 - t + 3? Explain how you

obtained this result.

What is the expression for the instantaneous rate of

change of v with respect to t at general clock time t,

given the same velocity function? Explain how you

determined this.

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

v(2) = 2 * 2^2 - 2 + 3 = 9.

v(2.1) = 2 * (2.1)^2 - 2.1 + 3 = 9.72

So the average rate of change of v with respect to t for

the interval from t = 2 to t = 2.1 is

ave rate = change in v / change in t = (9.72 - 9) / (2.1

- 2) = 7.2

v(2.01) = 2.0702, and v(2.001) = 2.007002. Using these

values along with v(2) = 9 we find that

on interval t = 2 to 2 = 2.01 the average rate is 7.02

on interval t = 2 to 2 = 2.001 the average rate is 7.002

It is therefore reasonable to conjecture that the

instantaneous rate at t = 2 is exactly 7.

In fact the instantaneous rate of change function is the

derivative function

v ' (t) = dv / dt = 4 t - 1.

This function gives the instantaneous acceleration at

clock time t:

a(t) = v ' (t) = 4 t - 1.

Evaluating this function at t = 2 we obtain

a(2) = 4 * 2 - 1 = 8 - 1 = 7,

which confirms the conjecture we make based on the

series of intervals above.

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Self-critique (if necessary):

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique Rating:

*********************************************

Question:

A ball rolls from rest down a book, off that book and

onto another book, where it picks up additional speed

before rolling off the end of that book.

Suppose you know all the following information:

How far the ball rolled along each book.

The clock time at which the ball is released, the clock

time at which it first reaches the end of the first

book, and the clock time at which it first reaches the

end of the second book.

How fast the ball is moving at each end of each book.

How would you use your information to calculate the

ball's average speed on each book?

How would you use your information to calculate how

quickly the ball's speed was changing on each book?

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

*********************************************

Question: `qQuery Add any surprises or insights you

experienced as a result of this assignment.

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

`a** Student Response: I think I really confused what

information stood for what in the Force and Pendulum

Experiment. However, I enjoy doing the flow diagrams.

They make you think in a different way than you are used

to. INSTRUCTOR NOTE: These diagrams are valuable for

most people. Not all--it depends on learning style--but

most. **

Comments:

****************

"

Self-critique (if necessary):

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating:

*********************************************

Question:

A ball rolls from rest down a book, off that book and

onto another book, where it picks up additional speed

before rolling off the end of that book.

Suppose you know all the following information:

How far the ball rolled along each book.

The clock time at which the ball is released, the clock

time at which it first reaches the end of the first

book, and the clock time at which it first reaches the

end of the second book.

How fast the ball is moving at each end of each book.

How would you use your information to calculate the

ball's average speed on each book?

How would you use your information to calculate how

quickly the ball's speed was changing on each book?

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

*********************************************

Question: `qQuery Add any surprises or insights you

experienced as a result of this assignment.

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

.............................................

Given Solution:

`a** Student Response: I think I really confused what

information stood for what in the Force and Pendulum

Experiment. However, I enjoy doing the flow diagrams.

They make you think in a different way than you are used

to. INSTRUCTOR NOTE: These diagrams are valuable for

most people. Not all--it depends on learning style--but

most. **

Comments:

****************

"

Self-critique (if necessary):

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating:

#*&!

&#Very good responses. Let me know if you have questions. &#