Andy Resnick said:
Sure-
It's a 5-credit class with lab (2 lectures/week, 2 recitations/week, 1 lab/week). Prerequisites are "Three units of high-school math, three units of high-school science", whatever that means.
How much control do you have over the recitations and lab sessions?
With two recitations per week (and decent cooperative TA's if you have them), I'd try to make one of theses sessions "inquiry" / activity -based. Two good sources for this are "
http://www.phys.washington.edu/groups/peg/tut.html"" -- curricular materials that come out of the University of Washington Physics Education Group and have been shown to improve students understanding at various institutions. Some of the materials in the first reference are calculus-based and many are algebra-based, while the latter leans a bit more towards no-math.
I've adapted some of these ideas for activity-based work in my own classroom I've done successful activity-based teaching for classes of up to 110-120 students, for two semesters of "How things Work" courses which have no math prerequisite, and one semester of algebra- and calculus-based "Physics III (Waves, Optics and Modern Physics)." -- during the "lecture", since unfortunately my teaching assignments have no recitation section and lab is tightly controlled by the laboratory supervisor, who favors a directivist / cookbook approach to control damage to equipment. In my lecture sessions, I usually have the students complete guided-inquiry worksheets, and I usually tend to use simulations (such those available through the http://phet.colorado.edu/index.php" -- through the University of Colorado' Physics Education Group). The PhET site has several teacher-submitted activities (and I've been submitting some of mine when I think I have something particularly novel). I make sure students are prepared for this form of instruction by making them read the text before they come to class and complete short online quizzes (similar to the "just in time teaching" method). I favor the use of simulations because most students have their own laptops or at least one laptop for a group of 3-4 (although I can substitute in a few departmental ones if needed -- we have a set of 20 and with a class of about 120 students I probably check out about 15, exchanging a computer for a student ID). Occasionally though I like to mix in a few hands on experiments with Walmart-purchased supplies or cheaper lab-equipment -- such as aero-dynamic toys, bouncing balls, ice-cream making, lens and mirror ray-tracing and comparison, dice rolling to show "decay" etc... the students do seem to prefer these experiences although they can cost a bit to set up at first -- especially with 120 students.
Doing an activity during one recitation would be motivating, while reserving one session per week for problem-solving would probably be appropriate for the level of students you have and the curricular expectations of the course for a significant competency in problem-solving. Via what I've heard from other professors, often grouping students together for whiteboard problem-solving or concept-mapping works well during recitation... and probably helps them work together better outside of class (which I do encourage).
For the lecture session, many professors use personal response systems or "clickers" with concept tests (you may want to look over Mazur's "
http://mazur-www.harvard.edu/research/detailspage.php?ed=1&rowid=8"" materials -- he uses more PRS concept testing during the lecture than actual "lecturing"). Some institutions subscribe to particular systems and have instructional support available through some "instructional technology center" usually based out of the library or something.
My group-work activity-based "lecture" sessions are more like a permutation of "http://gallery.carnegiefoundation.org/collections/keep/jbelcher/" " and are my own form of peer instruction (which I use because otherwise my primary assignment "How Things Work" doesn't get any "hands-on" because they don't even have a lab!). Of course it's rather an extreme variation form the typical instruction... but I've found it works for me and my students (in all my assignments but a calculus-based EM course -- which I still teach a traditional way), and my chair is supportive.
Sorry to be so long... but there's a lot of buzz-words and curricular materials you can look up more on... edited to add some links to get you started.