MAC 2311 Honors Calculus 1: Course Policies (preliminary)
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Spring 2007
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Instructor: Dr. Eugene Belogay |
(pronounced Beh-law-GUY) |
Email: ebelogay@fau.edu |
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Office: HC 162 |
Phone: 799-8028 (6-8028) |
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Hours: MW 3:30-6, F 10-11. By appointment only: M 6-7, F 3-5. |
Tutors: TBA |
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Course Description. Inspired by problems in astronomy and geometry, Sir
Isaac Newton and Wilhelm Gottfried Leibnitz derived the principles of differential
and integral calculus more than 300 years ago.
Since then, calculus has provided the foundation for advances in many
fields, such as chemistry, physics, economics, biology, medicine, business,
psychology, and, of course, mathematics.
Calculus is so important, that it is often considered as the gateway to many of those
fields.
In
this course we will engage in the full mathematics process: we will search for patterns, order and
reason, attempt to model our world (in order to clarify and predict better what
happens around us); try to understand and explain ideas clearly, and apply
familiar mathematics to solve unfamiliar problems. This variety of mathematical activities is
quite challenging and, for many of you, the experience will be vastly different
from your experiences in more traditional mathematics courses.
Goals. By the end of this course, you should be
able to
Required Textbook: Calculus, Hughes-Hallett et al, 4th edition, ISBN 0-471-48481-4, Wiley 2005.
Recommended
(optional) text: How to Ace Calculus,
Adams et al, ISBN 0-7167-3160-6, Freeman.
Required
scientific graphing calculator: TI-83, 83 Plus (recommended), 85, or 86. The models TI-89 and TI-92 (and other
symbolic calculators) are fine, but will not be allowed during quizzes and
tests.
Attendance. Be here! Be
here for every class and be on time (being late is disruptive and plain
rude). Missing more than two classes
will negatively affect your success (and final grade). Whether you are in class or not, you are
responsible for all assigned work; there will be no credit for missed
work. Your cell phone must not ring in
class.
Workload. Expect to spend approximately 8-12 hours
each week, outside of class, reading
the textbook and your class notes, solving problems, working in the lab or in
groups, editing project reports, and organizing your skills in preparation for
quizzes and exams.
Help. I cannot teach you; I can
only help you learn. Please ask
questions and seek assistance as needed.
You may email me at any time, and I encourage you to make use of my
office hours. It is a good idea to do
most of your lab work before 6 pm, so I can help you in real time. The math tutors will become available the
second week of classes. Browse the
various helpful resources that I have assembled;
they include guidelines for effective group work and strategies for studying
for tests.
Homework and Quizzes. Do all of the
problems as soon as they are assigned, attempting
unassigned problems as well. Seek
assistance with any problem that gives you trouble. Write the homework on loose paper and keep it
neatly arranged and labeled in a 3-ring notebook; I may collect your homework
notebooks biweekly. (Keep your homework
solutions, without the scratch paper, in a section by itself, rather than mixed
in with your class notes.) We will have
weekly quizzes on the readings and homework exercises. The grade for a missed quiz is –1. The two worst quiz grades will be
dropped. No make-ups will be given for
quizzes. The key to success in this course is doing the homework.
Project Reports. Team projects will be assigned, collected, and
graded as scheduled. I encourage you to submit a preliminary draft report
before you submit the complete project. Reports will be graded not only
for correct mathematical "answers,'' but also for the clarity of your
write-up. Material form the projects
will appear on quizzes and tests.
Tests. There will be five major tests (four midterms and a gateway) and a comprehensive final exam. No
make-ups will be given for tests, except in the case of a documented
emergency. You may take the gateway test
as many times as you need to pass it (the scores do not affect your final
grade); failure to pass it before the last day of class lowers your semester
grade by one full letter.
Due Dates and Late Policy: Work is due at the beginning of class on the
announced due date. I will accept late
work only before I complete the grading of the assigned work; each day
past the due date decreases your grade by 10%.
Grading. Your semester grade will be based on the following
course activity (tentative) weights:
|
Activity
in Class Discussions |
Bonus |
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Quizzes
and Handouts (on HW and reading) |
10
% |
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Team
Projects (worst grade dropped) |
15
% |
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Midterm
Tests (worst grade at half-weight) |
40
% |
|
Final
Exam |
35
% |
Acing (scoring more than 95
points on) the final exam automatically converts a B semester grade into A.
Students with Disabilities. In compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, students who require special
accommodations due to a disability to properly execute coursework must register
with the Office for Students with Disabilities (OSD) and follow all
procedures. (The OSD is a part of
Diversity Student Services on the MacArthur Campus in Jupiter and is located in
the Student Resource building in SR 117; the phone number is 799-8585, TTY
799-8565).
Honor Code
and Collaboration.
Homework. I encourage
you to talk to each other while you are thinking about a homework problem and
examine each other's solutions.
Nevertheless, you need to understand the idea yourself and your final solution must be your own.
Team Projects. Each
contributing team member must sign the team report, acknowledging substantial
contribution to the joint work. All
contributing members of a team receive the same grade.
Quizzes and tests must be completed individually, according to the Honor Code. If you have any questions about what
constitutes doing individual work,
see me immediately.
Warning: Copying
(completely or in part) somebody else's work or submitting work that is copied
with cosmetic changes, added in an attempt to seem superficially different,
constitutes gross plagiarism (and infraction of the Honor Code) and will not be
tolerated.
Last updated: 1/7/07
7:42 PM