Math 124E and 124F, Calculus with Analytic Geometry I

Autumn 2007

GRADES ARE IN; click here

Here are the FINAL and GRADING KEY.

Instructor

Ioana Dumitriu
PDL C-342
Phone: 206-616-8164
Email:
dumitriu 'at' math.washington.edu


Lectures

MWF
10:30-11:20  (124E)
11:30-12:20  (124F)
SMI 102


Office hours:

M, 2:00-3:00  (PDL C-342)
Tue, 4:00-5:30   (MSC)

Topics



  • Math 124 Materials Website. This website is a great source of information, and it also has a large number of quizzes and exams from previous quarters. More on this below.
  • The Math Study Center (a very important resource that you are urged to use).


Math 124 Materials Website

This is a common web page for all sections of Math 124 taught this quarter at the University of Washington. Here is a link to it. Please read all the information on this page very carefully. The following documents at this site are particularly important:
This web site also contains many quizzes and exams from previous Math 124 courses. The topics covered in these quizzes and exams vary somewhat from instructor to instructor. A packet containing all the worksheets, homework and old finals from the above website can be purchased from the Communications Copy Center (see Textbook below).

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Math Study Center

The MSC is one of the best resources at your disposal: a place that's almost always open, where you can speak to and get help from tutors, professional mathematicians, and fellow students. Unless you are 100% comfortable with this class, check the MSC out.

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Grades

Your grade is determined by how you do relative to the class as a whole. Grades will be distributed proportionally between exams (quizzes, midterms, final), homework, and worksheets, as follows:

          Total:                      100%

 Note: 
although things vary from year to year, past experience teaches that to get a 3.9 one needs at least 90%, to get a 3.0 one needs at least 77%, and to get a 2.0 one needs at least 60%.

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Worksheets

There are weekly worksheets for Math 124 that will be done during Quiz sections on Tuesdays, except for the weeks of the Midterms and Final. You will do these problems in small groups and your TA will help you work through them. Worksheets give you enough supervised practice to go off and do the homework. They may also be used to introduce new ideas and methods that have not been covered in lecture. Treat the worksheets seriously as they help you learn how to think and write mathematics with your TA present to help you if you make a mistake.

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Homework

Due to the large size of the class, only 2 problems will be graded each week. You are encouraged to talk to your classmates and discuss both the homework and the material you are learning, but you will be expected to write up solutions on your own.

Since most of the grade will be based on exams, it is essential to understand fully how to solve the homework problems and to acquire enough practice to be able to solve problems relatively quickly. Do additional problems if you feel that you need more practice. Since the homework is meant to stretch your thinking beyond the lectures, and to help you master the subject, it may (and will) be harder than the examples covered in lecture. Questions on exams draw from all the activities of the course such as the lectures, worksheets and homework. Do not assume that only homework problems will be asked on tests.

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Quizzes
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Midterms and Final

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Teaching Assistants and Quiz sections

On Tuesdays and Thursdays you will meet with a Teaching Assistant in a smaller group. This gives you a chance to get more of your questions answered.

The Tuesday sections are 80 minutes long so that, in addition to getting help with your homework, there will be time for working on the Worksheets. The midterm exams will be administered during the Tuesday sections, on October 23 and November 20.

Most weeks there will be a quiz on Thursday. You will hand in homework at the beginning of each Thursday session to your TA and they will return it to you, probably a week later.

The TAs are:

Sections Times and Locations Name Office Email
EA
T  10:00-11:20,    DEN 205
Nathaniel Blair-Stahn
PDL C-8B
 ndbs 'at' math.washington.edu

Th 10:30-11:20,   DEN 205



EB
T  10:00-11:20,    DEN 217
  Matthew Williams
GUG 407
mowill 'at' u.washington.edu

Th 10:30-11:20,   DEN 217



EC
T  11:30-12:50,    DEN 205
Nathaniel Blair-Stahn PDL C-8B ndbs 'at' math.washington.edu

Th 11:30-12:20,   DEN 205



FA
T  11:30-12:50,    DEN 217
  Matthew Williams
GUG 407
mowill 'at' u.washington.edu

Th 11:30-12:20,   DEN 217



FB
T  11:30-12:50,    DEN 317
     Alyson Deines
PDL C-8L
adeines 'at' math.washington.edu

Th 11:30-12:20,   DEN 317



FC T  10:00-11:20,    DEN 317
     Alyson Deines
PDL C-8L
adeines 'at' math.washington.edu

Th 10:30-11:20,    DEN 317



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Textbook

Calculus, Early Transcendentals by James Stewart (Fifth Edition).
Note: We are using the 5th edition this year and the homework problems are different from those of the 4th edition.

If you do not intend to go beyond Math 125, you can use the alternate book Single Variable Calculus, Early Transcendentals (also by James Stewart).

You will need the Math 124 Homework/Worksheet Packet, available at the Communications Copy Center, CMU B-042 (just down the hall from the MSC).

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Calculator Policy

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Expectations

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Tips for getting a better grade

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Guidelines for writing up solutions to problems

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Much of the material is due (with thanks) to Patrick Perkins.



Back to Ioana Dumitriu, the Department of Mathematics, or University of Washington.