GRADES ARE
IN; click here
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:
- the "Note
to the student" -- IT
IS VERY IMPORTANT THAT YOU READ IT.
- the list of weekly homework and worksheets. (Click on the
outline for each week to access that particular week's homework and
worksheet.)
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:
- Worksheets (total)
5%
- Homework (total)
15%
- Quizzes
(total) 15%
- Midterm
1
15%
- Midterm
2
15%
- Final
35%
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.
- Your TA will will keep a record of your participation
and performance in the worksheet sessions--they count toward your
grade.
- The lowest weekly worksheet score will be dropped.
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Homework
- Homework assignments for each week can be found on the Math 124
webpage. (Click on the outline for the week.)
- These assignments are to be turned in on Thursdays in
your Quiz section.
Homework 1 is due on Thursday, October 4.
- The lowest weekly homework score will be dropped.
- No
late homework will be accepted.
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
- There will be a 15-minute quiz most Thursdays (about 5-6 per
term). There will be no quizzes in the weeks with Midterms or Final.
These will usually cover the preceding homework, and will be very
similar to the homework problems. The TA's
will grade them and return them to you the following Tuesday.
- The quizzes are
closed book/closed notes and you cannot use a graphing calculator.
- There are no make-up
quizzes.
- The
lowest quiz score will be dropped.
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Midterms and Final
- There will be 2 midterm exams. They
will be given on the dates listed below.
They are meant to take 50 minutes but you can take the full 80 minutes
of the Quiz section.
- Midterm I : Tuesday, October 23 in Quiz section.
- Midterm II : Tuesday, November 20
in Quiz section.
- The final exam will take place on Saturday, December 8, between 1:30pm-4:20pm (170 minutes).
Location TBA.
- You must bring a
Photo ID to all exams.
- For both midterms and for the final, you are allowed to use one
(double-sided) handwritten 8.5x11
sheet of notes.
- See Calculator Policy below.
- There are no make-up
exams. If you have a compelling
and
well-documented reason for missing a test, speak to the
professor about it.
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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
- You will need a scientific calculator for Math 124. The
scientific calculator must have trigonometric functions, like sin and
cos, as
well as logarithms and exponentials (ln and exp).
- Graphing calculators
are not
allowed on quizzes and exams. A graphing calculator is
any
device with a multiline display that has the ability to graph
mathematical
functions. Examples are the TI-86 or the HP-49G. See your instructor
before the
first quiz if you are not certain if your calculator is acceptable.
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Expectations
- You are expected to read this Note
to the student.
- You are expected to read the appropriate chapters in the book in addition to coming to lectures.
- You are expected to
understand the concepts, in addition to being able to apply them to
numerical problems.
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Tips for getting a better grade
- Read the book. Knowing recipes to solve numerical problems is
helpful, but not enough. You need to understand the concepts; you will
be asked questions that test this understanding.
- Due to the amount of material that needs to be covered, this
class goes at a very fast pace (and neither I nor your TA can do too
much about it). This is why the "Note to the student" stresses
the fact that you need to put in an additional 15 hours per week (aside
from the time spent in class), working on your own. Take that very
seriously.
- A good way to find out if you understand something is to explain
it to someone else. You might be surprised to find out how hard it is
to accurately reproduce/explain something that you think you understand.
- Write clearly and correctly. Be logical in your arguments, and
learn the definitions and theorems accurately. Due to the size of the
class, we can only evaluate you based on your written work--so it is
very important to convey your knowledge precisely in your writing.
- Do the homework problems. Even if you do understand the material,
it is hard to reproduce it on a test if you have not practiced. Working
quickly is important in this class, and speed cannot come without
practice.
- Come to office hours (both mine and your TA's), go to the MSC,
and come talk to me or to your TA if you are having trouble. Let me
know early in the quarter if you are having problems with the course
for whatever reason.
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Guidelines for writing up solutions to
problems
- You must show all your work in order to get full credit,
therefore you need to explain all your steps and methods clearly.
- It must be apparent to the grader that you did this work by
yourself, and he/she must understand your logic. This sort of
completeness is especially necessary on the homework, when the answer
to the problem is given to you either at the back of the book or on the
Math 124 website. Unless you show your work, it will be assumed that
you copied the answer from the aforementioned sources.
- You are urged to use words to give such explanations as needed.
- Try to put yourself into the grader's shoes when writing: after
writing up a solution, ask yourself is someone else in the class could
follow it. Is the solution clearly organized, or must one look for it
in various corners of the page? Is it clear how each step follows
from the previous? Are there any "miraculous" transitions that require
further explanation?...
- Make it easy to grade your work. Keep in mind that, as much as
one always tries to be objective, statistics show that a grader who is
frustrated with a writeup can sometimes involuntarily be harsher.
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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.