Math 126 A & B - Calculus III - Autumn 2010

Final practice solutions are here

Midterm 2 info and practice problems are here

Solutions to practice problems are here


Midterm 1 (section 126 A) solutions are here

Midterm 1 (section 126 B) solutions are here

Midterm 2 (section 126 A) solutions are here

Midterm 2 (section 126 B) solutions are here

Lectures

Monday/Wednesday/Friday
9:30 - 10:20 and 10:30 - 11:20
KNE 110


Instructor

Boris Solomyak
Padelford C-328
Phone: 206-685-1307
solomyak 'at' math.washington.edu


Office Hours

Mondays 1:00-2:00 at the Math Study Center in Communications B-014, Wednesdays 2:00-3:00 in PDL C-328, and by appointment. (Starting Oct 4!)


Topics



The Course

This course covers a few miscellaneous topics from calculus. Most of our time will be spent on calculus in three dimensions. We first cover the basics of analytic geometry in three-space. We then discuss parametric equations and introduce the differential calculus of vector valued functions. This part of the class finishes with an introduction to multivariable integration. The last few weeks are devoted to Taylor polynomials and Taylor series. This material is useful for making approximations and for solving differential equations. We will use locally produced notes for this part of the class instead of the textbook. These notes are available here.

Grades

Your grade is determined by how you do relative to the class as a whole. Grades will be based on total score earned. Your score will be made up of the following

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Worksheets

There are worksheets for Math 126 that will be done during some TA sessions. 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 these worksheet sessions.

Homework

will be assigned daily, see the syllabus for the problems due. You are responsible for all the problems assigned (i.e: any of it could appear on the exams). The problems assigned during the week will be collected in the lecture on the following Wednesday.

Unfortunately, the amount of homework that can be graded is limited. Each week two of the problems will be chosen at random to grade. They will be worth 3 points each. This makes a total of 6 points. In addition to this, you will receive a score out of 4 points reflecting the percentage of the homework you completed. (For example, if you completed about 75% of the assignment, you would receive an additional 3 points.) Thus the total possible score for each assignment is 10 points. The lowest weekly homework score will be dropped. No late homework will be accepted.

Exams

Final Exam

will take place from 1:30pm to 4:20pm on Saturday, December 11. Note that this is not the time listed in the final exam schedule. Students MUST PETITION IN ADVANCE if they have a legitimate reason to take a make-up final. Petition forms are available in the Math Advising Office, C-36.

Final Exam Location:

SectionsLocation
AA-AE KNE 130
BA-BE KNE 130

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Rules for taking exams

Quiz section

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 homework questions answered. Some days there will be a worksheet that you can work on while the TA circulates and answers questions. On some weeks there will be a practice midterm exam. You will hand in homework on Wednesdays to me and the TA's will return it to you, about a week later. The midterm exams will be held in Quiz Section.

The TA's are:

SectionsNameOfficeEmail
AA & ABSayan Banerjee PDL C-109 sayan87 'at' math.washington.edu
AC & AD Graham Clenaghan PDL C-113 clenagh 'at' math.washington.edu
AE & BA Stephen McKeown PDL C-8H smckeown 'at' math.washington.edu
BB & BC Andrey Sarantsev PDL C-552 ansa1989 'at' math.washington.edu
BD & BE Bharathwaj Palvannan PDL C-8F bharath 'at' math.washington.edu

Text

Multivariable Calculus by James Stewart (this is a custom text for UW --- you may also use Calculus: Early Transcendentals, sixth edition by Stewart).

Calculators

You will need a scientific calculator for Math 126. Graphing calculators are not allowed on quizzes and exams.

The scientific calculator must have trigonometric functions, like Sin and Cos, as well as logarithms and exponentials (ln and exp).

The calculator must not be a graphing calculator. 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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Mathematics Department University of Washington