LecturesMonday/Wednesday/Friday9:30 - 10:20 and 10:30 - 11:20 KNE 110 InstructorBoris Solomyak
Office HoursMondays 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
|
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.
| Sections | Location |
|---|---|
| AA-AE | KNE 130 |
| BA-BE | KNE 130 |
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:
| Sections | Name | Office | |
|---|---|---|---|
| AA & AB | Sayan 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 |
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.
| Mathematics Department | University of Washington |