Instructor: Dr. Virginia M. Warfield
Office: Padelford C-437 Phone: 543-7445
e-mail address: warfield@math.washington.edu
Office Hours: Mondays 2:00-3:00 in my office;
Wednesdays 2:30-3:30 in the Study Center
TA's: Christopher Skov [e-mail address: skov@math.washington.edu]
Joel Hindorff [e-mail address: hindorff@math.washington.edu]
Course Web Page: http://www.math.washington.edu/~warfield/courses/120.html
Text: Precalculus, a First Course in Problem
Solving by David Collingwood
Math Study Center: B14 CMU (in the basement of the Communications
building)
Course Goals: As the course title indicates, one of the
goals is to prepare students to take a calculus course. This,
in fact, is what determines the content topics chosen. On the
other hand, as the text title indicates, a much broader and deeper
goal is also involved: learning problem-solving. The skills you
learn in that area are essential for any future math and science
courses you take. They are also useful in many other areas of
academia and even spill over into day-to-day ordinary life. The
potential pay- off is thus quite large. And, as is so often the
case, the size of the pay-off is directly proportional to the
amount of time, effort and determination invested.
Steps to Success: Here are some things that are within your control and will have a large influence on how much you get out of the course:
Course Structure and Grades:
Homework: Assignments will be due at the beginning of class
every Tuesday after the first week. The standard assignment will
be all of the problems listed on the syllabus for the previous
week. Homework must be turned in on 8.5 by 11 inch paper not ripped
out of a spiral notebook (no fringes) and must be stapled. Points
will be deducted for failure to meet these requirements. Late
homework will not be accepted. If all your homeworks are turned
in, the lowest homework grade will be dropped,
Tests: There will be full-period tests on Thursday, February
4 and Thursday, March 4.
Quizzes and Activities: Every Thursday on which there is
not a test there will be either a quiz or an activity. For the
quizzes and activities there will be no make-ups. The lowest score
will be dropped (or the one you missed, if you miss one.)
Calculators: Graphing calculators are permitted on all quizzes and tests. Note, though, two important obligations that go along with this permission:
Grading: Grades are not based on a pre- determined curve.
They are competency based-- if everyone does well, everyone gets
a good grade. Your grade does not depend in any way on how well
your classmates do, so you are not in competition with
any of them. In fact, we encourage you to work cooperatively as
much as possible--you can learn a lot from each other. The exact
correspondence between the percentage points and numerical grades
cannot be determined in advance because it depends on factors
like how difficult the exams are. The weighting, however, will
be as follows:
Topic Schedule:
| 1/4 §1.1 | 1/6 §1.2 | 1/8 §1.3 |
| 1/11 §1.4 | 1/13 §2.1 | 1/15 §2.2 |
| 1/11 §1.4 | 1/13 §2.1 | 1/15 §2.2 |
| 1/18 MLK Day | 1/20 §2.3 | 1/22 §2.4 |
| 1/25 §2.5 | 1/27 §2.6 | 1/29 §2.8 |
| 2/1 §2.9 | 2/3 Review |
First Assignment:
§1.1: 2,5,6,7,11,17,19,24;
§1.2: 2,6,7,9,11
§1.3 1,3,7,9,12,13
You should try to do each one right after the class covering the pertinent section, but they are all to be turned in on Tuesday, 1/12.