Book: Calculus -Early Transcendentals
version, Edwards - Penney, 6th edition
Prerequisites: working knowledge of differential calculus (e.g.
MATH 2200).
How to reach me:
(706) 542-2210
ctamas@math.uga.edu
Office
hours (tentative):
Mondays
Tuesdays/Thursdays:
-or by appointment (email me)
Course information: http://www.math.uga.edu/~ctamas/teach/MA2210.html
Also on WebCT:
http://webct.uga.edu
Course objective: acquire a fundamental working knowledge of
the theory of one variable integral calculus (antiderivatives
and definite integrals), and apply this knowledge to computing areas, volumes,
real life applications, and to solving differential equations.
Class structure:
Grades: By the end of the semester you can accumulate a total
of 600 points (100 for HW and quizzes combined, 100 for each midterm and
200 for the final). Your final letter grade will depend on the actual points
you have. If you have 90%, you will have an A; if you have 80%, you will
have at least a B; if you have 65%, you will
have at least a C.
Attendance: You are required to attend all class sessions. An
excessive number of absences might lead to you being dropped from the class.
Important: No late HW-s or make-up quizzes allowed. If you miss
an exam, you can make it up only if you have a serious (and documented)
excuse.
Academic honesty: You are responsible for knowing and respecting
the University?s policy on academic honesty (in particular, look at sections
5 and 7 on the webpage
http://www.uga.edu/ovpi/academic_honesty/culture_honesty.htm).
I encourage you to discuss HW assignments (and math
in general) with each other. However, you have to think and compute
for yourself, and have to write up your own answers to the assignments.
Grading policy: You
must
show your work in order to get credit (be it on HW-s, quizzes or exams).
The way you obtain the answer is just as important as the answer itself.
Notes, books, and calculators are not allowed on tests or quizzes.
Course topics: Riemann sums, definite
integrals, antiderivatives, area and volume
computations, differential equations, and applications to practical problems
such as those involving force and work, population models, mechanical vibrations.
We cover chapters 5,6,7, and 8 of Edwards-Penney.
Homework and Quiz grade distribution:
Extra credit: From time to time, extra credit problems may be
assigned (if there is interest). These problems may be somewhat more challenging
than ?regular? HW problems and will be graded on correctness. You will
usually have 1-2 weeks from the date they were assigned to turn them in
to get the credit for them.