MATH 2200L Syllabus
Instructor: Yu, Jie
Call Number: 10-206
Room: GSRC 1023-220
Period: 01:00P-03:15P Thursday
Office: 427-D Boyd
Graduate Studies Bldg
Email: jyu@math.uga.edu Phone: (706) 542 2619
Office hours: 03:20P-4:50P Thursday or by appointment
Course description:
The
calculus labs have been designed to give you an opportunity to investigate math
problems in greater detail than in the calculus books. You will work on
projects and write reports on them with the aid of Maple, a computer algebra
system. Instructor of this lab is not supposed to teach you how to work with
problems and projects, but will be
available to help you with Maple as you work.
Lab Manual: All materials can be found online at: http://www.math.uga.edu/calclab/calclab2200/.
Lab Project Schedule:
Projects
Due day
Project 1 Welcome
to Maple I and II Jun 23
Project 2 Introduction
to Limits Jun
30
Project 3 Definition
of the Derivative Jul
7
Project 4 Home
Mortgages Jul
14
Project 5
Project 6
The Bungee Jump
Jul 28
* After due day, the report will not be accepted.
Grading Policy: The final grade will be determined as
following:
1 Average of the six projects (70%)
2
Attendance and performance in the class (30%)
A: 85%-100%; B: 75%-84%; C: 65%-74%; D: 55%-64%; F: below 55%
.
Attendance Policy: Attendance will be taken every meeting time.
Full participation in this course is required. A student may miss fewer than two
classes. But there is no penalty only if a student arrange in advance with an
instructor of another section to attend class as a make-up student. A
student who misses two or more classes will have his/her grade lowered by one letter
grade.
* Attendance will be considered as following: Don¡¯t leave the class early without
any excuse; Work hard on project in most of the class time.
Withdrawal Policy:
If a student withdraws from a lab, the student must withdraw
from the regular course-MATH2200. Students may initiate their own withdrawals on OASIS.
How to Work on the
Projects and Write Your Report:
You are encouraged to collaborate with each other--form a small group of two or three people. The projects can be done with your team work and the reports, however, must be written by yourself. Each student must sign her/his report after the academic honesty statement at the end of the report. All students are responsible for maintaining the highest standards of honesty and integrity in every phase of their academic careers. The penalties for academic dishonesty are severe and ignorance is not an acceptable defense.
http://www.uga.edu/ovpi/academic_honesty/culture_honesty.htm
The following are about how to write your report
(1) Your report on a project should be a clear and complete presentation of the project topic, the steps in your investigations of the topic, and the results of your investigations;
(2)
Each report should begin with an introductory paragraph
in which you introduce your topic and give an idea of the approach you will
take to your investigation;
(3) You can redo your projects; you must turn in your redone project in a week after you get your graded one. The final score will be the average of the both.
Subject to change