Math 311, Advanced Calculus I



New Announcements

check for revised syllabus and revised homework [11/13/08]

Notes on Exponential Series


Course Information for all Sections


Course Information for Section 02


OLD Announcements

Some sample solutions for homework will be posted after graded papers are returned. See links after the homework assignments below. [9/16/08]

There is a technical snarl with my file for Homework Set 4. It will take time to get the file fixed. Indeed there is a smaller snarl in other files: If you see a symbol that looks like the symbol for the empty set in a word, you should try to read it as "fi". Something internal to the wordprocessor is misreading "fi" as the command for the Greek letter "phi" [10/3/08]

Solutions for Homework Set 3 are up. [10/2/08]

Write-ups for the Bolzano-Weierstrass Theorem and Nested Intervals Theorem are also up. [10/2/08]

Please note corrected office hours above. [9/23/08]


GENERAL INFORMATION AND ADVICE

A tentative syllabus is available below. Beware of frequent adjustments.

Read the assigned sections once before each lecture. Read them again after each lecture before starting on the homework. Re-read them as often as necessary! Additional material may be posted on this web page.

Attendance is crucial. I will accept late homework only in special cases and even then only if I have not yet returned the graded set.

Make-up exams will be offered only if there is adequate reason to do so. A student's lack of preparation or lack of confidence is not an adequate reason. In most cases, if you must miss an exam you will know in time to discuss the matter with me (in person, by phone, or by email) IN ADVANCE. If we have not discussed the matter in advance, then I will need evidence of an emergency.

EXAMS: There will be two midterm exams and a final exam.

WORKSHOPS: We will usually have one workshop session each week, usually on Wednesdays. Workshops are essential for learning the course material. Students will work in small groups on specially constructed problem sets. Most problems will deepen understanding of recently presented material. Some problems will connect recent material to earlier material in the course. Some problems will provide motivation for upcoming material.

The lecturer will circulate among the groups coaching, but not demonstrating solutions. The goal at first is to offer ideas for analyzing the problem. Later in the term the goal is to ensure that groups can make use of the ideas offered repeatedly earlier.

At the end of each workshop session, one problem will be assigned to be written up and submitted at the next workshop. While students are encouraged to work together outside of class, the write-ups should be individual work. These write-ups will be graded on two scales: 0-5 for content and 0-5 for exposition. Good reasoning and good mathematical exposition may be more valuable in the long run than any particular piece of mathematical technique.

If a student has made an honest effort but not achieved much success, I may permit the student to revise the write-up and resubmit it. In such cases I will replace the original score by the average of the original score and the score on the revised write-up.

Directions for workshop write-ups:

HOMEWORK:

I will assign about 5 to 10 exercises a week for you to work on. I will assign about 3 to 5 of these to be turned in. These will be due one week after they are assigned. Of these, some (usually not all) will be graded. Other homework (whether turned in to not) may be discussed in class. Note: Nov 26 runs on Friday schedule!! Nov 27 is Thanksgiving

Homework will be due one week after it is assigned, usually on Thursdays.

Use the same format for writing up homework as for writing up workshop problems.

Each homework problem will be graded on a scale of 0-5. Remember, the grader cannot grade your mathematics unless its exposition makes it clear what is going on.

I have been known to put homework problems on exams. Obviously, it is to your benefit to learn from doing the homework and to learn more from the reader's comments and from the class discussions.

TERM GRADES:

Each midterm exam counts for 100 points. The final exam counts for 200 points. The best ten workshop write-ups count for 100 points. The homework sum will be rescaled to count for 50 points.

Homework is intended to help you learn the material. Poor performance on homework will not necessarily lower your term grade.

Because of the opportunity to revise and resubmit write-ups, poor performance on the workshop write-ups may lower your term grade from that suggested by exam grades alone.

An extremely weak final exam may lower a term grade below that suggested by the point-total taken by itself.

Tentative Syllabus

 
DateLecture TopicLecture or Workshop # Homework due
9/3 Ch. 0 W1  
9/4 Ch. 0 L1  
9/8 Ch. 0 L2 Ch. 0, Set 1
9/10   W2  
9/11 Ch. 0 L3  
9/15 Ch. 1 L4 Ch. 0, Set 2
9/17   W3  
9/18 Ch. 1 L5 Ch. 1, Set 1
9/22 Ch. 1 L6  
9/24   W4  
9/25 Ch. 1 L7  
9/29 Ch. 1 L8 Ch. 1, Set 2
9/30   W5  
10/2 Ch. 1 L9  
10/6 Ch. 1 L10  
10/7   W6  
10/13 Ch 2 L11  
10/9 Ch. 0, Ch. 1, Ch 2.1 and Ch. 2.3 Review, L12  
10/14 Ch.0-2 Exam #1 "W7"  
10/16 Ch. 2 L13  
10/20 Ch 3 L14 Ch 2, Set 1
10/21   W8
10/23 Ch.3 L 15 Ch 2, Set 2
10/27 Ch.3 L16 Ch 3, Set 1
10/28   W9  
10/30 Ch. 4 L17 Ch. 3, Set 2
11/3 Ch. 4 L18  
11/4   W10  
11/6 Ch.4 L19
11/10 Ch. 4 L20  
11/11   W11  
11/13 Ch. 4 L21 Ch. 4, Set 1
11/17 Ch. 4 L22  
11/18   W12  
11/20 Handout L23 Ch 4, Set 2
11/24 Ch. 2, Ch.3, Ch. 4.1-2 EXAM 2 "L24"  
11/25   L25  
12/1 Handout L26  
12/2   W13  
12/4 Handout L27 from Handout
12/8 Handout L28  
12/10 Handout W14  
Homework on the material in the Handout is embedded in the Handout itself.


Textbook Homework Problems

TENTATIVE HOMEWORK SETS -- Be alert for modifications!

Each faculty member makes his/her own assignments. Problems marked W might be better as workshop problems than as homework problems.

Due Date Section Problems to do Problems to turn in
Sept 8 Ch. 0, Set 1 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12b, 14, 16, 18, 20 2, 6, 10, 16, 20
Sept 15 Ch. 0, Set 2 22, 24, 26, 32, 33, 38, 41, 44 24, 32, 38, 41, 44
Sept 22 Ch 1, Set 1 1, 3, 4, 6a,c, 7, 9, 14, 1, 4, 6c, 9
Sept 29 Ch 1, Set 2 16, 22, 24, 25, 27, 29, 32, 34, 40, 37, 38, 39 22, 27, 34, 37, 38, 39
Oct 20 Ch 2, Set 1 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 8, 11, 12, 15 2, 5, 8, 12, 15
Oct 23Ch 2, Set 2 14, 16, 17, 19, 21, 22, 25 16, 19, 22, 25
Oct 27 Ch. 3, Set 1 1, 2, 4W, 5, 6, 7, 9, 13 2, 4, 6, 9
Oct 30 Ch. 3, Set 2 14, 28W, 31, 37W, 42, 45W 14, 31, 34, 42
Nov 13 Ch. 4, Set 1 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 11, 13, 14 2, 5, 11, 13, 14
Nov 20 Ch. 4, Set 2 16, 17, 19, 20, 26, 28, 29 16, 17, 19, 28

Sample Solutions to Homework Problems


Maintained by acc@math.rutgers.edu and last modified 13 Nov 2008