Syllabus for MAA 3200, Fall 2010 (Ref # 81101) Last modified on
Professor: Steven M. Hudson. Phone:
305-348-3231.
Office Hours: Thursdays 11am to 12pm and 2:30pm to 3:30pm or by appt, in DM
419B.
E-mail: hudsons@fiu.edu,
Web Page: http://www.fiu.edu/~hudsons
Text 1: How To Prove It, by D Velleman, 2nd
Edn, Cambridge Univ Press (most of the book, about 7 weeks)
Text 2: Elementary Real and Complex Analysis, by G Shilov, Dover
Books (most of Chs 1-4, about 7 weeks)
Schedule: See the Schedule and Homework page
for more detail and updates.
8/23 - First lecture, PC 432, 9:30am to 10:45am
9/14 - Homework 1 due (others tba)
9/21 - Exam 1 (others tba)
10/15 [check!] - Last day to drop the course
11/11 - Veteran's Day (no class)
11/25 - T Day (no class)
11/30 - All late homework, excuses, etc. must be in.
12/7 (Wed 12:30pm to 3:15pm) - the final exam covers the entire course.
The prerequisite for this course is Calc III (MAC 2313). If you have written proofs in previous classes (Calculus, Discrete Math, Geometry, Linear Algebra, etc) you have a small advantage. If none of your previous professors required proofs, plan to work extra hard in the first 4-5 weeks.
Your semester grade will be based on your average score - not on improvement, effort, etc. Incompletes will not be given, except in special cases such as last-minute medical emergencies. I may give a little extra credit for special projects / etc, but have limits [a max of 3 points per student, none given in the last week, etc, see my policy page on this].
Percentages of course grade - 3 Exams at 20% each, Final exam, 30%, HW 10% [maximum] If I decide to give any short quizzes, they will be averaged in, counting at most 5% each. Each student will have a score between 0 and 100% at the end of the course. Letter grades will be assigned approximately as follows;
A 85-100%, B 75-84 %, C 65-74 %, D 55-64 %, F 0-54 %.
(+'s and -'s will be used). I will set the official scale at the end of the semester, after all grades are in, but will usually announce a new unofficial and approximate scale after each exam.
Expectations: You are expected to spend 10-15 hours a week outside of class, on homework and reading. DO NOT fall behind! You will need to visit various pages in this website. You are expected to ask questions, of me and of our Learning Assistant. Please come by my office at least once during the first 3 weeks.
You will be expected to write simple proofs within the first few weeks, with clear sentences and good explanations. A major goal is to write moderately difficult ones by the end of the term.
Various Policies: There will be about 5 homeworks (HWs), which will prepare you for the exams, and which count about 2 % each. They will be graded briefly. Do them by yourself and turn them in on stapled loose leaf paper. For maximum credit be neat, show all your work, and explain your reasoning clearly. Homework is due at the beginning of the class. Late homework (up to 2 weeks) is worth half the normal credit.
The Main Rules:
Any beepers/cell phones, etc must be turned off during
class.
If you cannot arrive and leave on time, see me and explain.
If you miss an entire class, get notes from a classmate.
If you must miss an exam, see me beforehand, and document your excuse.
But there will be no make-up exams.
If you turn in homework late for a good reason, write a note of explanation at
the top.
If you find a grading error, write a note to me at the top of your paper and
return it promptly.
I will try to identify any cheating that may occur in the course. To avoid unfounded suspicion, please show all your work, turn in any scratch paper you use in exams, and avoid sitting next to your study partners during exams. This covers the basics, but read over My Policies (the long version) so that you are not surprised by anything.
LINKS:
Schedule and HW
Help tutoring, websites, online tutorials,
advice etc
Exam Page - practice quizzes, keys, etc
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