MATH 250: Calculus III
Spring 2012
Course Syllabus and Class Policies
1.
Major Course
topics:
The
tentative detailed syllabus of the course can be found at http://home.sandiego.edu/~pruski/m250s12schedule.html
2. Course
Learning Outcomes:
3.
Regular attendance
is really necessary. It is quite difficult to catch up with the material when
you miss a class. It becomes virtually impossible, if you miss several classes.
4.
Be aware that the
pace of the course will be EXTREMELY FAST, particularly in its first,
relatively easier part. Of all math courses I have taught at USD, Calculus III
is the most intense. The amount of material to be covered is
truly overwhelming. For example, the list of topics for the final exam is over 70 items long, compared to usual 40 - 60
in other courses I teach. We cannot omit
any of the topics as the course is a prerequisite for various
upper-division courses. Your success in these upper-division courses depends on
your mastery of Calc III material. We have to cover the entire
list of topics. There simply is no way around it. In the past years, students
called the pace of the course hellish, ridiculous, impossible,
insane, etc. I do not totally disagree; well, it is not an impossible
course, but it is indeed very, very hard. In my view, Calculus III
should be an at least 5-unit course, but it is not feasible for various
reasons. The last four major course topics are usually perceived much more
difficult than the first three. Thus, we will cover the first part of the
course at an absolutely breakneck speed
to allow more time for more difficult material. Please brace yourself for possibly a rough ride. I am here to help you.
5.
Normally, in all
my courses, not only do I encourage class discussion, but I try not to limit
its scope. Calculus III – because of the
huge amount of class material to cover – is the only course where I sometimes
may need to limit questions in class
in an attempt to balance individual students’ benefit vs. the benefit for the
entire class. I have scheduled additional
office hours, especially for this class - every other Thursday, from 10:30
to 12.
6.
A student is
supposed to spend at least two hours at home for each class hour. Thus,
you should expect spending at least 8 hours a week (more likely about 10 hours)
doing your homework and preparing for quizzes/exams.
7.
Since Calculus
III is a course in mathematics, we will be doing some simple proofs.
You will be expected to do some proofs in your homework assignments as well as
during exams.
8.
Because of the
increased availability of various symbolic algebra/calculus tools such as
computer packages (Maple, Mathematica, MATLAB, etc.) and advanced
calculators, the computational aspect of the course has been significantly
reduced. Computations are way less important than setting up the problem
correctly. Calculators and computers can do the computations; only people,
however, can set the problems for computations. In this course, the concepts
count much more than computations. In class I will usually omit the
computational details of, say, integrations. When doing your homework, you will
be often encouraged to use integration tables, advanced calculators, or various
Web tools, except for some problems that I will ask you to solve completely
manually, and where I will require that you show all the steps of your work.
9.
The textbook:
Jon Rogawski, Multivariable Calculus (Chapters
12 through 18). I cannot lecture on everything in class (simply, there is not
enough time), so you will have to learn quite a lot of material on your own.
Reading the assigned material is absolutely essential! Quizzes may
include questions on the assigned reading as a gentle method of enforcing your
reading.
10. Office hours
(Dr. Lukasz Pruski, Serra 149, x. 4035):
Monday |
2:30 - 4:00 |
Tuesday |
2:20 - 3:50 |
Wednesday |
10:00 - 11:00 |
Every
other Thursday (special office hours, primarily for MATH 250) |
10:30 - 12:00 |
Friday |
12:15 - 1:15 |
and at
other times, by appointment.
11. Contact: The
best way to contact me is by using e-mail (pruski@sandiego.edu).
I read e-mail many times during the day and night, except for a few weekends
when I am out of town, loitering in the desert. I have voice mail (x. 4035),
but I sometimes forget to check it. You may call the Mathematics Department Executive
Assistant, Amy, at x. 4706, as well.
12. A primitive webpage for the course is at http://home.sandiego.edu/~pruski/m250s12.html.
You should check the webpage daily
for assignments, announcements, and links.
13. Homework Assignments will be assigned and collected twice a week. The assignments will be
graded partly on effort. I will assign many odd-numbered exercises that
have answers at the BOB (Back-Of-Book). The total homework assignment
score will count for 20% of the course grade. No late assignments
will be accepted unless you arrange it with me in advance.
14. There will be about 10 short pop-quizzes (not
announced in advance). Quiz questions will refer to the recently covered
material and to the new material you were supposed to read on your own.
Three lowest quiz scores will be dropped, and the remaining scores will count
for 20% of the course grade. Quizzes cannot be made up unless you have a
valid reason for not taking the quiz and you notify me in advance of
your absence.
15. There will be three tests (hour exams); the
tentative dates are February 24, March 28, and May 2. Tests will be of closed-book variety. No advanced
calculators, smart phones, iPods, etc. are allowed. The test scores will count
for 30% of the course grade. A test can be made up only if you have an
actual emergency and if you notify me in advance about your absence.
16. The final exam (Friday, May 18, 11:00 - 1:30)
will be cumulative and its score will count for 30% of the course grade.
The exam is closed-book and the calculator policy will be the same as during
the tests.
17. Grading criteria are as follows:
Total percentage |
Grade |
90% and above |
A |
80% - 90% |
B |
60% - 80% |
C |
50% - 60% |
D |
below 50% |
F |
Of
course, pluses and minuses will be used, on cutoff boundaries.
(In the unlikely case that the number of A's and B's fall below 40%, I will
curve the grades up appropriately.)
18. The Mathematics and Computer Science Department
strongly promotes Academic Integrity. I hope issues related to academic
integrity will not arise in our course. There have been some cases of cheating
in math courses in the past – mainly the cases of submitting someone else’s
work as well as cases of cheating during exams. Depending on the severity of
the case, the possible consequences include: assigning the score of 0 on the
given assignment, lowering the course grade, or even assigning an F in the
course.