Syllabus : Calculus I

1 Course Information

1.1 Professor Information

1.2 Course Description

This course is 4 semester hours. The prerequisites are MTH 139 or MTH 140. Topics include limits, continuity, differentiation of algebraic, trigonometric, and other transcendental functions, and applications of differentiation, including optimization and curve sketching, antiderivatives, integration by substitution, definite integrals, the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus, and application of integration to areas of regions in the plane.

1.3 Text and Materials

The textbook is Calculus Early Transcendentals, 3rd edition, by Rogawski and Adams, ISBN 9781464114885. Topics for MTH 233 are included in chapters 2, 3, 4, and 5 of the text. For exams, students may use only a non-programmable, non-graphing calculator.

1.4 Course Calendar

Please note that the dates for our in-class exams below are subject to change. The final is university scheduled and cannot be taken at a different time without permission of the Dean of the College of Sciences and Mathematics. A more complete schedule can be found here

Exam Date
Exam 1 Wednesday Feb. 12
Exam 2 Wednesday Mar. 18
Exam 3 Wednesday Apr. 8
Exam 4 Wednesday Apr. 29
Final 10:45-1:15 Wednesday May 6

1.5 Course Requirements

1.5.1 Class Attendance and Participation

Students are expected to attend all class meetings, arriving on time. If you are absent, you are responsible for determining what you missed and for being prepared for class when you return.

1.5.2 Preparing for Class

Students which are adequately prepared for the class should expect to spend a minimum of three hours of work for each credit hour (the federal definition of a credit hour requires two hours outside of class, I expect three, see below). This is 24-36 hours per week outside of class for Math 233 in the summer. Most of this time will be outside of class reading the text, practicing examples, and working homework exercises. A minimal time commitment is likely to lead to a final grade of a C. More time may be required to achieve excellence. Material to be discussed in class should be read before coming to class. Check your university email and the course website regularly, as I may send reminders, assignments, or announcements.

1.5.3 Lab Assignments

Labs will be turned in and graded. During the lab meetings, students will investigate various topics in calculus.

1.5.4 Homework

Homework will be assigned as exercises from the text, it will generally be due the Monday after the corresponding lecture. You will be required to turn in all the homework for a completion grade. In addition, some homework may be graded.

1.5.5 In-class exams

If a student must miss an exam due to an excused absence, special arrangements should be made in advance. Cell phones and graphing calculators are not allowed out during exams, even if that is all you brought. Students are responsible for bringing their own scientific calculator to exams. No music (even through headphones) is allowed during exams.

1.5.6 A Comprehensive Final Exam

The final exam is in our regular classroom on the date and time shown above.

1.6 Grading

1.6.1 Grading Policy

Category Weight
Labs 10%
Homework 20%
Exam 1 10%
Exam 2 10%
Exam 3 10%
Exam 4 10%
Final Exam 30%

1.6.2 Grading Scale

Letter Grade Percentage
A 90%-100%
B 80%-90%
C 70%-80%
D 60%-70%
F 0%-60%

1.7 Other Information

The following is an exerpt from SFA Policy 5.4:

The federal definition of a credit hour is an amount of work represented in intended learning outcomes and verified by evidence of student achievement that is an institutionally established equivalency that reasonably approximates:

  1. Not less than one hour of classroom or direct faculty instruction and a minimum of two hours out-of-class student work each week for approximately fifteen weeks for one semester or trimester hour of credit, or 10 to 12 weeks for one quarter hour of credit, or the equivalent amount of work over a different amount of time, or;
  2. At least an equivalent amount of work as outlined in item 1 above for other academic activities as established by the institution including laboratory work, internships, practica, studio work, and other academic work leading to the award of credit hours.

To this end, all students in courses offered by the Department of Mathematics and Statistics that wish to be successful should plan to spend a minimum of two hours outside of class for every credit hour associated with this course. Expected activities to be completed in the time outside of class include reviewing notes from previous class meetings, reading assigned course resources, completing all assigned exercises and projects, and performing periodic assessment preparation.

See http://www2.sfasu.edu/math/docs/syllabi/MTH233Syllabus.pdf for elements common to all sections.

1.8 UPDATED

Due to the outbreak of the Corona virus, several changes have been made (and may continue to be made) to how this course is run. The guiding principles for these changes are:

  1. make everything accessible to as many as possible;
  2. keep things simple;
  3. maintain the integrity of the course;
  4. stay on schedule as much as possible.

The changes are as follows:

1.8.1 Office Hours

I will continue to hold office hours at the regular time, except via Zoom. To attend Zoom office hours, follow the link: https://sfasu.zoom.us/my/drjensensfa.

1.8.2 Lectures

Lectures will held at the usual time, and will be broadcast via Zoom. These lectures will be recorded and links to the recordings will be posted on the course website so that students may access them anytime. You are not required to participate in the live lectures. However, it is suggested that, where possible, you view the recorded lectures. To attend the live Zoom lectures follow the link: https://sfasu.zoom.us/my/drjensensfa.

Because we won't be physically meeting, at is paramount that you read the textbook and do the homework.

1.8.3 Homework

Homework will continue to be assigned on the course website as normal. The only difference is that instead of submitting your homework to be graded, you will give yourself a grade on the homework (probably via D2L).

1.8.4 Quizzes

The recitation quizzes will not be required during the time we hold online classes. At the end of the semester the number of quizzes to be turned in will be re-evaluated (it is possible that this number will be 0).

1.8.5 Labs

Labs will continue to be done on Desmos at their usual times. In addition, you will be given the code to complete the lab on the course website, and you will have one week to complete the lab. For example a lab assigned on a Wednesday will be due the following Wednesday, before the next lab is started.

1.8.6 Exams

Any exams given during the online portion of this course will be take home exams, and will be open book/open note. The take home exams will be posted on the course website, and you will have one week to complete each take home exam. The exams will be turned in via D2L.

To be clear, here is a list of recourse you may use on take home exams:

  • your own self;
  • your own non-programmable, non-graphing calculator;
  • your own writing utensils and scratch paper;
  • your own notes;
  • your own textbook.

And here is a list of recourses you may not use:

  • the Internet;
  • another person;
  • another person's notes;
  • anything not on the approved list.

These exams will be "on your honor", and you will be trusted to not cheat.


Author: Ryan Jensen (ryan.jensen@mathnotes.cc)

Modified: 2020-06-01 Mon 14:59

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