Math Course Web Template, Quarter 2001

Lecture:
MWF 11:15-12:05, York 2622

Discussion sections:

(B01)   Tuesday,     8:00 -   8:50,   YORK ??
(B02)   Tuesday,     9:05 -   9:55,   YORK ??
(B03)   Tuesday,   10:10 - 11:00,   YORK ??
(B04)   Tuesday,   11:15 - 12:05,   YORK ??
(B05)   Tuesday,   12:20 -   1:10,   YORK ??
(A06)   Tuesday,     1:25 -   2:15,   YORK ??

Instructor: Dr. J. William Helton
                  Office: ?? AP&M
                  Office Hours: Monday ??, Friday ??
                                          

TA: ??XXXXX?? (A01-A04)
                  email: ??@math.ucsd.edu
                  Office: ??YYY?? AP&M   
                  Office Hours: ??
                                           

TA: ??XX?? (A05-A06)
                  email: ??@math.ucsd.edu
                  Office: ????? AP&M   
                  Office Hours: ??YYYY??
                                           

Syllabus:
Available here in Postscript or PDF.

Required Text:
James Stewart, Calculus: Early Transcendentals, Fourth Edition, 1999, Brooks/Cole Publishing Company (available at UCSD bookstore and other places).

Reading:
It is very important that you READ THE ASSIGNED MATERIAL IN ADVANCE OF THE LECTURE. This will be expected and it will enable you to maximize what you get out of lectures.

Calculators:
It is important that you bring your graphing calculator (preferably a TI-86) to each lecture and recitation. The TI-90 series of calculators is forbidden as these calculators are able to do too much.

Grading:
There will be 3?? weekly quizzes worth 24% of the course grade. Each quiz will contain one or more questions which are close to some homework exercise you have been assigned, and it will contain a more novel question. There will be a midterm exam worth 26% of the total course grade. The final exam will cover all sections and will be worth 50% of the course grade. If you fail the final, you will fail the course.

Homeworks:
The plan now is not to collect homework, since the quizzes address it directly. Possibly this will change or we might add an extra quiz, if class performance is less than glorious. Although the homeworks will not be collected, you are responsible for the material that are covered in them.

Calculus Lab:
Math 21C students can get help in APM 2402 and OASIS. For more information, click here.

The Class Homepage: get there from

http://www.math.ucsd.edu/courses/