http://math.okstate.edu/people/lebl/osu2163-f14/
Go to D2L at http://oc.okstate.edu/ for grades, discussions, announcements, etc...
Lecture: MWF 9:30AM - 10:20AM, Classroom Building 321
Jon Rogawski, Calculus: Early Transcendentals, Second Edition, 2011, W. H. Freeman and Company
Jiří Lebl
Web: http://math.okstate.edu/people/lebl/
Office: 505 MSCS
Office hours: Monday 2-3pm (office), Wednesday 2-3pm (MLSC main room), Friday
3-3:50pm (office), or by appointment at other times
Office phone: (405) 744-7750
Email:
lebl at okstate dot edu
We will learn multivariable calculus by generalizing the single-variable notions to functions of more than one variable. We will study in particular analytic geometry in three dimensions and basic notions of vectors, and the beginnings of vector calculus.
Prerequisites: Calculus I and II with grade C or better.
Grade distribution is as follows:
45% - 3 exams, the lowest grade is dropped, so the 2 best scores are counted.
30% - Final exam.
15% - Quizzes.
10% - Webassign.
As usual, 90% and above guarantees an A, 80% and above a B, 70% a C, and 60% and above a D. Curve will be applied if needed, and so those cutoff percentages could move downwards, but only if it is deemed necessary.
Exam 1: Friday, September 19th (in class)
Exam 2: Monday, October 20th (in class)
Exam 3: Friday, November 21st (in class)
Final exam: (as per university schedule) Monday, December 8th, 8:00am-9:50am, same room as class
Quizzes will be in-class, not announced ahead of time. They will be short 10-15 minutes. I will try to do at least one weekly, but no promises. Quizzes will be based on non-webassign homework, and sometimes perhaps on webassign as well. 2 lowest quiz scores will be dropped.
No calculators are allowed on the quizzes or exams. Trust me, you will not need them, and from experience in this sort of class, they just slow you down. Feel free to use them when studying and working on homework of course.
Written homework (which will not be handed in, but which will be the basis of quizzes) will be announced on D2L.
WebAssign will be used in this class:
https://www.webassign.net/login.html
Class key: okstate 4914 5485
See the tentative schedule (http://math.okstate.edu/people/leblosu2163-f14/schedule.html). This can (and will) change as situation "on the ground" changes.
See the official syllabus attachment, for some more information.
Wolfram Alpha (http://www.wolframalpha.com). It's like Google for math.
Speaking of Google: try typing something like x^2-y^2.
Although no, Google will not likely solve your homework problems for you. Even if it did, it would not be a good idea. The reason for doing the homework is to learn how to do it. If you simply try to find solutions online, and did manage to find them, you will not learn anything and you will see the result of this on the exams.