Please read the following remarks carefully. They contain information that will help you understand some important things about M351.
You should know how to access the Web, my
homepage, and the relevant pages for
this class which you will find through my homepage. For example,
homework
assignments and announcements will be posted there.
You will find frequent references in the
textbook to computer algebra systems, and in particular MAPLE. Part of
this course will be devoted to using MAPLE to analyze problems. There
is a potential trap here: overreliance on MAPLE will lead to poor
understanding of basic computations and to poor grades. You will NOT
have MAPLE available to you during examinations. If your MAPLE skills
are rusty, or if you would like to learn how to use MAPLE for these
problems, you may ask me for help or a MAPLE reference OR you may go
to the
go to the Online
Maple tutorial
It is CRUCIAL that you learn to
do problems "by hand" as
well as using the computer. There is a good reason for this
statement. Computer systems are not infallible; there is NO
software system of any complication, and certainly MAPLE is one such
system,
which does not have bugs. With any such software system when used
systematically, human intervention is frequently necessary. This
means you need to:
In order to earn a "C" grade in this class you MUST be able to
compute with paper and pencil both quickly and accurately.
There are certain skills that you learned
in your first calculus
classes that will be used many times in M351.
You may find it worthwhile to review these topics. Just as you
cannot successfully complete a calculus course without knowing basic
algebra, you cannot successfully complete M351 without being
PROFICIENT at:
Examinations in this course are designed
to find out three
things:
Experience has shown that to pass this course
you should devote
two hours outside of class for every hour in class. Note that this
requires you to spend a total of nine hours (minimum) each week on
M352. This amount of time is a little more than one full working day
per week of a routine nine-to-five job!