Math 161Q Calculus IA Quest, Fall 2007

Class Meetings
Instructor Time Place
Ang Wei Mon, Wed 2:00 - 3:15 pm Hylan 202
Workshop
Teaching Assistant (TA) Time Place
Sukriye Kara Thursday 1:00 pm-3:00 pm Meliora 205
Brian Schwartz Monday 4:00 pm-6:00 pm Hylan 1106A




Getting Help
Note: Office hours of all instructors and all TAs are open to all students taking the course.
Instructor Email Phone Office Office Hours
Ang Wei wei at math dot rochester dot edu 276-3117 Hylan 811 Mon 1-2 pm,
Wed 1-2 pm
TA Email
Sukriye Kara skara at u dot rochester dot edu
Brian Schwartz brian.schwartz at rochester dot edu
Extra Help
Math Study Hall The math study hall is staffed by math graduate students who will answer your questions on a walk-in basis. It is held in Hylan 1103 and open on Tuesdays from 9 am - noon and 2 - 5 pm, and Thursdays from 9 am - noon, 1 - 3 pm, and 4 - 5 pm. A schedule will be posted on the door. It is a good place to work on homework and get help.
LAS Study Groups Learning Assistance Services (LAS) resources are available to all students. Students with all kinds of academic records may make use of LAS programs. LAS works with strong students who wish to become better, with students who have not yet tapped into the strategies needed to succeed in college, and everyone in between. They offer extensive study groups and workshop programs, individual study skills counseling, study skills workshops, a study skills course, and disability support. LAS study groups meet weekly and offer a time to get together with other students who are taking your course and to get advice and direction from an older student who did well in this same course. Group meetings are informal and are offered in LAS, in the residence halls, and in some classroom buildings. Please contact LAS about joining a study group by visiting 107 Lattimore Hall or calling (585) 275-9049.
SUMS Tutors The Society for Undergraduate Math Students (SUMS) offers one-on-one private tutoring at reasonable rates. They can be contacted at tutors at math dot rochester dot edu, or by calling (585) 275-9422, or (585) 275-4411.
LAS Disability Support If you have an academic need related to a disability, please contact LAS about disability support. The University of Rochester is committed to providing equal educational opportunities for individuals with disabilities. Costs of required auxiliary services are to be borne by the university, not by the student. For more complete information about disabilities, please read the disability handbook. Please contact LAS by visiting 107 Lattimore Hall or calling (585) 275-9049. Note: To be granted alternate testing accommodations, you (the student) must fill out forms with LAS at least seven days before each and every exam. These forms are not sent "automatically." Professors are not responsible for requesting alternative testing accommodations at LAS, and they are not obligated to make any accommodations on their own.
WebWork Feedback All WebWork problems have a button for "email instructor." Clicking this button allows you to write a message that is emailed to the instructors and TAs. Someone will get back to you within a day or so (and maybe sooner). You do not have to copy out the problem (the system automatically does this). If WebWork won't accept your answer, then say what that answer is and how you came up with it. It helps us if you give some idea of your thought process. Be aware that email sent shortly before a set is due will almost certainly not get a reply before the set closes.
Further Suggestions

If you are having any difficulties, seek help immediately - do not wait until it is too late to recover from falling behind or failing to understand a concept. Ask an instructor or TA either in class, during office hours, or during an appointment. Email your instructor or TA, or use the WebWork "email instructor" button. Work with your classmates (this is always a good idea). It is essential not to fall behind because each lecture is based on previous work.

Good study habits are important for doing your best in this course. Students who have already taken calculus offer the following advice on how to succeed. Always go to class and take good notes. Read each section in the text before it is covered in class, since you will be lost if you can't follow the instructor. Do the homework the day of the lecture or the next day (don't procrastinate). Do all of the homework thoroughly, write out all of the details, keep it organized, and use it to help you study. Visit LAS and join a study group. If you don't understand something, ask right away. Learn from your mistakes. Go over tests and look at solutions until you know what you did wrong and understand the solution. Figure everything out rather than memorizing. Arrange your schedule so that you have enough time every week to study and do homework. Start studying for exams early. You can't just study the night before and do well. Get plenty of rest the night before an exam. Don't stress out and don't give up. For more advice, please read this mathematics survival guide, this advice on how to study mathematics, this advice for beginning calculus students or this advice on how to succeed in calculus.

The math department handbook has useful information on suggestions for first year students, assistance available to first year students, taking exams, course information, and advanced placement.





Course Description
Textbook

Calculus: Early Transcendentals, 6th edition, by James Stewart   (ISBN-10: 0495011665, ISBN-13: 978-0495011668). The web supplements for this book may be helpful, particularly the algebra review and the various web links for each chapter.

Course Description

Math 161Q covers differential calculus, which is the mathematical method for analyzing changing quantities. Change is measured by, for example, slopes, velocities, acceleration, and, in general, derivatives. The precise definition of an instantaneous rate of change requires an understanding of limits, a notion which also leads to the understanding of what is meant by a continuously changing quantity. Techniques like the product, quotient, and chain rules enable efficient computation of derivatives which can then be applied to, among other things, the analysis of motion, rates of change, optimization problems, and understanding the shape of a graph. Math 161Q is open only to first-year students. See also the course catalog description.

The Quest version of Math 161 covers the material of Math 161 in the same amount of time but with slightly more detail and rigor. The workshop problems are primarily what distinguish this enriched Quest course from the ordinary course. These problems are more challenging exercises, often coming from the Problems Plus questions in the textbook. The workshop will meet every week for two hours, and will take the place of having weekly quizzes.





Assessments and Grading

Attending lectures and workshops is required in this course, and students who miss a significant number of classes without obtaining excused leaves of absence from their instructors will find their grades penalized. In addition to classroom attendance, your grade for the course will be based on your performance on three exams, WebWork assignments, and quizzes:

Assessment Percent Date and Time Place
WebWork 25 % Usually due Friday at 6 PM Online (click here)
Workshop Problems 10 % Usually due at the beginning of the next class period Meliora 205
Hylan 1106A
Midterm exam 1 20 % TBA TBA
Midterm exam 2 20 % TBA TBA
Final exam 25 % Monday, December 17, 4:00 - 7:00 PM Hylan 202 (Bring your student ID!)

Your scores on WebWork, workshop problems, and exams will be available on BlackBoard's online gradebook for you to view. Please check that your scores are recorded correctly. If you added Math 161Q midway through the semester, please see the section Adding Math 161Q below for how your grade will be determined.

WebWork and Supplementary Homework

Homework comes in two forms. One form of homework consists of supplementary exercises that are listed in the course schedule. These exercises do not contribute directly to your total grade, but they will be discussed in recitation and similar exercises will undoubtedly appear on exams.

The other form of homework is WebWork exercises. WebWork exercises are done online and provide instant feedback. When you have done a WebWork exercise correctly, your credit for the problem is immediately recorded in the database, provided it is before the due date. You may attempt WebWork problems as many times as you like, and incorrect attempts are not counted in your grade. WebWork assignments are usually due every Friday at 6 am. The due dates are on the course schedule and are also included in the WebWork system. All WebWork problem sets, except for set 0, will be counted in your grade.

WebWork exercises are individualized for each student, but you are encouraged to discuss problems with other students. Get started early on WebWork each week and enter some answers at least a couple days before the due date. That way, you will have time to seek help on the harder problems before the set is due. The WebWork system often becomes overloaded and slow in the hours immediately before a set is due, since everyone is trying to enter their answers at the same time. Avoid the last minute rush by being done before then.

Your WebWork login name should be the same as your U of R e-mail user ID (the first part of your Rochester e-mail address), and initially your password will be your student ID number. You can change your password after you log in. If at the beginning of the semester you cannot log in to WebWork, please email the following information to your instructor, who will set up the account for you and contact you when it is activated:

  1. Your full name, your @mail.rochester.edu email address, and your student ID number (e.g., Joe Horatio Schmoe, jschmoe6@mail.rochester.edu, ID number 55567890), and
  2. The class number, your instructor's name, and the times the class meets (e.g., Math 161Q, Pearson MWF 1-2pm).
Workshop Problems

The workshop problems are primarily what distinguish this enriched Quest course from the ordinary course. These problems are more challenging exercises, often coming from the Problems Plus questions in the textbook. The workshop will meet every week for two hours every Thursday starting during the first full week of classes (September 10-14), and attendance is mandatory. You may attend either the early workshop on Thursday at 2:30 - 4:30 pm in Hylan 1104, or the late workshop on Thursday at 4:50 - 6:50 pm in Hylan 1106A. The workshop will be run by the TA's for the course. Starting with either the first or second workshop, there will be some brain food (cookies) provided during the workshop.

The workshop problems will be given to you well in advance of the workshop. You are expected to have read and made some progress on the problems before you come to the workshop. In the workshop you will share your ideas with others in a small group, and work together to solve the problems. Your TA's will check on each group's progress, answer questions, give hints and feedback, and clarify technical details. Your TA's will not "give" you the answer to any of the workshop problems. If there is time, the TA's will also discuss the WebWork or supplementary homework questions.

Each of you will write up solutions to the workshop problems individually. It is important that you write up solutions in your own words. The usual rules of good writing apply when you are writing for any mathematics class. In particular, you should always write in complete sentences using correct grammar, spelling, and punctuation. You should explain not only what you did, but why you decided to do what you did. You should think of this as an opportunity to reflect on the process that will lead you to a correct solution to similar problems. To encourage academic honesty, we require you to write the names of the people you worked with on the papers you hand in. The workshop problems will be handed in at the start of the next class period, which is usually Monday of the following week.

Exams
Make-up exams will be given at your professor's discretion, and only if you notify your professor before the exam or if you have an emergency. Exams will not be given early to accommodate travel plans. The final exam will be cumulative and cover everything listed in the course schedule. The final exam will consist of several parts, one for each part of the course. Some old Math 161 exams (not Math 161Q exams!) are available for practice. There is no guarantees that the types of problems or subject matter of these old exams will agree with those on your exams in this course, as they are exams from a slightly different course.




Course Schedule
Date Lecture (Reading) WebWork Supplementary Homework Workshop Problems
Sept 5- Sept 7 1.1: Four ways to represent a function
1.2: Mathematical models: a catalog of essential functions
1.3: New functions from old functions
1.4: Graphing calculators and computers
1.5: Exponential functions
1.6: Inverse functions and logarithms
WebWork Set 0
(This WebWork does not count toward your grade)


WebWork Set 1
(Due Thu, Sept 13 at 6 am)
1.1: 1-2, 5-8, 11, 37-40
1.2: 15
1.3: 1-4, 26-27, 40, 51
1.5: 15, 20, 22
1.6: 19, 23, 25, 35, 38, 39
No workshop this week
Sept 10-
Sept 14
2.1: Tangent and velocity problems
2.2: The limit of a function
2.3: Calculating limits using the limit laws
WebWork Set 2
(Due Thu, Sept 20 at 6 am)
2.1: 3, 6-8
2.2: 4-9, 25-28, 32
2.3: 1, 7, 9-11, 13-29 odd, 36
Workshop 1:
Page 81: 11, 12, 18, 19
(Due Mon, Sept 17 at the beginning of class)
Sept 17-
Sept 21
2.4: The precise definition of a limit
2.5: Continuity
2.6: Limits at infinity: horizontal asymptotes
WebWork Set 3
(Due Fri, Sept 28 at 6 am)
2.4: 1-5, 11
2.5: 4, 7-8, 12, 18-20, 31-34, 44, 49
2.6: 2-5, 15-33 odd
Ch. 2 Review: 36, 39-40
Workshop 2:
2.4: 38
2.6: 58
Page 171: 1, 3, 9
(Due Mon, Sept 24 at the beginning of class)
Sept 24-
Sept 28
2.7: Derivatives and rates of change
2.8: The derivative as a function
WebWork Set 4
(Due Fri, Oct 5 at 6 am)
2.7: 1, 3, 6-7, 14-17, 31-33, 44-47
2.8: 1-12, 20-28 even, 41-44
Workshop 3:
2.7: 51-52
2.8: 55
Page 171: 7, 8, 11
(Due Mon, Oct 1 at the beginning of class)
Monday, October 1, 2007: Last date to declare S/F option (except for students in their first semester), or to add or drop/delete
Midterm exam 1 is Tuesday, October 2, 8:00 - 9:30 AM in Hutchison 140 (Lander Auditorium)
Oct 1-
Oct 5
3.1: Derivatives of polynomials and exponential functions
3.2: The product and quotient rules
3.3: Derivatives of trigonometric functions
WebWork Set 5
(Due Fri, Oct 12 at 6 am)
3.1: 4, 7, 9, 11, 18, 28, 35, 51, 59, 77
3.2: 1-8, 25
3.3: 1-15 odd, 40-42
Workshop 4:
3.1: 78
Page 171: 12-14
(Due Wed, Oct 10 at the beginning of class)
Fall break starts Saturday, October 6 and ends Monday, October 8
Oct 10-
Oct 12
3.4: The chain rule
3.5: Implicit differentiation
WebWork Set 6
(Due Fri, Oct 19 at 6 am)
3.4: 1, 4, 9, 11, 15, 23, 59, 61, 63
3.5: 1-7 odd, 10, 21, 25, 29, 39
Workshop 5:
3.4: 66
3.5: 69
Page 266: 1, 4, 6
(Due Mon, Oct 15 at the beginning of class)
Oct 15-
Oct 19
3.6: Derivatives of logarithmic functions
3.7: Rates of change in the natural and social sciences
3.8: Exponential growth and decay
WebWork Set 7
(Due Fri, Oct 26 at 6 am)
3.6: 2, 4, 14, 18-19, 23, 37-38, 40-44
3.7: 1, 3, 12, 18, 23
3.8: 8, 10, 13, 15
Workshop 6:
3.6: 52
3.7: 20, 35
Page 266: 8, 9
(Due Wed Oct 24 at the beginning of class)
Oct 22-
Oct 26
3.9: Related rates
3.10: Linear approximation and differentials
WebWork Set 8
(Due Fri, Nov 2 at 6 am)
3.9: 2, 11, 14-20 even, 23, 30
3.10: 1, 2, 11, 13, 16, 18, 23, 36
Workshop 7:
3.9: 36, 37, 44
Page 266: 23, 27, 30
(Due Wed, Oct 31 at the beginning of class)
Oct 29-
Nov 2
3.11: Hyperbolic functions
4.1: Maximum and minimum values
4.2: The mean value theorem
WebWork Set 9
(Due Fri, Nov 9 at 6 am)
3.11: 1-3, 11, 17, 30-31, 38, 46
4.1: 3, 7-8, 29-43 odd, 47, 53
4.2: 1, 5, 7, 16, 20, 26-27, 29
Workshop 8:
4.2: 34-35
Page 266: 11, 20
(Due Wed, Nov 7 at the beginning of class)
Midterm exam 2 is Tuesday, November 6, 8:00 - 9:30 AM in Hutchison 140 (Lander Auditorium)
Nov 5-
Nov 9
4.3: How derivatives affect the shape of a graph
4.4: Indeterminate forms and L'Hospital's rule
4.5: Summary of curve sketching
WebWork Set 10
(Due Fri, Nov 16 at 6 am)
4.3: 1, 5, 7, 11, 14-18 even, 43, 47, 72-74
4.4: 5-6, 9, 13, 15, 21, 43, 49, 57, 59
4.5: 1, 3, 9, 23, 25
Workshop 9:
Taylor Polynomials Handout
4.3: 64, 82
4.4: 78, 84
Page 352: 2, 3, 7
(Due Wed, Nov 14 at the beginning of class)
Nov 12-
Nov 16
4.7: Optimization problems
4.8: Newton's method
WebWork Set 11
(Due Mon, Nov 26 at 11:59 pm)
4.7: 12, 17, 22, 25, 37
4.8: 1, 3, 5, 11, 29
Workshop 10:
Ch. 4.8: 31, 35, 40, 42
Page 352: 10, 16
(Due Mon, Nov 19 at the beginning of class)
Thanksgiving break starts at noon on Wednesday, November 21 and ends Sunday, November 25
Nov 19-
Nov 21
4.9: Antiderivatives
WebWork Set 12
(Due Fri, Nov 30 at 6 am)
4.9: 1-13 odd, 21, 29, 33, 36-37
No workshop this week
Nov 26-
Nov 30
5.1: Areas and distances
5.2: The definite integral
WebWork Set 13
(Due Fri, Dec 7 at 6 am)
5.1: 1-3, 11, 14, 20-22
5.2: 2, 7, 17-18, 21, 29, 31, 35-36, 53
Workshop 11:
4.9: 66, 74, 75, 76
Page 352: 11, 23
(Due Wed, Dec 3 at the beginning of class)
Thursday, December 6, 2007: Last date for students in their first semester to declare the S/F option
Dec 3-
Dec 7
5.3: The fundamental theorem of calculus
5.4: Indefinite integrals and the net change theorem
5.5: The substitution rule
WebWork Set 14
(Due Fri, Dec 14 at 6 am)
5.3: 2, 5, 10-11, 13-14, 19, 23-25, 31, 39
5.4: 1-2, 6-7, 12, 18, 33, 58
5.5: 2-5, 8-10, 17
Workshop 12:
5.2: 27, 52, 65-66
5.3: 54, 58, 68
(Due Wed, Dec 12 at the beginning of class)
Thursday, December 13, 2007: Last date students can withdraw from courses
Dec 10-
Dec 12
Review      
The final exam is Monday, December 17, 4:00 - 7:00 PM in Hylan 202
(Bring your student ID!)
Here is the registrar's final exam schedule
The course schedule was last updated on August 26, 2009




Adding Math 161Q

To add Math 161Q, please do the following:

  1. Talk to the Math 161Q professor and have him sign a drop/add slip to be turned in to the registrar.
  2. Email your professor the following information to set up a WebWork account:
    1. Your full name, your Rochester email address, and your student ID number (e.g., Joe Horatio Schmoe, jschmoe6@mail.rochester.edu, ID number 55567890), and
    2. The class number, your instructor's name, and the times the class meets (e.g., Math 161Q, Wei MW 2-3:15pm).
  3. Start attending one of the workshops immediately. Introduce yourself to the TA's and tell them that you just added the course. You are expected to start doing the WebWork and workshop problems, as well as take exams, as soon as you have added the course. Anything that you miss will count against your grade.

Your instructor will set up a WebWork account for you and contact you when it is activated. Within a day of turning in your drop/add slip to the registrar, you will automatically be added to the BlackBoard website for this course.

Transfer credit, AP credit, etc.

The frequently asked questions page has information about how to obtain transfer credit, how to take a course off-campus for transfer credit, how to obtain advanced placement credit, and how to change your calculus sequence. The math department handbook may also have useful information about this.