MATH 170: Calculus I
Section 010
Boise State University, Fall 2004

 
Instructor: Stephen Brill
Office: MG 218-A
Phone: (208) 426-3122
Fax: (208) 426-1356
E-mail: brill@math.boisestate.edu


Class meetings:
1640 to 1750, Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday in room MG 139.

Textbook:
Calculus: Early Transcendentals (Fifth Edition) by Stewart (Chapters 1-5).

Office hours:
Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday: 1800 to 1845.
Tuesday: 1530 to 1630.
Other times by appointment.

Homework:
The purpose of homework is to give students the opportunity to work with and become familiar with the important concepts of the course. Homework will be assigned regularly but will not be graded. Collaborative work on homework exercises is encouraged. You will have the opportunity to discuss homework exercises in class.

Calculators:
Use of calculators is encouraged on quizzes and the group project. Use of calculators is forbidden on tests and the final exam.

Academic honesty and appropriate behavior:
All students are expected to be familiar with and adhere to the policies and standards given in the BSU Student Code of Conduct. In addition, if you must have a cellular telephone or paging device on during class, please sit by the door so you can make a hasty and quiet exit if you are called.

Late work and/or extensions:
If you seek an extension on an assignment and the request occurs after the due date or time, your request will be summarily denied (except in the most extraordinary circumstances). Such requests that occur before the due date and time will be considered on a case-by-case basis.

Grading policy:
Your grade will be determined by your performance in four areas: Your grade will be computed via the following algorithm. Let x be the number of points accumulated throughout the semester (between 0 and 100):

A: x > 90
B: 80 < x < 90
C: 70 < x < 80
D: 60 < x < 70
F: x < 60



The following paragraphs are taken verbatim from the Department of Mathematics' "generic syllabus" for MATH 170:

Learning Objectives
Our first semester calculus course has the usual objectives of a calculus course which is used by other disciplines on campus. As a service course taken primarily by non-majors, MATH170 stresses neither the aesthetic side of mathematics nor the idea that of mathematics as the study of patterns.

Through the course of the semester, successful students will be expected


This page was most recently updated on 21 May 2004.
http://math.boisestate.edu/~brill/teaching/m170_f04/syll.html