2024 Fall Course Syllabus - Mathematics 3141.001
Course: Mathematics 3141.001.
Course Title: Advanced Calculus.
Credits: 3.
How this course will be taught: In-person.
Time: TR 2:00-3:20pm (lectures); T 11:00-11:50am (recitations).
Place: Wachman 010 (both lectures and recitations).
Instructor: Mihaela Ignatova.
Instructor Office: Wachman 532.
Instructor Email: ignatova@temple.edu
Instructor Phone: Please contact me by email.
Course Web Page: This is a registered Canvas course, all materials, announcements, grades, etc. will be posted there
Office Hours: TH 12:30-2:00pm.
Prerequisites: Math 2043, Calculus III; familiarity with mathematical proofs e.g. at the level of Math 2111 (basic concepts of math).
Course Materials: Primary textbook: Pugh, Charles. Real Mathematical Analysis, 2nd ed. Springer, 2015. ISBN 978-3-319-17770-0. Secondary: Rudin, Walter. Principles of Mathematical Analysis, 3rd ed., 1976. ISBN: 9780070542358. Additional materials can be found in the Canvas course page.
Course Goals: The course goals are to develop proof skills in one-dimensional calculus, understand the concepts of the real number system, functions, limits, continuity, differential and integral calculus of one variable, and uniform convergence. The course will focus on writing rigorous mathematical proofs.
Topics Covered: Sets and functions, ordered fields, properties of the real numbers, metric spaces, topological spaces, continuity, convergence, connectedness, differentiation and the Riemann-Stieltjes integral.
Course Grading: Midterms 20% each; Final 20%; Homework 20% (the lowest score will be dropped); Quizzes 20% (the lowest three will be dropped). The grading scale is A: 90-100; B: 80-89; C: 70-79; D 60-69; F: 60.
Exam Dates: Midterm 1 - Thursday, September 26th; Midterm 2 - Tuesday, October 29th; Final Exam - Tuesday, December 17th, 1:00pm - 3:00pm.
Attendance Policy: Students are expected to attend class. If you have an excuse for missing a class, please let me know. If you have 4 or more unexcused absences, your grade will drop half a notch (e.g. B to B-) for each 4 classes you miss.
Attendance and Your Health: To achieve course learning goals, students must attend and participate in classes, according to your instructors' requirements. However, if you feel unwell or if you are under quarantine or in isolation because you have been exposed to the virus or tested positive for it, you should not come to campus or attend in-person classes or activities. Students have the responsibility to contact their instructors to create a plan for participation and engagement in the course as soon as they are able to do so and to make a plan to complete all assignments in a timely fashion when illness delays their completion.
TA Contact Info: Brandis Whitfield, brandis@temple.edu, Office: Wachman 513.
Quizzes: There will be a short quiz every Thursday, unless otherwise announced. It will be returned to you on Tuesday.
Homework: To be uploaded on Canvas on Thursdays, before 2:00pm. Do all problems assigned and make sure that your work is legible. No late homework will be accepted. However, we will drop the lowest homework score. You may work cooperatively on assignments provided but you should write up the solutions on your own. Please put a note on your homework indicating the names of anyone you worked with.
Disability Statement: Any student who has a need for accommodations based on the impact of a documented disability or medical condition should contact Disability Resources and Services (DRS) in Howard Gittis Student Center South, Rm 420 (drs@temple.edu; 215-204-1280) to request accommodations and learn more about the resources available to you. If you have a DRS accommodation letter to share with me, or you would like to discuss your accommodations, please contact me as soon as practical. I will work with you and with DRS to coordinate reasonable accommodations for all students with documented disabilities. All discussions related to your accommodations will be confidential.
Academic Freedom: Freedom to teach and freedom to learn are inseparable facets of academic freedom. The University has adopted a policy on Student and Faculty Academic Rights and Responsibilities (Policy # 03.70.02) which can be accessed here (opens in new tab/window).
Add/Drop Policy: Students will be charged for a course unless dropped by the Drop/Add deadline date. Check the University calendar (opens in new tab/window) for exact dates.
During the Drop/Add period, students may drop a course with no record of the class appearing on their transcript. Students are not financially responsible for any courses dropped during this period. In the following weeks prior to or on the withdrawal date students may withdraw from a course with the grade of "W" appearing on their transcript. After the withdrawal date students may not withdraw from courses. Check the University Calendar (opens in new tab/window) for exact dates. See the full policy by clicking here (opens in new tab/window).
AI Policy: The use of generative AI tools (such as ChatGPT, DALL-E, etc.) is not permitted in this class unless specifically announced for a particular assignment; therefore, any use of AI tools for work in this class may be considered a violation of Temple University's Academic Honesty policy and Student Conduct Code, since the work is not your own. The use of unauthorized AI tools will result in a grade of zero on the assignment; a second offense will be reported to the Student Conduct Board.
Incomplete Policy: The grade "I" (an "incomplete") is only given if students cannot complete the course work due to circumstances beyond their control. It is necessary for the student to have completed the majority of the course work with a passing average and to sign an incomplete contract which clearly states what is left for the student to do and the deadline by which the work must be completed. The incomplete contract must also include a default grade that will be used in case the "I" grade is not resolved by the agreed deadline. See the full policy by clicking here (opens in new tab/window).
Student Support Services:
The following academic support services are available to students (all links open in a new tab/window):
The Math Consulting Center
Student Success Center
University Libraries
Undergraduate Research Support
Career Center
Tuttleman Counseling Services
Disability Resources and Services
If you are experiencing food insecurity or financial struggles, Temple provides resources and support. Notably, the Temple University Cherry Pantry and the Temple University
Emergency Student Aid Program are in operation as well as a variety of resources from the Division of Student Affairs.