Fall 2007 Course Syllabus
Course: 1011.003.
Course Title: College Math.
Time: 02:40P - 03:30P.
Place: BB 407.
Instructor: Mandelbaum, Joseph.
Instructor Office: Wachman 446.
Instructor Email: joseph.mandelbaum@temple.edu
Instructor Phone: 215-204-1653.
Office Hours: Monday - Wednesday 12:30P - 1:30P or by appointment.
Prerequisites: Placement Exam or having taken Math 45 or it's equivalent.
Textbook: Bennett and Briggs, Using and Understanding Mathematics, Addison-Wesley.
Course Goals: Math 1011 is a QA Core course designed to improve the level of quantitative awareness of students using familiar situations that provide a sense of purpose for studying mathematics. The objective is not to make mathematicians of the students, but to help gain a mathematicial perspective and deal as comfortably as possible with an environment that increasingly makes use of quantitative reasoning.
Topics Covered: Topics include: financial planning including compounding, savings plans, loan payments and mortgages; linear functions; exponential growth and decay; counting techniques; probability; and expected value.
Course Grading: There are 4 tests and a final. Of tests 1 through 4, the lowest test grade can be dropped to get the average of the three highest test grades. The final can NOT be the dropped test. The average of the three highest test grades would count as 80% of the grade and the final as 20%. Numerical averages translate into letter grades as follows: 93 to 100: A; 90 to 92: A-; 87 to 89: B+; 83 to 86: B; 80 to 82: B-; 77 to 79:C+; 73 to 76: C; 70 to 72:C-; 67 to 69:D+; 63 to 66:D; 60 to 62:D-; Below 60:F.
Exam Dates: Test 1:Sept.17; Test 2(Midterm):Oct.12; Test 3:Nov.2; Test 4:Nov.28; Final:See Final Exam Schedule.
Attendance Policy: As an incentive to attend class, three additional points are added to the final average for perfect attendance.
Any student who has a need for accommodation based on the impact of a disability should contact me privately to discuss the specific situation as soon as possible. Contact Disability Resources and Services at (215) 204-1280, 100 Ritter Annex, to coordinate reasonable accommodations for students with documented disabilities.
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.
Students will be charged for a course unless a withdrawal form is processed by a registration office of the University by the Drop/Add deadline date given below. For this semester, the crucial dates are as follows:
During the first two weeks of the fall or spring semester or summer sessions, students may withdraw from a course with no record of the class appearing on the transcript. In weeks three through nine of the fall or spring semester, or during weeks three and four of summer sessions, the student may withdraw with the advisor's permission. The course will be recorded on the transcript with the instructor's notation of "W," indicating that the student withdrew. After week nine of the fall or spring semester, or week four of summer sessions, students may not withdraw from courses. No student may withdraw from more than five courses during the duration of his/her studies to earn a bachelor's degree. A student may not withdraw from the same course more than once. Students who miss the final exam and do not make alternative arrangements before the grades are turned in will be graded F.
The grade I (an "incomplete") is reserved for extreme circumstances. It is necessary to have completed almost all of the course with a passing average and to file an incomplete contract specifying what is left for you to do. To be eligible for an I grade you need a good reason and you should have missed not more than 25% of the first nine weeks of classes. If approved by the Mathematics Department chair and the CST Dean's office, the incomplete contract must include a default grade that will be used in case the I grade is not resolved within 12 months.