Math 1131Q — Calculus I (Spring 2019)

Description: This course is an introduction to differential and integral calculus, which is the mathematical language used in any science concerned with dynamically changing quantities. The main topics it covers are limits, derivatives, integrals, the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus, and some basic applications of these ideas.

Prerequisites: Passing score on the Calculus Readiness Test.

Text:

The textbook for the course is Calculus Early Transcendentals, Single Variable by James Stewart (8th Edition), which is bundled with a WebAssign code for doing online homework. Below is a PDF detailing your different options for buying the textbook at the bookstore:

Math 1131 Textbook Instructions

Graphing calculators: TI 82, 83, 84, 84 plus, 85 or 86 may be used. Models TI-89 and above (including TI-Nspire) are not permitted on the exams or quizzes.


i>clicker Registration:

Clickers will be used in the lectures. You must register your i>clicker by visiting the link through the lecture section of your instructor in HuskyCT. You can buy the physical clickers at the UConn bookstore. We do not use mobile apps for clickers.

Clicker participation will start to count from the third week of the classes. You should make sure that you have a physical clicker by that time (no exceptions). Two days of clicker participation will be dropped at the end of the semester.


Homework and WebAssign:

Homework: To access the online homework you will have to go through Husky CT. In your discussion section’s HuskyCT page, you will find a link to do your homework using WebAssign. There will be homework assignments for each section of the text. Each assignment will be made available on WebAssign before the section is covered in class. The due date for each assignment will be set by your instructor. You will get five attempts for each question that is not multiple choice and fewer than five attempts for each multiple choice question; the exact number of attempts will depend on the number of choices. After each attempt, you will be told whether your answer is correct or not. If you are not able to get the correct answer after your initial attempts, we recommend that you seek help from your instructor, the Q-Center, a tutor, or another student before attempting to answer the problem again.

Warning: When accessing your online homework, use Firefox or Chrome as your browser; there are problems that can occur if you use Internet Explorer or Safari.

Discussion and Worksheets

Discussion sections provide an opportunity to ask questions about content from lectures and WebAssign, and explore examples that provide different perspectives and more depth. There will be a worksheet each week that you will normally begin working on in discussion, then finish and turn in at the beginning of a later discussion section. You can access the worksheets at the Learning Activities tab at the top of this page. The worksheets are designed to reinforce and strengthen your knowledge and understanding, and provide practice with writing coherent, well-reasoned answers to questions. The majority of the grade for these worksheets will be based on completion of the exercises, and parts of exercises on each worksheet will be graded in detail for correctness.

The due dates for the worksheets will be announced by your TA, who should be contacted if you have questions.

Submitting Worksheets: You will be submitting the worksheets in an online platform called Gradescope. 


Quizzes

  • There will be a quiz each week in your discussion class. These quizzes will be for 15 minutes.
  • The quiz in the first week is on precalculus. Each subsequent quiz will test students on material that was taught in the previous week.
  • Quiz make-up policy: a student is allowed to make up a quiz only if there is a personal/family/medical emergency with justification. Athletes who travel on behalf of the university must provide a letter/email from their athletic advisor in order to be allowed to take a make-up quiz.
  • Summary quizzes: The students will have the option to resubmit solutions to the “block” of quizzes given before that midterm. Here are the guidelines on submission and grading of these summary quizzes.
    • In each summary quiz, a solution to every problem from that quiz block should be included, even those for which the student made no mistake.
    • Each summary quiz will be graded for completeness only, so providing solutions to all problems earns 100%.
    • A student who doesn’t submit a summary quiz will still get a grade. It will be the average of quizzes in that block.
    • You will submit the summary quizzes in Gradescope.
  • We will drop your lowest grade quiz.

Exam information

There will be three midterm exams, all taken in the discussion section and all will be multiple choice. 

The final exam will be a mix of multiple choice and free response questions.


Grading

Homework (online)     WebAssign   8%
Quizzes (in a discussion)     Discussion   20%
Worksheets (written)     Discussion   8%
Clicker responses     Lecture   4%
Exam 1: 2nd Discussion Meeting, Week 4     Discussion   12%
Exam 2: 2nd Discussion Meeting, Week 8     Discussion   12%
Exam 3: 2nd Discussion Meeting, Week 13     Discussion   12%
Final Exam       Common (2 hours)   24%

Makeup Policy: In general, you will not be allowed to make up an exam, quizzes, homework or worksheet. In circumstances where you have a medical, family or personal emergency which prevents you from submitting your work on time, a proof in the form of doctors’ note excusing you from work (because of medical emergency), or an email from your parent (about family/personal emergency) will need to be provided.  If you are an athlete who will miss class time, quizzes, homework, worksheets or exams, you will need to ask your athletic advisor to send an email to your instructor and TA stating the circumstances for the absence.

In case of a missed exam please contact your instructor with 24 hours.

Academic Integrity/Misconduct.

  1. Academic misconduct is dishonest or unethical academic behavior that includes, but is not limited to, misrepresenting mastery in an academic area (e.g., cheating), intentionally or knowingly failing to properly credit information, research or ideas to their rightful originators or representing such information, research or ideas as your own (e.g., plagiarism). [Student Code of Conduct, Appendix A]
  2. Instructors shall take reasonable steps to prevent academic misconduct in their courses and to inform students of course-specific requirements. [Student Code of Conduct, Appendix A, Section A. Instructors Role]
  3. The definition of academic misconduct and how to report an incident can be found in the Academic Misconduct FAQ on the Community Standards website.
  4. Please review the entire website on Academic Integrity by clicking here.

How to study for this course

  1. Attend lecture and discussion class.
  2. Read the explanations and examples in the textbook.
  3. Watch videos (mathresources.uconn.edu/math1131). Each video lasts 8-15 minutes and covers some of the difficult and/or critical concepts.
  4. Do online homeworks and discussion quizzes. Remember to follow these tips! WebAssign Tips
  5. Revisit Concept Questions (mathresources.uconn.edu/math1131).
  6. Review with Flash Cards (mathresources.uconn.edu/math1131).