Math 141 E Syllabus Spring 2009 (#3689)Texts : Larson Hostetler "Precalculus 7th Edition" Class meets at 12:30-1:20 M-F in Room R-301 Instructor: Larry Susanka Office: L-200F Phone: 425-564-2484. Office hour: 11:30-12:20 E-mail: LSUSANKA@bellevuecollege.edu Test and Quiz dates are firm, though the material on them may vary from the schedule below by a section one way or the other if we get a little ahead or behind. As the course progresses sometimes I will post (after I give them to the class) some of the tests as well as other timely course information on a web page at also accessible through a link from the online syllabus. You are responsible for showing up and keeping current with all class events. Although I do not take roll, I have observed that people who often miss class frequently fail the class, and virtually never end up in the A or B ranks. A graphing calculator is required. The TI-84 is recommended. Laptops or large-format calculators such as the TI-9X series may not be used during tests. Some tests/quizzes must be done without calculator. I will presume that you are actually able to do on demand most of the things that are taught in the prerequisite classes. For this class that means Intermediate Algebra, a class we call Math 099. It should go without saying, but here it is anyway: there is no way (really!) to succeed in this class if your arithmetic and Intermediate Algebra skills are not there and if you are not ready to be held accountable in a test environment for these skills. Sample finals for Math 97, 98 and 99 from past years can be found at Unfortunately, as with many things in this life, if you don't use it you lose it. Having taken arithmetic and algebra classes years ago is most certainly not a guarantee that you remember enough, or were ever taught certain of these facts, or ever asked to use them in a test environment. You may need a refresher course before mastery returns. Or not. There is a HUGE variation in preparation levels that people have coming into this particular class, the first college credit math class. Proper placement is a complex and difficult problem at every college, and students can't succeed without it. In this class we are using the ALEKS web-based system in the first two weeks to fill in holes you might have in your background (everybody has some of course) and get you ready for the rest of the class which can then be conducted efficiently at a college level. You will be given an ALEKS code on the first day of class. ALEKS is free for us: you will not have to pay for ALEKS. You will go to www.aleks.com when you have an hour or two on the first or second day of class and ALEKS will establish what you know and what you don't know by giving you an Assessment. ALEKS knows what topics must be learned before other topics. This is based not on somebody's theory about how you should learn these things, but on the results of tens of millions of students working with ALEKS and learning topic after topic and succeeding or not. ALEKS is what computer people call an "expert system," a product of artificial intelligence research: it modifies itself based on what happens. Please note that it is imperative to your success in this course to log-in to ALEKS and take the Assessment within the first 2 days of class. After ALEKS establishes what you know it will create a pie chart of topics you need to learn, and you will work through or "fill in" the pie until you have all the skills you need. 20% of your grade will be based on the percent of all the topics prerequisite to the course that you know by noon on the tenth day of class, the last day to withdraw with no "W" on your transcript. That will be determined by your performance on a comprehensive assessment test available through ALEKS between 1 am April 8 and noon April 14. You cannot take this exam after noon April 14, and your score will be recorded as 0 if you have not finished by then. Take ALEKS very seriously. When fully prepared it takes most students 10 hours or more each week of homework to earn an A or B grade in a college credit math class. Attempting to refresh prerequisites beyond the second week puts the weekly time commitment beyond the reach of most students and virtually always yields a poor result. Important Dates :
Grades will be based on your ALEKS preparation score (50 points maximum), 5 Quizzes (10 points each), 2 Tests (50 points each) and the cumulative final (50 points). The final score, in addition to its fixed 50 point value, can be used (if that is to your advantage) to replace one low or missing Test or the Quiz total, but not your ALEKS score. This can be a benefit if you get sick, are called out of town or just want to take a "personal holiday" on one test day. Homework problems will be recommended as we go along but not collected. We will, however, spend much of the class time going over the assigned problems. You are responsible for showing up on test days. Please DON'T ask to reschedule, and I don't give make-ups. Grade lines will be given when I hand back the tests. Please record the grade lines I give as the course goes along so you know how you are doing. (Add up your scores, add up my grade lines and compare.) At the end of the course I will add up my grade lines to give the overall grade lines. There is no opportunity for "extra credit." Grade lines will be no higher than 65%-C, 80%-B and 90%-A. This is a concentrated course, and we must keep on task and focus during class time in order to do the many things we have to do. I have been charged with the responsibility to organize the class, and "class etiquette"is important. For those few who know nothing of class etiquette at a college, I invite you to peruse http://scidiv.bellevuecollege.edu/LS/teaching/ClassEtiquette.php where I have assembled the essentials. Key topics include:
I would like to touch on a topic that is not often broached in a syllabus, but is important for success in life, here at college, and in this class in particular. You should take what you do seriously or switch to something else that you CAN take seriously. Often people are uninspired by what they are doing, find themselves in an uncomfortable situation that shows no promise of improvement. Those folks, particularly if they are young with a world of possibilities to select from, need to wake up and find something that inspires them and do that instead. Success comes in many shapes! Sometimes, I know, it might seem impossible to "switch" and you just have to take the hand you are dealt. Take that hand seriously. Live your life intentionally, like you mean it, like it matters. It does. The same rule applies whether you are working at a fast food restaurant, taking college classes or plumbing houses for a living. Do the best job you can, not because you like your boss but because you like yourself. Show up every day. Learn ALL the skills needed for excellence in that job, not just the ones you have an affinity for. Don't make excuses. Don't use an instance in which it seems you were treated unfairly, which is bound to happen innumerable times throughout life, to interfere with your determination to do the best job you can. And be honest with yourself about the quality of your work. Since I am not a minister, a psychotherapist or a professional philosopher, please take the last paragraphs with a grain of salt. I have simplified the complexities of achieving "success" to a few basic principles. That can't be completely right, can it? Life is just not that simple. Still, psychotherapist or not, I can't help but notice how people (students in particular) succeed and how they fail. After thirty years of teaching, patterns become obvious. Think about it, anyway, and if you find that you are not succeeding the way you would like there might be something there for you to ponder, beyond the details of grading in this class. The habit of taking the things you do in your life seriously is the start. Cheating is a poor way to try to pass a course and the faculty here at BC has agreed to be tough about instances of cheating and to announce this in our syllabi. If caught, at the least cheaters will receive an irrevocable 0 on the test in question and other administrative action is possible that may, for example, affect continued student status. Don't do it. My tests are timed and there is a bit of "time pressure" if the student is uncertain of the material. This is intentional on my part. One reason is that both you and I need a "reality check" periodically throughout the quarter. It is very hard for the student (and for me in conversations with students) to tell the difference between "familiarity" with the material in the sense of "recognizing" it if someone else does it, and actual mastery of the material. Even if you can get an answer, but only after false starts and checking the book and your notes and so on, you are STILL not quite there. I don't want students to be "discovering" how to do unfamiliar problems on the tests. I want them to recognize the type of problem immediately and go right to the solution technique: to demonstrate mastery of the material. Acquisition of the ability to demonstrate mastery is the point of all your homework. My tests are designed to reveal who can do this and who cannot and at what level. Few people like tests and, in particular, few of my students really like my tests. But there is an important point to doing it this way: I want students who earn a good grade in my class to feel confident that they have the tools they will need to succeed. This math class does not stand alone. It is part of a sequence leading to higher math classes and other classes where the material is applied. If the student is not "fluent" in the techniques of this course, he or she cannot hope to flourish in these subsequent courses. My usage of the word "fluency" is the same as if this were a foreign language class, and the reason the student must be fluent is the same.
Imagine the following scenario: A student tells me that he or she can read French and I present that student with a copy of "Le Monde" and ask the student to translate the front page. The student replies that this is terribly unfair. The student says that he or she is "left brained" or "right brained" or something and cannot be expected to just sit down and read the paper, even though he or she says "I really do know how to read French. I just can't do it when you ask me like that." Sound silly? Well this same argument, with "math" substituted for "French," is used without blinking an eye in almost every math class where tests occur. My response, when it is used in my class, is always the same. To reiterate: I know my math tests are fairly hard. That is because I need to find out if you have learned well the many techniques we study in the course. I need to find out if you recognize problems right away, or if it takes a long time before you can dredge something up. This correlates with how much time you have spent on homework outside of class, and with how well you will be able to use the techniques when they are small parts of much longer problems in later courses. Typically you will need to spend two to three quality hours of study outside of class for every hour inside to succeed. It may take some people more, and some less. However much time it takes you, your grade will be based on your ability to perform on the exams, and not on whether I like you or feel you deserve to pass or because you really need or want a certain grade. I do not use your feelings about the class, whether you like math or don't like math for instance, or whether you feel you are an "A" student or not, in calculating your grade. Except in the case of a documented disability, all testing must take place in the class on the day of the test within the time limits I set. I do not give the "HW" grade to conceal, from those who will try to evaluate your transcript, the result of an unsuccessful attempt to take this class. If you need to withdraw you must do so by the withdrawal deadline. If my attitude toward these matters does not work for you I strongly encourage you to shop around for an instructor amenable to alternative theories of education. We can save quite a bit of class time by dealing with the repetitive "Will this be on the test?" question right here in the syllabus. I will respond to the question "Will this be on the test?" by referring the student to the following statement: My feeling on this matter is that if you concentrate on understanding the material and the ideas in the class the tests will take care of themselves. I try to telegraph clearly the type of material that will be on tests but I usually avoid saying that any particular problem will be on the test. This is because I want students to master everything and not focus on a few trees (at the expense of the forest) too early. With that as the ideal, I do understand that students have to make decisions about where to target their study hours and how to prepare for and take these tests. I have some suggestions of several different kinds that apply not only to this class but to many classes and testing environments:
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