Math 1090 § 7 Business Algebra *Syllabus* Sept. 10, 2003 MWF 11:50 a.m. - 12:40 p.m. 2006 HEB Web page: http://www.math.utah.edu/~treiberg/M1090.html (Official updates of the syllabus and homework assignments will be available here.) Instructor: A. Treibergs, JWB 224, 581­8350. E-mail: atreiber@math.utah.edu. Office Hours: 10:45 - 11:35 MWF (tent.) & by appt. Text: Harshbarger & Reynolds, MATHEMATICAL APPLICATIONS for the Management, Life and Social Sciences 7th ed., Houghton Mifflin 2004. Prerequisite: The prerequisites for the course are (1) at least a 'C' in Mathematics 1010 or its equivalent (but preferably a 'B',) or (2) an ACT score of at least 23. Students are expected to already have the basic algebra skills contained in the prerequisites Chapter 0: Algebraic Concepts. Informal Problem Sessions: There will be informal problem sessions held on the Tuesdays before quizzes and exams. Attendance is strictly optional and not a requirement for the course. Students will have the opportunity to present their solutions to homework problems and ask questions. Material for exams will also be reviewed in class as scheduled. The informal problem session will take place on alternate Tuesdays in LCB 225 from 4:35 - 5:25 p.m. Dates for the Informal Problem Session: Sept. 9, 23, Oct. 7, 21, Nov. 4, 18, Dec. 2. Grading Homework: You will be assigned daily problems which you are expected to master but will not be asked to turn in. We'll discuss these problems in class. Exam questions will be modifications of homework problems; examples from the text or examples worked in class. Midterms: There will be four full-hour in-class midterm exams on Wed., Sept. 10, Wed., Sept. 24 , Wed., Oct. 22 and Wed. Nov. 19. Your midterm total will be the sum of your best three midterm scores. There will be no midterm makeup exams. Quizzes: There will be three 15 minute in-class quizzes on Wed., Aug. 27, Wed., Oct. 8 and Wed., Nov. 5. Your quiz total will be the sum of your best two scores. There will be no makeup quizzes. Final exam: All sections of Math 1090 will take a Departmental Final Exam on Monday, Dec. 8, at 3:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. in JTB 130. You must take the final to pass the course. Course grade: Based on the sum of best three of four midterm scores 54%, best two of three quizzes 10% and the final exam 36%. The approximate grading schedule is 90% to 100% A 80% to 89% B 65% to 79% C 50% to 64% D less than 50% E Occasionally '+' or '-' may be added when there are natural breaks in the scores. Calculators: A scientific calculator that does exponentials and logarithms is essential. A graphing or financial calculator may also be useful. However, an answer without accompanying descriptions will not be acceptable. Each exam will state the rules for acceptable calculator usage. Tutoring: Free tutoring is available in the Rushing Mathematics Center, located between JWB and LCB. Hours M-Th 8:00 am-8: 00 p.m., Fri 8:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. Operation begins Aug. 27. Withdrawals: Last day to drop a class is Aug. 29. Until Oct. 17 you can withdraw from the class with no approval at all. After that date you must petition your dean's office to be allowed to withdraw. ADA: The Americans with Disability Act requires that reasonable accommodations be provided for students with cognitive, systemic, learning and psychiatric disabilities. Please contact me at the beginning of the term to discuss any such accommodations you may require for this course. Content: Fundamental is the relationship between formulas, functions and graphs. We shall discuss matrix calculations. We shall develop facility in using algebra in economic, business and other social science applications.