Instructor: John Perry
Office: Southern Hall, 310
Office Hours: MWF 2·45-3·45a; TTh 10·30-11·30p
Office Phone: 601·266·4293
Email: john.perry@usm.edu
Instructor's web page: http://www.math.usm.edu/perry/
Class web page: http://www.math.usm.edu/perry/mat103sm10/
Class meeting time and location: 1-2·30p MWF, SH 202
Text: Trigonometry (Sixth Edition), by McKeague and Turner, Thomson Brooks-Cole, 2008.
Course
Description:
Trigonometric functions and their inverses, trigonomic identities and equations, and solutions of triangles.
(We aim to cover chapters 1-7.)
Prerequisite: High-school algebra. Math ACT ≥ 24 or a grade of C or better in MAT 101.
Grading: The semester grade will be determined by a weighted average, according to the weights listed below. At any point during the semester, you may determine your standing by computing your grade. This can be done by multiplying the average for each category by the category's weight, then adding the product in each category. See me if you would like this shown to you.
Tests | 40% of total |
Homework | 10% of total |
Attendance | 10% of total |
Final Exam | 40% of total |
Grades are awarded according to the following scheme:
100-90 A | 89.99-80 B | 79.99-70 C | 69.99-60 D | 59.99-0 F |
There is no curve.
Makeup work: I do not give makeup tests/quizzes/etc. without an excused absence. If you must miss class, then you must also produce documentation of the reason for your absence. If you were sick, you can show me the receipt from the hospital or doctor; if you had a sports event, you can show me the schedule; if someone died, you can show me an obituary notice; if the tire on your car blew out, you can show me the receipt from the mechanic.
Homework: I expect you to do the homework. If you do not do the homework, you will probably fail this course. I will evaluate homework using occasional homework quizzes.
Tutoring and study groups: I encourage you to work together on homework assignments, to look at each other's solutions, and to explain answers to each other. This is not the same thing as copying each other's homework. You take the tests alone and without help, so if you cannot explain to your tutor, classmate, or teacher how to solve the problem, then you have not learned how to solve it, and you need to study it more (perhaps by visiting me, the professor).
My philosophy of
the instruction: I want you to pass this course.
You can learn this material,
and I am happy to assist any
student who genuinely needs help.
That said, you are the primary
agent of your learning.
I cannot learn the material for you; I
already learned it many, many years ago. It required a lot of work, and
sometimes it was difficult enough that I needed help from other people.
Today I
am a professor of mathematics. If I can
learn it, you can, too.
Almost twenty years ago, I earned a 2 on the AP
Exam. Our goal is that by the end of this course, you can do better
than I did.
Final Exam:
Friday 30 July 2010, 1-2·30p
Note: The last day to drop a full-semester course without academic penalty is Friday, June 25.
ADA Syllabus Statement If a student has a disability that qualifies under the American with Disabilities Act (ADA) and requires accommodations, he/she should contact the Office for Disability Accommodations (ODA) for information on appropriate policies and procedures. Disabilities covered by ADA may include learning, psychiatric, physical disabilities, or chronic health disorders. Students can contact ODA if they are not certain whether a medical condition/disability qualifies.
The University of Southern Mississippi |