Math 1499 is a one-credit studio course that may be taken in conjunction with Math 1551 (Differential Calculus) by students who need extra support in the Precalculus topics used in Calculus.
All students in Math 1499 should enroll concurrently in Math 1551.
Some students are required to enroll in Math 1499 based on their Math placement scores, but any student wishing for additional support is welcome to enroll.
Introduction to probability, probability distributions, point estimation, confidence intervals, hypothesis testing, linear regression and analysis of variance.
MATH 3215, MATH 3235, MATH 3670, and MATH 3740 are mutually exclusive; students may not hold credit for more than one of these courses.
Mathematical logic and proof, mathematical induction, counting methods, recurrence relations, algorithms and complexity, graph theory and graph algorithms.
An introduction to proofs in advanced mathematics, intended as a transition to upper division courses including MATH 4107, 4150 and 4317. Fundamentals of mathematical abstraction including sets, logic, equivalence relations, and functions. Thorough development of the basic proof techniques: direct, contrapositive, existence, contradiction, and induction. Introduction to proofs in analysis and algebra.
Linear algebra in R^n, standard Euclidean inner product in R^n, general linear spaces, general inner product spaces, least squares, determinants, eigenvalues and eigenvectors, symmetric matrices.
This course develops in the theme of "Arithmetic congruence, and abstract algebraic structures." There will be a very strong emphasis on theory and proofs.
This course is a problem oriented introduction to the basic concepts of probability and statistics, providing a foundation for applications and further study.
MATH 3215, MATH 3235, MATH 3670, and MATH 3740 are mutually exclusive; students may not hold credit for more than one of these courses.