Lecture Information • Lecture: MATH 5010: introduction to Probability • Room: LCB 323 • Days/Time: Monday-Wednesday - Friday 14:00 - 14:50 Instuctor’s Information • Instructor: Nicos Georgiou • Office: 202 LCB • E-mail: georgiou@math.utah.edu • Webpage: http://www.math.utah.edu/∼georgiou Book There is no assigned textbook for the class. We will be using typed notes, available on my website. Office hours • —————————• Wednesday 1:00 pm - 2:00pm. If you cannot make either of the office hours and there is a question that cannot be answered shortly before or after lecture, we can schedule an appointment. As soon as an appointment is made for the week, it will be notified to the whole class so more people can attend. You may also try to just knock on my door, but I might not be there! ADA Statement 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 semester to discuss any such accommodations you may require for this course. Please inform me in a timely manner, don’t just bring this up on the day of the exam. Exams There will be two 50 minute in-class midterms and a final exam. The final is scheduled according to the university timetable on Tuesday, December 17, 1-3pm. Each midterm is worth 20% of your grade and the final 35%. The remaining 25% depends on weekly quizzes (explained below). Here is a table with the examination dates. Exam Type Date Maximum Score Quizzes Every Monday 125 Midterm 1 10/ 7 (M) 100 Midterm 2 11/ 18 (M) 100 Final Exam 12/17 (F) 175 Total Score from Midterms 375 Total Score from Quizzes 125 Total Score for class 500 1 2 Here are some answers to possible questions: • All midterms will happen during lecture time, in our usual room (LCB 323). • At least 60% of the total midterm points will come from Homework problems (see section: Homework). This does not mean that the problems will be identical. It means that numbers might change or that the main idea is similar. • At least 20% of midterm points will be examples worked out in class or examples you had to study at home. • The midterm material is not cumulative: Each material will cover material that was covered after the midterm preceding it. However, it’s possible that some prior knowledge is needed - for example definitions or concepts. The final is cumulative. • I have a strict rule of no LATE make-up exams (with a possible exception of sudden illness or life and death matters). If for any other important reason you cannot attend the midterm/final at the specified time, you should tell me at least a week in advance so I can prepare an early midterm for you. Quizzes and Homework Quizzes worth 25% of your grade. They are 5 − 10 minute and will consist of only one or two problems. I will drop the lowest 2 quizzes. For this reason, I will never give a make-up quiz, please don’t ask. Quiz problems will come directly from the assigned homework problems (numbers might change of course, don’t expect a copy-paste of the HW problem). Homework will be assigned every week and you are more than welcome to come to office hours and ask pointed questions. Please don’t expect that I will solve all HW problems on the board for you, office hours are not a 1−on−1 tutoring session. Also, due to the size of the notes is conceivable that many examples from the notes are left for you to read. Some will be left as reading assignments and will be clearly marked in my notes, in class or explicitly mentioned. These examples are also fair game for the midterms, so please ask questions about them if something is not clear. Here are the answers to some possible questions: • Write clearly, in a tidy manner. If I cannot follow your work or reasoning, I cannot give credit! • You may discuss your problems with me. You might not get an answer, but a gentle push in the correct direction never hurt anyone :) The following grades are guaranteed: This means that if you get an average of 75 you cannot do worse than a C. It is possible that by the end of the semester the cut-offs will be lowered but not raised. Electronic devices Disruptive use of electronic devices is not allowed during class time. This includes i-pads, i-macs, i-pods and i-don’t-know-what-else. If the usage of electronic devices disturbs any 3 Grade Percentage A 90%+ B 77%+ C 63%+ D 55%+ person in class (including myself) you will be (kindly) requested to exit the room without the annoying little device. FYI, I am short on i-phones these days. In particular this implies a strict policy of NO CALCULATORS unless explicitly mentioned. You are definitely not going to need (or be allowed to use) them during any of the midterms, so please, for the sake of practice, do not use them for the homework either. An answer of π is much more correct than an answer of 3.14159 (why?). Annoying habits of the instructor. • I never reply to e-mails after 6 pm. If I can answer immediately, you will have your answer by noon the next business day. If I cannot answer immediately, I’ll tell you before noon the next business day and then reply again as soon as I know an answer, or discuss it during lecture. If neither of the above happens, I didn’t receive your e-mail; please resend. • I NEVER (and I cannot stress this enough) do math or solve problems over e-mails. The probability of reading such an e-mail is 0. If you send a TeX-ed pdf as an attachment, the probability of reading such an e-mail is 10%, but I will never reply. Instead I will talk about it during lecture. • I much prefer people coming to office hours. Don’t be afraid, I won’t bite. I think is much more instructive to see the thought process. If you are too scared to come alone, bring a friend! Some tips: (Feel free to ignore) Learn how to read a math book. Reading a math book properly requires pencil and paper. Follow along with the book. Treat example problems, theorems, and formulas as exercises with solutions. Know the definitions and boldface terms. Be able to work each example problem. The example problems are designed to cover all the basic ideas, they are a great tool for review and an excellent pool for exam problems, since they give the instructor and grader an idea on who read the book and studied. Exam preparation. Mathematics is not a science that you can do well just by memorizing information. Apparently people find it helpful to learn the solution to a problem by heart. THIS WONT HELP IN THIS (OR IN ANY OTHER) CLASS! Recognition knowledge isn’t enough. You need to be able to do the problems without looking at a book. Don’t blindly memorize. This might lead to problems, especially if one is ” evil” enough to give similar sounding problems that need a different method. You need to know the method you want to apply, recognize the type of problem rather than the problem itself. Organize the material. The more the better. Seek an academically supportive environment. For example, people prefer studying at libraries, or coffee-shops (misery loves company after all:-). Its completely normal if you don’t understand everything from the beginning, so it’s extremely 4 important to help one another out. There are many ways to do this. For example you can have a of couple note-buddies. Form a note-taking pool. One person can take notes while the others listen (though people usually prefer their own notes) or one person can write down what the instructor says rather than write, and then exchange notes. Questions. Answering questions is one of best ways to solidify your own understandingbut please make sure you know what you are talking about. If you are unsure, ask a third person. Don’t do others’ work for them. Encourage people to do their own thinking (even if they are your best friend). The purpose of getting help is to become able to do the problems without help, not make someone eternally grateful to you. Don’t be afraid to ask for help when you are stuck, but especially don’t hesitate to speak up when you are lost. We want to answer your questions. We want you to understand. Highlight what you don’t understand; don’t hide it. If your instructor checks work, write questions on your work. Come to office hour with questions.