MAT1325- Calculus II Basic Information: Instructor Name Dr. Yukong Zhang Home Institution Texas Wesleyan University Instructor Title Associate Professor E- Mail yzhang@txwes.edu Home Office Phone Number 817-531-4885 Office TBA Office Hours TBA, and by appointment Course Description: Volumes; one-sided limits; limits at infinity; continuity and derivatives; derivatives and integrals of trigonometric, logarithmic, exponential, and hyperbolic functions; parametric equations; polar coordinates and equations; and an extensive study of techniques of integration. Required Course Materials: Textbook Edition Author Publisher ISBN-10 Calculus 10 Howard Anton, etc Wiley 0470647698 Link to e-book purchase address: http://www.amazon.com/Calculus-Early-Transcendentals-10th-Edition-ebook/dp/B006RB8C6U/ref=tmm_kin_title_0?ie =UTF8&qid=1385958769&sr=8-2 Course Hours: The course has 19 class sessions in total. Each class session is 130 minutes in length. The course meets from Monday to Thursday. Each course has a total of 40 class hours (4 credit hours). The last Thursday (July 31, 2014) is a reading day for students. Final exams are scheduled on Aug 1 and 2, 2014 Prerequisite: Calculus I (MAT1324) Course Schedule: Week Session Day Topic (s) Chapter(s) June 30 M Review of Integration Derivatives and Integrals Involving Log Functions 6.1, 6.2 W Inverse Functions 0.4 Th Derivatives of Inverse Functions//Derivatives, L’Hopital’s Rule and Indeterminate Forms 6.3, 6.4, 6.5 July 7 M Inverse trigonometric functions 6.6,6.7 July 8 T Exam 1 July 9 W July 10 Th July 14 M July 15 T Integration by Parts Trig substitutions Modeling with Differential Equations Separation of Variables July 1 Week 1 July 2 July 3 Week 2 Week 3 T 7.1, 7.2 7.3, 7.4, 7.6 8.1 8.2 Homework Week 4 Week 5 July 16 W July 17 Th First Order DE’s and Applications ODE’s and Sequences July 21 M Exam 2 July 22 T July 23 W July 24 Th July 28 M July 29 T Infinite Series, Convergence Tests Taylor and Maclaurin Series; Power Series Convergence of Taylor Series Differentiation & Integration of Power Series Parametric Equations , Polar Coordinates Tangent line, arc length and area for Polar Coordinates July 30 W July 31 Th 8.3 8.4, 9.1, 9.2 9.3, 9.4, 9.5 9.6, 9.7, 9.8 9.9 9.9, 9.10 10.1, 10.2 10.3 Reading day Final Exam Grading Policies: Part Percentage Points Homework 20 20 Quiz (two quizzes) 10 10 Exams (Two midterms and final) 20/20/30 20/20/30 100% 100 Points Attendance/ Participation Group Project Course Total Grade Distribution: Percentage Letter Grade Grade Points A 4.0 A- 3.7 B+ 3.3 B 3.0 B- 2.7 C+ 2.3 C 2.0 C- 1.7 D+ 1.3 D 1.0 F 0.0 Exam Policy Homework should be turned in before class. No make-up quizzes. Academic Integrity SCP expects honesty from students in presenting all of their academic work. Students are responsible for knowing and observing accepted principles of scholarly research and writing in all academic work. Academic dishonesty or cheating includes acts of plagiarism, forgery, fabrication or misrepresentation, such as the following: claiming the work or thoughts of others as your own copying the writing of others into your written work without appropriate attribution writing papers for other students or allowing them to submit your work as their own buying papers and turning them in as your own having someone else write or create all or part of the content of your assignments submitting the same paper for more than one study or class without explicit permission from the faculty members General Principles SCP is committed to principles of trust, accountability, clear expectations and consequences. It is also committed to redemptive efforts, which are meaningful only in light of these principles. Students will be granted due process and the opportunity for an appeal. Academic dishonesty offenses generally are subject to incremental disciplinary actions. Some first offenses, however, receive severe penalties, including dismissal from the program. General Disciplinary The following is a non-comprehensive list of possible actions apart from dismissal from the program: warning from a professor, program director; a lower or failing grade on an assignment, test or course; suspension or dismissal from the course; suspension or dismissal from the program. Disciplinary Actions for Specific Offenses Some academic dishonesty offenses call for specific disciplinary actions. The following have been identified: Falsification of documents: Students who falsify or present falsified documents may be dismissed. Prospective students who are discovered to have presented falsified admission documents prior to admission shall be denied admission to the program. Should it be discovered after admission that a student had presented falsified documents for admission, such admission may be annulled and the record of academic achievement removed from the academic record, with appropriate notations. Such annulments or denials may be reviewed after one year. Dishonesty in course requirements: Course work (a quiz, assignment, report, mid-term examination, research paper, etc.) in which a student has been dishonest generally will receive zero points towards the grade in fulfillment of a course requirement, and/or the student may receive a failing grade for the course. The professor of the course determines the appropriate consequence. Final assignment: When a student cheats in a major or final assignment such as a comprehensive examination or presents plagiarized material in a major or final assignment, that student shall receive an F in that particular subject. Student cheats on more than two exams shall be dismissed from SCP.