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By Steven Zucker, professor of mathematics at Johns Hopkins University.
- 1.
- You are no longer in high school. The great majority of you,
not having done so already, will have to discard high school
notions of teaching and learning and replace them by
university-level notions. This may be difficult, but it must
happen sooner or later, so sooner is better. Our goal is more
than just getting you to reproduce what was told to you in the
classroom.
- 2.
- Expect to have material covered at two to three times the
pace of high school. Above that, we aim for greater command of
the material, especially the ability to apply what you have
learned to new situations (when relevant).
- 3.
- Lecture time is at a premium, so it must be used efficiently.
You cannot be ``taught'' everything in the classroom. It is
your responsibility to learn the material. Most of this
learning must take place outside the classroom. You should be
willing to put in two hours outside the classroom for each hour
of class.
- 4.
- The instructor's job is primarily to provide a framework,
with some of the particulars, to guide you in doing your
learning of the concepts and methods that comprise the material
of the course. It is not to ``program'' you with isolated
facts and problem types nor to monitor your progress.
- 5.
- You are expected to read the textbook for comprehension. It
gives the detailed account of the material of the course. It
also contains many examples of problems worked out, and these
should be used to supplement those you see in the lecture. The
textbook is not a novel, so the reading must often be
slow-going and careful. However, there is the clear advantage
that you can read it at your own pace. Use pencil and paper to
work through the material and to fill in omitted steps.
- 6.
- As for when you engage the textbook, you have the following dichotomy:
- (a)
- [recommended for most students] Read for the first time the
appropriate section(s) of the book before the material is presented
in lecture. That is, come prepared for class. Then the faster-paced
college-style lecture will make more sense.
- (b)
- If you haven't looked at the book beforehand, try to
pick up what you can from the lecture (absorb the
general idea and/or take thorough notes) and count on
sorting it out later while studying from the book
outside of class.
- 7.
- Exams will consist largely of fresh problems that fall within
the material that is being tested.
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Up: Math 103 Course Information
Previous: Math 103 Information (Prof.
Joshua Holden
11/2/1999