Course Information
MATH300: Foundations of Advanced Mathematics - This course is an introduction to communication in mathematics as well computational tools for mathematics. This writing intensive course provides a transition from the Calculus sequence to the upper-division mathematics curriculum at CSM. Topics include logic and recursion, techniques of mathematical proofs, reading and writing proofs, mathematics software.
Prerequisite: MATH 213, 223 or 224.
Instructor Information
Instructor : Terry Bridgman
Office : Stratton Hall 208
Office Phone : 303.384.2447
email : tbridgma@mines.edu
Course Calendar
Classes Begin : May 14th, 2012
Meeting Days : Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday
Course Sections :
Section A, 9:30am-12:20pm, Chauvenet Hall 143
Classes End : June 22nd, 2012
Important Dates :
May 18th - Census Day
May 28th - Memorial Day - No Class
June 8th - Last Day to Withdrawal
June22nd - Last Day of Classes
Office Hours
Fixed Office Hours :
Wed : 1:30pm - 3:30pm
If you cannot meet during the previous office hours then please contact me to schedule another meeting time.
Textbook Information
Textbook : Mathematical Reasoning - Ted Sundstrom, ISBN 0-13-187718-6
Course Materials
These downloads require Adobe Acrobat Reader
Syllabus
MATH300.Summer2012.Syllabus
Historical Mathematician
The following is a template for you to use with your research paper. The included sections are
suggested -- feel free to rename as appropriate.
Paper Template .tex File
Your paper should include:
- Title
- Abstract
- Sections on
- Short bio
- Mathematical Contributions
- "Things that make you go 'huh!'"
- Bibliography w/ at least 3 references (only 1 may be Wikipedia)
Mathematician Selection
Student
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Mathematician
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Student
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Mathematician
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Rami A.
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Archimedes
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Allen L.
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Evan B.
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Lagrange
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Alyssa M.
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Kevin B.
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Leibniz
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Karen M.
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Brian C.
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Grothendieck
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Nathan J. N.
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Alexander C.
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Lyapunov
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Ross P.
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Andrew C.
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Lucas Q.
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Poincare
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Logan D.
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Descartes
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Anastasia S.
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Cauchy
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Sean D.
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Jacqueline S.
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Bernhard Riemann
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Jordan D.
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Galois
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Beverly S.
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Zachary H.
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Joseph Betrand
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Brittany S.
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Bernoulii
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Eric J.
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Frances S.
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Pythagoras
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Emily K.
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Euler
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Marisse V.
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Carson K.
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Nicole W.
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Heine-Borel Theorem
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MATH300.HeineBorel
Assignments
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Assignment 1 (pdf)
Due: Friday, 5/18, 2:00pm
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Assignment 2 (pdf)
Associated .tex File
Due: Thursday, 5/24, 2:00pm
LaTeX Assignments
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LaTeX 1 (pdf)
Due: Monday, 5/21, 2:00pm
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LaTeX 2 (pdf)
Due: Tuesday, 5/29, 2:00pm
LaTeX Materials
These downloads require Adobe Acrobat Reader
Sample LaTeX File
Copy the following into an empty file within your LaTeX IDE.
It should compile cleanly without errors or warnings
The resulting pdf is included here:
sample.pdf
\documentclass[12pt]{article}
\usepackage{amsmath}
\title{\LaTeX}
\date{}
\begin{document}
\maketitle
\LaTeX{ } is a document preparation system for the \TeX{}
typesetting program. It offers programmable desktop publishing
features and extensive facilities for automating most aspects of
typesetting and desktop publishing, including numbering and
cross-referencing, tables and figures, page layout, bibliographies,
and much more. \LaTeX{} was originally written in 1984 by Leslie
Lamport and has become the dominant method for using \TeX; few
people write in plain \TeX{} anymore. The current version is
\LaTeXe.
% This is a comment; it will not be shown in the final output.
% The following shows a little of the typesetting power of LaTeX:
\begin{align}
E &= mc^2 \\
m &= \frac{m_0}{\sqrt{1-\frac{v^2}{c^2}}}
\end{align}
\end{document}
Useful LaTeX Links
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