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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
Prerequisite: a grade of C or better in MAT 133 or equivalent. Students who have not completed MAT 133 and who plan to register for this course should take the mathematics placement exam. A high score on the exam will meet the prerequisite for the course. Topics include: A study of functions involving limits, continuity, derivatives, and antiderivatives; the definite integral and Fundamental Theorem of Calculus. Credit can be earned for only one of MAT 141 and 191. (Every semester)
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4.00 Credits
Prerequisites: a grade of C or better in MAT 191 or consent of the instructor. Topics include: Methods of numerical integration, applications of the definite integral, techniques of antidifferentiation, improper integrals, infinite series, differential equations, and polar coordinates. (Every semester)
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4.00 Credits
Prerequisite: MAT 191. Topics include sets, functions, Boolean algebra, elementary graph theory, techniques of counting, and methods of proof (including induction and contradiction). (Every semester)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: MAT 192. A course designed to facilitate the transition to mathematics courses in which the student is expected to prove theorems Topics include sets, logic, methods of proof, relations, and number systems. (Every fall semester)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: MAT 192. Topics include vector calculus; limits and continuity of functions of several variables; partial derivatives and applications; multiple integrals and applications. (Every semester)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: MAT 192. A study of sample spaces, conditional probability and independent events; random variables and their distributions both discrete and absolutely continuous; expected value; variance, and regression; Law of Large Numbers and Central Limit Theorem; sampling; estimation; testing of hypotheses. Credit for MAT 126 will not be granted after credit has been earned in MAT 320. (Every spring semester)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: MAT 192. A study of ordinary differential equations using qualitative, numerical and analytic approaches. Topics include first-order differential equations, second-order linear differential equations, systems of differential equations, Laplace transformations and applications. (Every semester)
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3.00 Credits
(Same as CSC 335) Prerequisites: MAT 192 and ability to write programs in a high-level computer language. A study of numerical methods for the solution of mathematical problems and computer application of those methods. Topics will include: methods such as the bisection algorithm and fixed point iteration for the solution of equations with a single variable, interpolation and polynomial approximation, numerical differentiation and integration, solution of systems of linear equations, and least squares approximation. Offered infrequently. (Every two years)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: MAT 225 or 260, or consent of instructor. An introduction to the algebraic structure of vector spaces; the theory of matrices; the application of matrices to the study of vector spaces; systems of linear equations and linear transformations. (Every spring semester)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: MAT 330 or permission of the instructor This course focuses on mathematical modeling of phenomena from biology, chemistry, engineering, medicine, and physics. Students learn the tools and techniques of modeling using differential equations, matrix algebra, and statistics and learn to formulate a variety of models. Students engage cooperatively and individually in the formulation of mathematical models and in the techniques of investigating those models. Several major projects throughout the semester give the students experience in applying the tools and formulation of models. Class sessions consist of lectures and hands-on experimentation with projects using several computational tools. (Every two years)
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