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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course introduces the techniques of differential and integral calculus and illustrates these ideas with practical applications from the social, managerial, and life sciences with special emphasis on business and economics. Three credit hours. Prerequisite: MAT 115 or placement. Course may not be taken out of sequence. Offered every semester.
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3.00 Credits
This course is an introduction to linear algebra. The topics covered will include Systems of Linear Equations, Vectors and Vector Spaces, Linear Transformations, Linear Dependence, Matrices, Determinants, Basis and Dimensions, Eigenvectors and Invariant Spaces. Three credit hours. Prerequisite: MAT 251. Offered fall semester.
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3.00 Credits
This course is an introduction to the modeling of certain operational features common to business and information systems management. The focus will be on scheduling models, allocation models, queuing models, and inventory models. The models will provide mathematical information which can be used in the decision-making processes needed to solve large-scale problems. Emphasis is on problem formulation andexperimentation with "naive" methods of solution; microcomputer software will be used to solve problemsrepresentative of the real world. Three credit hours. Prerequisites: Completion of MAT 114 or higher placement; and CIS 115 or CIS 120. Offered Spring semester.
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3.00 Credits
Calculus I is the first course of a three semester sequence in Calculus, covering differentiation with applications, including transcendental functions. Three hours of lecture and one hour of lab/recitation per week. Three credit hours. Prerequisite: Grade of C or better in NYS Regents Course III or equivalent, MAT 115, or placement. Offered fall semester. Note: Registration for both the lecture (MAT 251) and the lab (MAT 251L) is required.
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3.00 Credits
Calculus II is the second of a three course sequence in Calculus. The course covers integration, including transcendental functions, methods of integration, sequences, and series with applications. Three hours of lecture and one hour of lab/recitation per week. Three credit hours. Prerequisite: MAT 251, minimum grade of B recommended. Offered spring semester. Note: Registration for both the lecture (MAT 252) and the lab (MAT 252L) is required.
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3.00 Credits
This course is an introduction to the theory of numbers. Topics will include Prime Numbers, Divisibility, Congruences, Powers of an Integer Modulo m, Quadratic Reciprocity, Greater Integer Function, and Diophantine Functions. Three credit hours. Prerequisites: MAT 115, MAT 151, or Appropriate High School Math Course with a Grade of C or better. Offered spring semester.
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3.00 Credits
Calculus III extends the concepts of calculus in one variable to the calculus of several variables. Course topics include: vectors in the plane and space; 3-dimensional coordinate system; vector-valued functions;differential geometry; partial differentiation; and multivariable calculus. Three credit hours. Prerequisite: MAT 252. Offered fall semester. Note: Registration for both the lecture (MAT 261) and the lab (MAT 261L) is required.
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3.00 Credits
(Topic to be specified each semester course offered.)
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3.00 Credits
The main goal of this course is to expose the student to the abstract concepts of algebra. The topics include sets, relations, mappings, groups, rings, isomorphism, homomorphism, polynomial ring, ideal, vector spaces, and linear independence. Three credit hours. Prerequisites: MAT 242 and MAT 255. Offered fall semester.
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3.00 Credits
This course will introduce the ideas of continuity, convergence, connectedness in a topological space, metric space, knot, manifold, and surface. Prerequisites: MAT 151, 242, and 261. 3 credits
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