Multivariate Calculus, Hons

Techniques of calculus in two and three dimensions. Vectors, partial derivatives, multiple integrals, line integrals, and a complete coverage of Vector Analysis, including the theorems of Green, Stokes, and Gauss. There will be some emphasis on the underlying theory, numerous applications will be included, and some attention will be paid to history. Active student participation will be encouraged. A 50-minute discussion meeting will be included in this course.

Honors Calculus II

This 4-credit course will cover the standard subject matter, as given in the course syllabus: The definite integral, techniques of integration, and applications to physics, chemistry, and engineering. Sequences, series, and power series. Taylor and MacLaurin series. The honors course will cover this material in greater depth. This means that there will be some emphasis on the underlying theory, that more applications will be included, and that some attention will be paid to history. Active student participation will be encouraged. Recommended for Freshmen, Sophomores; Majors, Non-majors.

Honors Calculus II

This 4-credit course will cover the standard subject matter, as given in the course syllabus: The definite integral, techniques of integration, and applications to physics, chemistry, and engineering. Sequences, series, and power series. Taylor and MacLaurin series. The honors course will cover this material in greater depth. This means that there will be some emphasis on the underlying theory, that more applications will be included, and that some attention will be paid to history. Active student participation will be encouraged. Recommended for Freshmen, Sophomores; Majors, Non-majors.

Honors Calculus II

This 4-credit course will cover the standard subject matter, as given in the course syllabus: The definite integral, techniques of integration, and applications to physics, chemistry, and engineering. Sequences, series, and power series. Taylor and MacLaurin series. The honors course will cover this material in greater depth. This means that there will be some emphasis on the underlying theory, that more applications will be included, and that some attention will be paid to history. Active student participation will be encouraged. Recommended for Freshmen, Sophomores; Majors, Non-majors.

Honors Calculus II

This 4-credit course will cover the standard subject matter, as given in the course syllabus: The definite integral, techniques of integration, and applications to physics, chemistry, and engineering. Sequences, series, and power series. Taylor and MacLaurin series. The honors course will cover this material in greater depth. This means that there will be some emphasis on the underlying theory, that more applications will be included, and that some attention will be paid to history. Active student participation will be encouraged. Recommended for Freshmen, Sophomores; Majors, Non-majors.

Calculus I Honors

This honors course will cover the standard subject matter, as given in the MATH 131 course syllabus: Continuity, limits, and the derivative for algebraic, trigonometric, logarithmic, exponential, and inverse functions. Applications to physics, chemistry, and engineering. The honors course will cover this material in greater depth. This means that there will be some emphasis on the underlying theory, that more applications will be included, and that some attention will be paid to history. Active student participation will be encouraged.

Calculus I Honors

This honors course will cover the standard subject matter, as given in the MATH 131 course syllabus: Continuity, limits, and the derivative for algebraic, trigonometric, logarithmic, exponential, and inverse functions. Applications to physics, chemistry, and engineering. The honors course will cover this material in greater depth. This means that there will be some emphasis on the underlying theory, that more applications will be included, and that some attention will be paid to history. Active student participation will be encouraged.

Calc Life-Soc Sci I

This honors course will cover the standard subject matter, as given in the MATH 127 course syllabus: Basic calculus with applications to problems in the life and social sciences, functions and graphs, the derivative, techniques of differentiation, curve sketching, maximum-minimum problems, exponential and logarithmic functions, exponential growth and decay, and introduction to integration, but in greater depth. This means that there will be some emphasis on the underlying theory, that more applications will be included, and that some attention will be paid to history.

Cognitive Psych - Honors

Cognitive psychology is the branch of psychology concerned with the scientific study of the mental processes involved in perception, attention, memory, knowledge, language, problem solving, reasoning, and decision-making. In short, cg is concerned with the scientific study of the mind and mental processes (Goldstein, 2005). When you finish the class you should be able to understand, evaluate, and do research in cognitive psychology. You will be learning from both a text and primary journal articles.
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