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California State University StanislausMath 1600 and 1602 Section 2: StatisticsSpring 20061600: TR 9:40 am - 11:07 am, CX 101, Dr. Melanie Martin1602: TR 11:15 am - 12:15 pm, C 136, Dr. Melanie Martin |
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Welcome to Math 1600, Statistics
Course Description:
This is an introductory course designed for students in the
behavioral, biological, and social sciences. The description of sample
data, probability and probability distributions, sampling and
estimation, testing hypotheses, correlation and regression,
introduction to the analysis of variance.
Announcements and Upcoming Events
2/14/06 |
Welcome to Math 1600! |
4/25/06 |
Quiz on Chapters 6&7 at beginning
of class of Thursday |
5/16/06 |
Cards for Final: 5 3"x5" two-sided index cards in your own writing OR 1 8.5"x11" paper, two-sided, in your own writing AND The formula handout sheet provide - you are welcome to write on it Tables for the Normal, T, and Chi-squared distributions will be provided |
5/18/06 |
Office Hours: Monday, May 22: 2-4 pm Tuesday, May 23: 2-4 pm Wednesday, May 24: 10 am - 2 pm |
Textbook is Statistics: Principles and Methods, 4th
Edition, by Johnson and Bhattacharyya
Prerequisite: Math 0106,
0107 or 0110, or a passing score on the ELM test, or equivalent.
Corequisite: Math 1602,
Section 2.
Instructor: Dr. Melanie Martin
Office: Demergasso-Bava
Hall 276
Email: mmartin@cs.csustan.edu
Office Phone:
(209) 667-3787
Web
Page:
www.cs.csustan.edu/~mmartin
Office Hours:
Best way to contact Dr. Martin:
Email mmartin@cs.csustan.edu Please put "Math1600" in the subject
line of the email.
Warning: I reserve the right to make changes to the syllabus
at any
time during the term by announcing them in class and on my web page.
Grading: Grades will
be based mainly upon two midterm exams, a comprehensive final exam,
multiple homework
assignments, lab assignments and multiple quizzes. A plus and
minus grading scale
will be used to
assign final grades. The final grade weighting of student work is
estimated in the table below.
Midterms (2 exams at 20% each) |
40% |
Homeworks |
10% |
Quizzes |
15% |
Lab (Math 1602) |
10% |
Comprehensive Final |
25% |
Total |
100% |
Exams and Quizzes: There will be two midterm exams and a comprehensive final,
all will be in class, closed book. There will be at least one quiz most
weeks, quiz dates may or may not be announced in advance. If you know
in
advance that you might miss a quiz or exam, you must discuss
this with me well in advance. No
make-up quizzes or exams will be given unless you have a verifiable
emergency. I do not give early exams
to accommodate
vacation schedules, so please make your holiday travel plans
accordingly. I reserve the right to refuse
make-up
requests.
Homework:
Regular homework is expected and is a regular part of any math course.
Your homework is due each day at the
start of class. Homework must be stapled and should have your
name, the couse and section number clearly visible. No late homework
will be accepted.
Academic Honesty: The work you do for this course will be your own,
unless otherwise specified.
You are not to submit other people's
work and represent it as your own. I consider academic
honesty to be at the core of the University's activities in education
and
research. Academic honesty is expected at all times in this course.
Cheating is an attack on the efforts of myself and fellow students
and, above all, on the cheater's integrity. Those caught cheating will
be dealt
with to the full extent allowed under University policy.
Important dates:
(See Schedule of Courses or Academic Calendar)
Last day to add/drop a
class:
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March 13; |
Last day to change grade options (CR/NC): |
April 5; |
No classes. |
March 31, April 17-21. |
Assignment |
Problems |
Assigned |
Due |
HW1, Section 2.3, page 39 |
2.3, 2.8, 2.9, 2.11, 2.15, 2.19,
2.23 |
2/16 |
2/21 |
HW2, Section 2.4, page 50 Section 2.5, page 62 |
2.29, 2.31, 2.33, 2.43, 2.49,
2.52 2.59, 2.69, 2.77 |
2/21 |
2/23 |
HW3, Section 4.2, page 136 Section 4.3, page 144 |
4.1, 4.3, 4.9, 4.11 4.17, 4.19, 4.20, 4.21c, 4.25 |
2/23 |
2/28 |
HW4, Section 4.4, page 154 Section 4.5, page 167 |
4.43, 4.44, 4.45, 4.47, 4.49,
4.50, 4.51 4.55 though 4.60 inclusive |
2/28 3/2 |
3/7 |
HW5, Section 4.5, page 167 |
4.61,4.65, 4.67,4.69,4.71,4.73,4.75,4.79 | 3/7 |
3/9 |
HW6, Section 5.2, page 196 Section 5.3, page 202 |
5.2, 5.3, 5.4, 5.5 5.9, 5.10, 5.11,5.12, 5.17, 5.18, 5.21, 5.25, 5.27 |
3/9 |
3/14 |
HW7, Section 5.4, page 213 |
5.29b, 5.31, 5.32, 5.34, 5.37 | 3/14 |
3/16 |
HW8, Section 5.6, page 232 Section 4.6, page 178 |
5.69, 5.71, 5.72, 5.73 4.85, 4.86, 4.88, 4.91 |
3/16 |
3/23 |
HW9, Section 6.3, page 266 |
6.13, 6.15abc, 6.17abc, 6.19, 6.20, 6.21, 6.23 | 3/28 |
4/4 |
HW10, Section 6.4, page 271 | 6.25ace, 6.27a, 6.29, 6.30, 6.31 | 4/4 |
4/6 |
HW11,
Section 7.3, page 310 |
7.10, 7.18, 7.19, 7.20, 7.23, 7.25 | 4/6 |
4/11 |
HW12,
Section 8.2, page 329 |
8.5, 8.7, 8.11, 8.13, 8.14 | 4/11 |
4/13 |
HW13,
Section 8.3, page 338 |
8.15,
8.17, 8.19, 8.21, 8.25,
8.27 |
4/13 |
4/25 |
HW14,
Section 8.4, page 353 |
8.37,
8.44-8.47 |
4/25 |
4/27 |
HW15,
Section 8.4, page 353 Section 8.5, page 363 |
8.48-8.52 8.59, 8.62, 8.63, 8.67, 8.69, 8.75, 8.79, 8.81 |
4/27 |
5/2 |
HW16,
Section 9.2, page 382 Section 9.3, page 389 |
9.1,
9.2, 9.3, 9.5, 9.7, 9.8 9.9, 9.11, 9.13, 9.15, 9.19, 9.27, 9.30 |
5/2 |
5/11 |
HW17,
Section 9.5 , page 401 |
9.41,
9.43, 9.45, 9.47. 9.53 |
5/4 |
5/11 |
HW18, Section 10.2, page 432 | 10.7,
10.9, 10.10, 10.11, 10.22, 10.23 |
5/11 |
5/16 |
HW19, Section 10.4, page 449 | 10.40,
10.41, 10.42, 10.43 |
5/16 |
5/18 |
HW20, Section 3.5, page 110 |
3.14, 3.15, 3.16, 3.17, 3.18,
3.22, 3.26, 3.28, 3.35 |
5/18 |
N/A |