WELCOME TO APPLIED DISCRETE MATHEMATICS

 

Can't see something here you were expecting (like forum access)? Make sure you login to the site using your UCSC credentials at the bottom of the page!

 

Lots of important links off to the left!

Your teaching staff:

Instructor: Tracy Larrabeetracy

Office hours: Monday, 11:00-12:00noon, or send me email or use the webforum.

Office: 337A E2

Teaching Assistants:

Avirudh Kaushik

Section:

Monday 10:40AM-11:45AM E2 194

Friday 10:40AM-11:45AM E2 194

Vishnu Surya Reddy Nandi

Sections:

Wednesday 12:00PM-01:05PM Engineering 2 194

Friday 01:20PM-02:25PM Physical Sciences 130

Viktor Jankov

Sections:

Tuesday 11:40-12:45 Engineering 2 194

Thursday 8:30-9:35 Physical Sciences 130

Marcello Guarro

Section:

Tuesday 08:30AM-09:35AM -  PhysSciences 130

Wednesday 08:00AM-09:05AM - Engineering 2 194

 

     

MSI Tutors (Please note that you have to sign up to attend MSI: There is no drop-in MSI tutoring)

Joyce Huang

Monday 920-1020am

Tuesday 950-1050am

Wednesday 520-620pm

Thursday 520-620pm

Kyle Ebding

Tuesday 9:50-10:50 AM
Wednesday 2:40-3:40 PM
Thursday 3:20-4:40PM
Friday 10:40-11:40 AM 

Surya Ruddaraju

Tuesday 3:20 - 4:20           Crown 201

Wednesday 2:40 - 3:40      ARC 116

Friday 9:20 10:20               Oakes Learning Center

 

Class Locations and dates

Class locationClassroom Unit 2

Class time: MWF 4:00-5:05  

 

 

 

 

 

 

Class Calender (when you can get help) 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Check Your Grades! 

Date and time of final exam: Tuesday, March 21 4:00-7:00 

 A note about the recorded lectures:

You can download the lecture by clicking on the top, right-clicking the topmost hyperlink (labeled Presenter - [ File extension : mp4 ] ) and then clicking "Save Link As." It downloads quickly.

Any 7th edition of Rosen Discrete Mathematics and its Applications works.  There is a custom version in the bookstore, but feel free to buy any old used 7th edition.  It is available on Amazon and such.

Another book some students find helpful is The Nuts and Bolts of Proofs by Antonella Cupillari. You don't need to buy this book if you don't want to, but many who have been intimidated by proofs (especially inductive proofs) have found it useful. 

Syllabus

  • Week 1:Introduction & Logic
  • Week 2:Logic & Sets
  • Week 3:Functions, Sequences, & Summations
  • Week 4:Integers & Intro to proofs
  • Week 5:Induction
  • Week 6:more Induction and Recursion
  • Week 7:Counting: Permutations and Combinations
  • Week 8:Probability and Recursion
  • Week 9:Recursion and Relations
  • Week 10:Relations and Equivalences

Assignments and quizzes

Your grade will be 40% from the weekly quizzes, 15% from the homework, which should largely cover the quiz material,  45% from the final exam (which you have to pass to pass the course) and 5% extra credit for MSI attendance. We don't have the manpower to give you detailed feedback on the homework, but we will always publish a solution to the homework before the weekly quiz. It is in your interests to understand the homework, because I often use problems straight off the homework for the weekly quiz. Make sure to keep up with the required readings listed on the quiz preparation tab at the left.

There are no makeup quizzes in this class! However, your grade will come from your best 7 quizzes, so that should cover the odd family event or work emergency that causes you to miss a couple of quizzes.

Communications

Please feel free to tell either the professor or the TA about any comments or suggestions you might have about how to improve the class. The best way to do this is by electronic mail, If you want to communicate anything to either of us anonymously, this is a good way to do it. You are always welcome to broadcast your opinions by using the webforum.

Don't worry we don't do this!

Disability Resource Center Student Accomodations

I welcome DRC students. Make sure you talk to me at the beginning of the quarter about your needs. As a note, I far prefer your emailing me a PDF of your DRC form instead of giving me a piece of paper.

Cheating

Cheating

I hate to talk about cheating, because I like to assume there will be none, but the School of Engineering says I must: If a TA finds or I find conclusive evidence that you have cheated on a quiz or exam, you will fail that quiz or exam. If you touch a cellphone or unapproved calculator during a quiz or final exam, you will fail that quiz or exam. It will not be possible to pass this course with a grade of 0 on the final exam. You should know that if you have been officially charged with cheating, and the provost has ruled that you have cheated, you get a black mark on your record: this could lead to either suspension or expulsion from this university.

To receive credit for a weekly quiz, you must sit in one of the installed seats of the lecture hall, and you must put the names of your right and left neighbor on the top of your quiz page (put something like "end of row" if there is no one on one side). After you turn in your test, you must leave the lecture hall immediately, and if you have forgotten your backpack or other materials, you may not retrieve them until class time is over. You may not talk to anyone during the test time but the instructor or one of the TAs. Violations of this rule will result in a quiz score of zero on the part of the person doing the talking.

Just as something to keep in mind, you will have an assigned seat for the final exam. Don't grow too dependent on sitting with your friends during examinations.

This all sounds ominous, but honestly, it is just so we all know that everyone is on a level playing field.