Marcus
McGuff

Course Policies / Course Syllabus

Coursework and Grading
(Page 1)

ACC Policies
(Page 1)

 

The Book and Software for the Course (Page 2)

Other Useful Things (Page 2)

ACC Services (links)


Course Policies and Information / Course Syllabus

MATD 0370 - Elementary Algebra Distance Learning (Open Campus)

Fall 2011 - Synonym 36239 (Section 028)
August 22, 2011 - December 11, 2011

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Instructor:

Marcus McGuff

Phone: 223-4024
Office: NRG 2139
Email: mmcguff@austincc.edu

US Mail address:

Marcus McGuff
ACC Northridge Campus
11928 Stonehollow Drive
Austin, TX 78758

Office Hours:

My office hours are posted on my home page here. I am also available for appointments at other times. Email me or call in advance to set up a time.

Required Textbook/Software License:

Text: Elementary Algebra, Concepts and Applications, 8th Edition, Bittinger & Ellenbogen (ISBN 0-321-23388-3 OR 0-321-37365-0)

Bittinger textbook image

This is the same book we are using in our "regular" classroom based lecture courses. We will be using MyMathLab software with it. You have the following options to get the book:

  1. Buy a new copy of the book with the software included (Hard cover: ISBN: 0-321-61615-4, loose-leaf: ISBN: 0-321-67373-5).
  2. Buy a used copy of the book ( ISBN 0-321-55717-4, be sure it is the 8th edition) and purchase the MyMathLab software online or a MyMathLab access kit (ISBN 0-321-567382) separately. (See 3 below for instructions on how to buy the software.)
  3. If you don't feel you need an actual printed copy of the textbook, you can just use the software by itself. All of the material in the book is available from inside the software, so you can read it on your computer. (Clearly, you can save a lot of money this way, but don't forget this means you will not be able to carry your book around with you to work on your homework/studying. This is an important issue, so think about it carefully before you decide to go this route.) You can just purchase the MyMathLab software by itself online at www.pearsonmylab.com. (You will receive an email from me with your "Course ID" that you need to know to buy online by the first day of class, if you have submitted the first Orientation Form and taken the Elementary Algebra Pretest by then.)
  4. If you are having financial aid problems (i.e., your financial aid money hasn't come in yet and you can't buy the book until that happens), you should also apply for a temporary access code. This will only give you a little bit of extra time (a week or two for you to get things straightened out), but it will allow you to get started working right away, which is really important if you want to do well in the course. You can also do this at the end of the process when you to www.pearsonmylab.com to purchase MyMathLab.

Either way, you will need to go to www.pearsonmylab.com to activate the software (once you receive the Course ID from me via email). After registering, the last step will be to enter the access code that came with your book, pay for access via credit card or Paypal, or request temporary access. Please choose the correct option from the following screen to finish your registration:

MML purchase options

IMPORTANT WARNING: If you buy a new book, the book is not returnable after you open the shrink-wrap covering the book. Please be sure you are in the correct course before you open this shrink-wrap. (See the Getting Started page for information on the Review for Elementary Algebra Pretest and the Elementary Algebra Pretest you should take before you break the shrink-wrap.) If you are unsure or you are having problems with your financial aid arriving in time to buy the software by the first day of class, please contact me right away to discuss requesting a "temporary login" for the software to use so you don't have to wait to get started.

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Supplemental Material:

Instructional Methodology:

This course is a personal computer/modem course in which students work on software and in a textbook, participate in online discussions, do paper homework, and take paper-and-pencil tests in an ACC Testing Center.

Prerequisites:

C or better in Basic Math Skills, MATD 0330 taken in spring 2000 or later or C or better in Prealgebra, MATD 0350, or its equivalent knowledge, or appropriate score on the placement test. (See my page on Advising for details.)

Course Description:

Elementary Algebra is a course designed to develop the skills and understanding contained in the first year of secondary school algebra. Topics include review of operations on real numbers, graphing linear equations, variation, solving linear and quadratic equations, solving systems of linear equations, polynomials, factoring, and applications.

Course Rationale:

As with all developmental math courses, Elementary Algebra is designed to provide you with the mathematical foundation and personal confidence to enable you to use mathematics in your future life. This course is designed to prepare you for MATD 0390 Intermediate Algebra and the algebra-based courses which follow it. It also may provide you with sufficient preparation to be able to pass the math portion of the TASP test. It also offers you one way to prepare for MATH 1332 and 1342, after you have passed the math portion of the TASP test.

Minimum Time Commitment:

You should expect to spend anywhere from 12-20 hours per week on the software, working at least three different days during the week, doing paper homework, and preparing for and taking tests.

If you are continually caught up in the course according to the course calendar, keeping up with the class participation requirements (see below), and making at least B's on the homework and tests, then I do not require that you spend any certain amount of time on the course.

If you fall behind in the course, fail to meet the participation requirements, or your homework/test grades fall below 70, you must spend at least 8 hours on the software and 6 hours on other work in the course each week in order to remain enrolled. If you are more than one week behind, I may require you to spend even more time on the software or I may withdraw you from the course.

For some of you, this is a required developmental course. This means you have not satisfied the math portion of the TASP/THEA test and have been permitted to enroll in other credit courses only on the condition that you participate in this course. Consequently, I am required to keep track of your participation in the course. If you are "TSI mandated" (previously known as "TASP mandated"), you could be withdrawn from all of your ACC classes if you withdraw (or are withdrawn) from this course. If you fall more than a week behind and do not meet the minimum time commitment for the course (see immediately above) for more than one week, I may withdraw you from the course. If you have computer problems at home, you can do your work in the Learning Labs. When you arrive at the Learning Lab, ask specifically to use the PLATO (may also be called "Academic Systems") software and bring your login/password.

For more information, please read the important TSI/TASP notice below. (This notice appears in the course handout of all developmental math courses.)

TSI Warning for students who are not TSI complete**

Students who are not TSI complete in math are not allowed to enroll in any course with a math skill requirement.

All students are required to be "continually in attendance" in order to remain enrolled in this course. If this is the only developmental class you are enrolled in, and you withdraw yourself from this course or are withdrawn by your instructor, then:

  1. You may be withdrawn from courses that you should not be enrolled in, such as any class with a math skill requirement.
  2. You will have a hold placed on your registration for the following semester. The Hold will require that you register for the next semester in person with an advisor or counselor and that you work with the Developmental Math Advisor during that semester.
  3. You will continue to face more serious consequences, up to being restricted to only registering for developmental courses, until you complete the required developmental math course or satisfy the TSI requirement in another way.

More information can be found at http://www.austincc.edu/math/tsiwarning.htm.
** If you are unsure whether or not this warning applies to you, see an ACC advisor immediately.

Importance of Completing Developmental Course Requirements
The first steps to achieving any college academic goal are completing developmental course requirements and TSI requirements. The first priority for students who are required to take developmental courses must be the developmental courses. TSI rules state that students are allowed to take college credit courses, if they are fulfilling their developmental requirements. Because successful completion of dev courses is so important, ACC will intervene with any student who is not successfully completing developmental requirements. This intervention can mean a hold on records, requiring developmental lab classes, working with the Dev Math Advisor, and monitoring during the semester.

 

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Class Participation and Discussion Groups:

One of the drawbacks to taking a distance learning course is that students can't interact with each other and the instructor as easily as they can in a classroom-based course. Since this is such an important part of learning, we will use an online discussion board to allow some interaction between everyone in the class. We will use the Course Compass course management system to allow this. I will also post all class announcements on this system and you can check your grades on this system as well. Before you log onto Course Compass for the first time, go here for instructions. Please note that using Course Compass is not optional in this course; it is a requirement.

As part of your grade in this course, you must do two things each week for your "Class Participation" grade: you must participate at least once each week by doing one or more the possible participation activities listed below AND you must work the problems in "Extra Study/Study Plan" inside CourseCompass that the software identifies that you need to work on after each quiz for that week (these are the problems in each section under "Extra Study" with the little pencil icons next to them - This topic needs more study.). Before you post to the message boards, be sure to read the instructions here about use of the message boards and what I consider appropriate behavior. You will only receive credit for posts that follow these guidelines.

You may receive class participation credit for any of the following activities (remember, you need credit for at least one thing each week, plus the "Extra Study/Study Plan" problems):

Additionally, you may do the following for a one-time participation credit:

Class participation grades can be earned ONLY at the indicated time. More posts to the message boards later won't replace missing posts earlier, as far as the participation grade. It will only count during the week it is actually posted (and you cannot carry over posts from one week to the next for credit). Honestly, I really hope that you get so used to asking and answering questions on the message boards that you know you will get 100% on your participation grade. (You can always post more than the minimum, if you find it helpful...)

It is your responsibility to check the message boards regularly so that you know what questions other people are asking (that you might want to reply to) and if someone replies to a question you posted.. If you do not receive an answer to your question from one of your classmates or from me in a few days (I usually won't jump in right away answering questions), you can always email me your question. Also, you are responsible for checking for announcements in Course Compass several times a week. This is how I will communicate with the class as a whole; all important announcements will be posted on Course Compass/MyMathLab.

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Homework and Quizzes:

Homework

There are two parts to your homework grade: online homework and written (paper) homework. Each section in the textbook will have one of each of these, about half online and half written. You must turn in both types of homework to receive full credit. You should work the online homework first and then the written homework for each section. Your online homework will be graded by the computer and you will collect all of your written homework together for each test and send it to me in one packet after the test deadline.

Online Homework

You will receive a score on every section of online homework you submit. You should make 90% or above on each section of this before you continue on to the written homework or the next section. You can check each answer as you submit it as many times as you want, so you should keep working on it until you have mastered that 90% score. See the tutorial on how to use MyMathLab for more information on homework and working with the software.

Written homework

You will not turn written homework in right away; you should collect everything together related to the test (including the Test Review I assign) and submit it all at together after the deadline for each test. Only part of each assignment will be graded. You can see the assignments and due dates on the schedule page. Written homework for a lesson must be done AFTER you have worked with the online homework for that lesson and BEFORE you take the relevant quiz.

This should represent your best possible work. If your work is poorly organized or difficult to read you will not get full credit (or any credit in extreme cases). If you only show the answers and not the supporting work you will receive little or no credit. Homework sent in after the deadline, without permission by email in advance, will not be accepted for a grade.

Each of the four homework assignments will be graded on a scale of 0-10 (the homework for Test 4 and the Final Exam will be combined into a single packet). You must submit all the parts of each assignment in the same envelope. Incomplete assignments will be accepted, but graded accordingly. Each packet of written homework will count for several sections of online homework (since each packet contains multiple sections), plus the appropriate test review. At the end of the semester, your homework grade will be computed as a combination of the online and written work.

To submit your homework, collect one entire homework packet together for each test (the first one is Lessons 1.1 - 2.6 plus the pretest review and test reviews), write your name on the top page, staple it together, and put it in a sealed envelope with my name and your name in the appropriate places for the address and the return address. You may submit it by campus mail or US mail. I would prefer that you send it the same day you take the test. I understand that it will take a few days to reach me. It is unlikely that you need to pay extra postage for earlier delivery than normal. If you are concerned about that, email me and ask. The deadlines are given on the list of assignments. Questions about late homework are answered below.

The address for mailing homework is:

Marcus McGuff
ACC Northridge Campus
11928 Stonehollow Drive
Austin, TX 78758

Quizzes

After completing the online and written homework for a particular section, go to the section in your software called "Online Quizzes". Each of these quizzes covers several sections in the textbook and they are not timed. You may take each Online Quiz up to three times and the highest of the three scores will be recorded. (Don't do those three all at the same time. If you make a low grade on the first one, do some more work before you take it again. If you still make a low grade, discuss it with me and we'll make a plan for what you need to do to improve.) See the section on quizzes in the MyMathLab tutorial for details.

You have not mastered a section until you make at least a 90% on the online homework and an 80% on the related online quiz. All of these quiz grades will be averaged together at the end of the semester to make up the quiz portion of your grade. (Go here for more details on using the computer software.)

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Tests:

All of your tests and the final exam will be paper and pencil tests administered at one of the many ACC testing centers. (They will not be on the computer.) When you fill out the Online Orientation Forms, you will choose the testing center you will use for all of your tests. For each test, there will be a scheduled time period during which you must go to this testing center and take the exam (see the schedule for deadlines). (You are also required to keep working on new lessons in the material during that time.)

This is not a self-paced course. If you are working ahead and want to test early, please contact me at least one week before you want to take it to see if I can get the test to your testing center early. No make-ups or retests will be given, but, when I average grades at the end of the semester, I will use your Final Exam grade to replace the lowest grade on the previous tests if your Final Exam score is higher AND your class participation AND your homework grades are both at least 70%. Questions about late tests are answered here.

Before you go to a Testing Center, read the rules at http://www.austincc.edu/testctr/

Be sure to pay careful attention to the hours of the Testing Center and the rules. Some of the testing centers are fairly crowded and so you may have to wait in line, especially if you go in the late afternoon or early evening. Do not wait until the last day to take the test and NEVER start a test if you don't have at least 1 1/2 hours available to take it before the Testing Center closes and you must leave. Allow more time if you are slow at working the problems in your homework.

I will post your grades in the online gradebook in Course Compass/MyMathLab. You may go over your tests with me during office hours in person or (in some cases) by telephone. Individual appointments outside of office hours are also possible, depending on my schedule. When reviewing the test, please have a copy of the problems on the relevant Test Review handy. I have found that trying to review tests via email doesn't work very well if you have missed more than about 10 or 15 points. The best thing to do is to come into my office so you can actually see what you did wrong, if this is at all possible.

Final Exam

You are required to take the final exam on campus in the appropriate Testing Center. If you do not take the final exam you will receive an F for the course, regardless of your class average. The deadlines for the Final Exam and the last homework set are very strict because grades must be computed very soon after those deadlines.

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Grading Policy:

Your final grade in this course will be determined by five components.

Online Quizzes Average
8%

Homework Average (includes online and written homework)

8%
Class Participation
4%
Test Average (4 tests, 15% each)
60%
Final Exam
20%

Grades will be assigned as follows based on your total course average:

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Late Homework, Tests, and Other Work

Class Participation Credit:

If your schedule is such that you have to skip a week for some reason, you should email me to let me know in advance and, IF I approve it, do some extra participation activities either the week before or the week after to make up for it. (Kindly hint: "I didn't get around to it last week." isn't an acceptable reason. These sorts of things must be approved by me in advance, unless there is a serious emergency.) If you haven't made these arrangements with me in advance, missed class participation credit may not be made up.

Late Homework:

It is important for you to be well-prepared for each test. Online and written homework to be submitted for a grade MUST be completed BEFORE taking the test over that material. The deadline for putting the written homework into the mail is the same day as the deadline for the test (except that the material for the last test may have to be submitted earlier). If, because of the hours of your postal service, or a holiday, it isn't postmarked until the next day, that will be OK. If I give you permission to take a test late, that also includes permission to submit the homework late, too. Written homework submitted later than this will be subject to a substantial grade penalty, which will partly depend on the number of days late.

Late Tests:

There is usually a 5 or 6 day period after you should have finished the material before the deadline for the test on that material. That allows for students to take the test "on time" even if they are a bit behind in the course. If you are even more behind than that, you must be in frequent communication with me (email exchange every day or two) about your progress and your plans to catch up. In some (rare) situations, if I agree that your progress and plans are reasonable, I may allow you a few extra days past the deadline to take a test with no grade penalty. That must be worked out IN ADVANCE, not after the test deadline. (Hint: This doesn't mean you call me on the last day of the test to request an extension. If you see you aren't going to be ready in time or you have some serious life/job/personal issue that is causing problems, you need to contact me as soon as possible to discuss it.)

Tests taken late without advance permission are subject to a substantial grade penalty (possibly ALL of it, if you are more than a few days late). If you have not taken a test by the deadline, you MUST contact me immediately to discuss when you will take the test (with an appropriate penalty). If you have not contacted me or taken the test within 3 days of the deadline, you will receive a grade of 0 for that test. No extensions will be given for the Final Exam, since the course grades must be posted very soon afterwards.

Regardless of these rules, you should NEVER start a test unless you have at least 1 1/2 hours to finish it. If you go to the Testing Center on the last day, and there is a line, and you will only have one hour to take the test, then DON'T TAKE IT. (Whenever you take the test, you will get the grade you earn on it at that time.) Instead, go back the next morning when the Testing Center opens. You may lose a few points for it being late, but probably not as many as you would lose due to not finishing it.

 

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Course Objectives

Common Course Objectives for MATD 0370

The following objectives are listed in a sequence ranging from the simple to the more complex. As such, this document should not be viewed as a chronological guide to the course, although some elements naturally will precede others. These elements should be viewed as mastery goals which will be reinforced whenever possible throughout the course.

Overall objectives:

  1. Students will feel a sense of accomplishment in their increasing ability to use mathematics to solve problems of interest to them or of use in their chosen fields.
  2. Students will attain more positive attitudes based on increasing confidence in their abilities to learn mathematics.
  3. Students will learn to understand material using standard mathematical terminology and notation when presented either verbally or in writing.
  4. Students will improve their skills in describing what they are doing as they solve problems using standard mathematical terminology and notation.

1. Description and classification of whole numbers, integers, and rational numbers using sets and the operations among them

  1. identify and use properties of real numbers
  2. simplify expressions involving real numbers
  3. evaluate numerical expressions with integral exponents

2. Polynomials

  1. distinguish between expressions that are polynomials and expressions that are not
  2. classify polynomials in one variable by degree and number of terms
  3. simplify polynomials
  4. add, subtract, multiply (including the distributive law), and divide polynomials (including division by monomials, but excluding long division)
  5. factor polynomials in one or more variables (including factoring out the greatest common factor, factoring by grouping, factoring trinomials in which the leading coefficient is one, factoring trinomials in which the leading coefficient is not one, and factoring the difference of two squares)
  6. understand and use the exponent laws involving integer exponents
  7. convert numbers into and out of scientific notation and perform multiplication and division with numbers written in scientific notation

3. Solve linear equations in one variable involving integral, decimal, and fractional coefficients and solutions

4. Solve and graph linear inequalities

5. Application problems

  1. write and evaluate linear expressions from verbal descriptions
  2. solve application problems which lead to one of the following types of equations: linear equations in one variable, systems of two linear equations in two variables, quadratic equations, and rational equations with monomial numerators and denominators)
  3. solve literal equations for a specified variable using addition and multiplication principles
  4. use given data to estimate values and to evaluate geometric and other formulas
  5. solve problems involving the Pythagorean theorem, similar triangles, and proportions

6. Linear equations in two variables

  1. identify the relationship between the solution of a linear equation in two variables and its graph on the Cartesian plane
  2. understand and use the concepts of slope and intercept
  3. determine slope when two data points are given
  4. graph a line given either two points on the line or one point on the line and the slope of the line
  5. write an equation of a line given one point on the line and the slope of the line, or two points on the line
  6. identify lines given in standard, point-slope, or slope-intercept forms and sketch their graphs
  7. solve systems of linear equations

7. Quadratic equations

  1. find solutions to quadratic equations using the technique of factoring and using the principle of square roots
  2. recognize a need to use the quadratic formula to solve quadratic equations and solve quadratic equations by using the quadratic formula when  some  simplification of square roots is needed

8. Description and classification of irrational numbers

  1. simplify  radical expressions
  2. use decimal approximations for radical expressions

9. Rational expressions

  1. determine for which value(s) of the variable a rational expression is undefined
  2. simplify rational expressions containing monomials, binomials, and trinomials
  3. multiply and divide rational expressions containing monomials, binomials, and trinomials
  4. add and subtract rational expressions with like denominators and rational expressions with unlike denominators (only monomials and binomials that do not require factoring)

10. Geometry

  1. understand the difference between perimeter and area and be able to use formulas for these appropriately
  2. solve application problems involving angles and polygons

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Withdrawals

It is the student's responsibility to initiate all withdrawals in this course. The instructor may withdraw students who fail to make the minimum time commitment of the course for two weeks, but makes no commitment to do this for the student. (If you decide to stop working on the course, you had best make sure that you drop the course. While I MIGHT do this, it is YOUR responsibility. If you fail to do so, you could receive an F on your permanent record.) After the withdrawal deadline, neither the student nor the instructor may initiate a withdrawal. If you are withdrawn by mistake, I will only consider reinstating you if you have taken all necessary tests, are current in your homework, and are caught up in all coursework to the point at which you are requesting reinstatement.

Please check the schedule page for the withdrawal deadline for the semester.

Reinstatement

Students who withdrew or were withdrawn generally will not be reinstated unless they have completed all course work, projects, and tests necessary to place them at the same level of course completion as the rest of the class.

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Scholastic Dishonesty

Acts prohibited by the college for which discipline may be administered include scholastic dishonesty, including but not limited to, cheating on an exam or quiz, plagiarizing, and unauthorized collaboration with another in preparing outside work. Academic work submitted by students shall be the result of their thought, work, research or self-expression. Academic work is defined as, but not limited to, tests, quizzes, whether taken electronically or on paper; projects, either individual or group; classroom presentations; and homework.

Students who violate the rules concerning scholastic dishonesty will be assessed an academic penalty that the instructor determines is in keeping with the seriousness of the offense. This academic penalty may range from a grade penalty on the particular assignment to an overall grade penalty in the course, including possibly an F in the course. ACC's policy can be found in the Student Handbook page 33 or on the web at: http://www.austincc.edu/handbook/

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Students with Disabilities

Each ACC campus offers support services for students with documented physical or psychological disabilities. Students with disabilities must request reasonable accommodations through the Office of Students with Disabilities on the campus where they expect to take the majority of their classes. Students are encouraged to do this three weeks before the start of the semester.

Students who are requesting accommodation must provide the instructor with a letter of accommodation from the Office of Students with Disabilities (OSD) at the beginning of the semester. Accommodations can only be made after the instructor receives the letter of accommodation from OSD.

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Statement on Academic Freedom:

Institutions of higher education are conducted for the common good. The common good depends upon a search for truth and upon free expression. In this course the professor and students shall strive to protect free inquiry and the open exchange of facts, ideas, and opinions. Students are free to take exception to views offered in this course and to reserve judgment about debatable issues. Grades will not be affected by personal views. With this freedom comes the responsibility of civility and a respect for a diversity of ideas and opinions. This means that students must take turns speaking, listen to others speak without interruption, and refrain from name-calling or other personal attacks.

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Acceptable Behavior:

Classroom behavior should support and enhance learning. Behavior that disrupts the learning process will be dealt with appropriately, which may include having the student leave class for the rest of that day. In serious cases, disruptive behavior may lead to a student being withdrawn from the class. ACC's policy on student discipline can be found in the Student Handbook page 32 or on the web at: http://www.austincc.edu/handbook/

Clearly, since this is a distance learning course, there is no actual "classroom" per se, but this policy applies to use of the message boards, email, and other class-related activities.

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Be sure to read the other page of course policies/information as well.


This webpage was created by Marcus McGuff.
It was last updated on January 19, 2009 .