Course Guidelines Math 338
Dr. R. Beezer Spring 2002

Text   We will be using Combinatorics by H. Joseph Straight and Introduction to Graph Theory (Fourth Edition) by Robin J. Wilson.

Home Page   Start at http://buzzard.ups.edu/courses.html to locate the WWW page for this course.

Office Hours   My office is Thompson 321G; the telephone number is 879-3564. Making appointments or simple, non-mathematical questions can be handled via electronic mail - my address is beezer@ups.edu. Office hours will be 9:00-10:00 on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. I will always be available during these times on a first-come, first-served basis. If these times are not convenient, please do not hesitate to make an appointment with me for another time. You are also welcome to drop by my office without an appointment at any time that I am in (1 P.M. - 4 P.M. is a good time to try). Office hours are your opportunity to receive extra help or clarification on material from class, or to discuss any other aspect of the course.

Homework   Problems from the text will be suggested throughout the lectures and posted on the course WWW page. Of course, you are not limited to working just these problems. It will be your responsibility to work these problems and seek out my feedback as you desire. You may turn in written solutions for my comments at any time, or you may come by my office to discuss your solutions.

These exercises will form the basis for the classes where we will have problem sessions (most every Friday) and for discussions in office hours. It is your responsibility to be certain that you are learning from these exercises. The best ways to do this are to work the problems diligently when assigned and to participate in the classroom discussions. If you are unsure about a problem, then a visit to my office is in order. Making a consistent effort outside of the classroom is the easiest way to do well in this course.

Mathematics not only demands straight thinking, it grants the student the satisfaction of knowing when he [or she] is thinking straight. - D. Jackson
Mathematics is not a spectator sport. - Anonymous
I hear, I forget.
I see, I remember.
I do, I understand.
    - Chinese Proverb

Quizzes   There will be seven one-hour quizzes - mostly on Mondays. The material to be covered on each quiz will be announced in class. The lowest of your seven quiz scores will be dropped. The comprehensive final exam will be given at 4 P.M. on Thursday, May 16. The final exam cannot be given at any other time, so be certain that you do not make any travel plans that conflict, and since this exam falls late in finals week also be aware that I will allow you to work longer on the final exam than just the two-hour scheduled block of time. In other words, plan your travel arrangements accordingly.

Grades   Grades will be based on the following breakdown: Quizzes - 75%; Final - 25%. Reading questions, attendance and improvement will be considered for borderline grades. Scores will be posted on the World Wide Web at
http://buzzard.ups.edu/courses.html. A reminder about withdrawals - a Withdrawal Passing grade (W) can only be given during the third or fourth weeks of the semester, after that time (barring unusual circumstances), the appropriate grade is a Withdrawal Failing (WF), even if your work has been of passing quality. See the attached schedule for the last day to drop with an automatic `W' and please read The Logger about these often misunderstood grades.

Attendance   Daily attendance is required, expected, and overall a pretty good idea.

Purpose   Combinatorics is important for many problems in computer science and allied fields (like cryptology), is fundamentally the main part of simple probability questions, and is useful in other fields of mathematics, such as abstract algebra. Many optimization questions (scheduling, vehicle routing, etc.) rely heavily on ideas from combinatorics. Its also a major component of problems classified as recreational mathematics (puzzles and games).

We will have occassion to work with many theorems and develop some theories fully, especially in the later part of the course. The principal thrust of this course early on will be on problem-solving.

Homework Exercises
(Straight, Chapters 0, 1, 2)
SectionPageProblem
1.11031, 2, 3, 4
0.1146c, 7, 13, 20c, 21, 25
1.21122, 3, 5, 7, 10, 13, 16, 18
0.2351, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 18, 21, 24, 28, 31
1.31272, 3, 5, 8, 9, 10, 13, 16, 19, 22, 27
1.41361, 4, 5, 8, 13
1.51471, 3, 6, 7, 12, 15, 17, 19
1.61593a, 5, 8, 10, 11, 16
0.4815, 9, 13a, 16, 23
2.11854, 8, 11, 13, 21, 22-24
2.22043, 4, 7, 10, 15, 21, 22
2.32272a, 3, 5g, 7cd, 9
2.42395, 6, 9, 11, 13, 16, 19

Tentative Daily Schedule


Monday Tuesday

Thursday Friday

Jan 21
MLK Day

Jan 22
Straight, Chapter 1

Jan 24

Jan 25
Problem Session

Jan 28

Jan 29

Jan 31

Feb 1
Problem Session

Feb 4
Quiz # 1

Feb 5

Feb 7

Feb 8
Problem Session

Feb 11

Feb 12

Feb 14

Feb 15
Problem Session
Potlatch (Sat.)

Feb 18
Quiz # 2
Last day to drop

Feb 19

Feb 21

Feb 22
Problem Session

Feb 25
Straight, Chapter 2

Feb 26

Feb 28

Mar 1
Problem Session

Mar 4
Quiz # 3

Mar 5

Mar 7

Mar 8
Problem Session

Mar 11

Mar 12

Mar 14

Mar 15
Midterm
Spring Break
Monday Tuesday

Thursday Friday

Mar 25
Problem Session

Mar 26
Quiz # 4

Mar 28
Wilson, Chaps. 1-6
Straight, Chapter 3

Mar 29

Apr 1

Apr 2

Apr 4

Apr 5
Problem Session

Apr 8
Quiz # 5

Apr 9

Apr 11

Apr 12

Apr 15

Apr 16

Apr 18

Apr 19
Problem Session

Apr 22
Quiz # 6

Apr 23
Straight, Chapter 4

Apr 25

Apr 26

Apr 29
Problem Session

Apr 30

May 2

May 3
Problem Session

May 6
Quiz # 7

May 7


Final Examinations
Thursday, May 16 at 4 P.M.




File translated from TEX by TTH, version 3.03.
On 16 Jan 2002, 09:18.