This document is subject to major updates until the first day of classes!
This syllabus is subject to minor corrections and updates at any time! Major changes may arrive, if we are so ordered by (disease control) authorities.Last update: Monday, August 22, 2022
Instructor: | Gábor
Hetyei Office: Fretwell 335F, E-mail: ghetyei@uncc.edu Office hours: Tuesdays and Thursdays 1:00-2:00 pm, Wednesdays 4:45-5:15 pm, or by appointment (eventual changes will be announced in class). |
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Text: |
Abstract Algebra: An
Introduction, 3rd Edition, by Thomas Hungerford
ISBN: 9781111569624. Some information may be provided on supplementary handouts, and you can not expect everything told in the lecture to be found in the book. Attendance is mandatory! |
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Prerequisites: | MATH 1242 or MATH 2164 with a grade of C or better or consent of the department. | ||||||
Topics: |
Chapter 1: Arithmetic in ℤ Revisited. Chapter 2: Congruence in ℤ and Modular Arithmetic. Chapter 3: Rings. Chapter 4: Arithmetic in F[x]. Chapter 5: Congruence in F[x] and Congruence-Class Arithmetic. Chapter 6: Ideals in Quotient Fields. Time permitting, and depending on the interest of the audience, we may also cover some of Chapter 7 (Groups). | ||||||
Test Dates: |
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Attendance: | Required, in person, unless we are ordered to move online. Submit documentation via the Niner Health Check if you contract covid, and contact me by email to receive instructons regarding special arrangements for the time of your quarantine. The current expectation is that both tests and the final exam will be on campus. If we have Zoom sessions then they will be recorded and you will have to have your video on. You will be counted absent if you miss 15 minutes or more of a lecture. Having 8 or more absences results in an automatic course grade of F! Even excusable absences are counted toward the maximum of 7 allowed absences. Scanned lecture notes will be posted as a courtesy, subject to no unexpected technical problems. | ||||||
Homework: | Homework will be assigned every day, and will be usually collected once every week, via Canvas. You will have to submit scanned PDF files, any other file format may be rejected. The number of exercises per week will be low, but I will expect a detailed writeup. A random selection of the assigned exercises will be graded. Past due assignments will be rejected. No partial credit will be given for bonus questions, only perfectly good solutions will be accepted. However, a bonus assignment may be resubmitted an arbitrary number of times before its final due date of November 29. Some of my test questions may be very similar or even identical to homework questions that have been previously discussed in class. This by itself is a great reason to regularly attend every lecture, another reason being that mathematics is cumulative, failing to understand one section will impact the ability to learn several subsequent sections. | ||||||
Evaluation: |
Grades will be based on:
23% for the homework, 22% for each of the tests, and 33% for the final (22% for the mandatory part, 11% for the optional part).
Tentative grading scale: 90 - 100 % A, 75 - 89% B, 60 - 74% C, 50 - 59 % D, 0 - 49% F. (This scale is applicable only if you have 7 or less absences.) |
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Tuesdays and Thursdays 10:00 am - 11:15 am in Smith 306 | ||||||
Homepage: | https://uncc.instructure.com/courses/175536/assignments/syllabus | ||||||
Disabilities: | UNC Charlotte is committed to access to education. If you have a disability and need academic accommodations, please send me your accommodation letter as early as possible. You are encouraged to meet with me to discuss the accommodations outlined in your letter. For more information on accommodations, contact the Office of Disability Services at 704-687-0040 (Fretwell 230). | ||||||
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Rules of the Classroom: |
To ensure that your fellow students' right of learning is
protected, please observe the following:
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Academic Integrity: |
All students are required to read and abide by the Code of Student
Academic Integrity. Violations of the Code of Student Academic
Integrity, including plagiarism, will result in disciplinary action as
provided in the Code. Definitions and examples of plagiarism are set
forth in the Code. The Code is available from the Dean of Students
Office or online.
In this class, the following special rules apply:
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Copyright issues: |
My lectures and course materials, including presentations, tests, exams,
outlines, and similar materials, are protected by copyright. I am the
exclusive owner of copyright in those materials I create. I encourage
you to take notes and make copies of course materials for your own
educational use. However, you may not, nor may you knowingly allow
others to reproduce or distribute lecture notes and course materials
publicly without my express written consent. This includes providing
materials to commercial course material suppliers such as CourseHero and
other similar services. Students who publicly distribute or display or
help others publicly distribute or display copies or modified copies of
an instructor's course materials may be in violation of University
Policy 406, The Code of Student Responsibility. Similarly, you own
copyright in your original papers and exam essays. If I am interested in
posting your answers or papers on the course web site, I will request
your written permission. I wish to especially underscore that under no circumstances should you make homework solutions publicly available. |