The Mathematics Department is adding an online section of MATH 1090 this summer. The course is popular with Ohio University students who don’t need college algebra to satisfy the general education Tier I quantitative requirement.
The department also offers a summer menu of courses from algebra to xxxx.
MATH 1090 Consumer Math ONLINE
Tier I Quantitative Skills (1M)
Class #4741 | Full Summer Session
Description: This course covers applications of elementary mathematics to day-to-day problems, with special emphasis on consumer topics such as compound interest, mortgages, and installment buying. A scientific calculator is required. No credit for this course if taken after MATH 1250 or higher-level MATH course.
MATH D005 Intermediate Algebra
Class #2381 | Full Summer Session
Description: This developmental course in algebra is for students in need of preparation for math placement level PL1. It covers operations and equations with rational expressions, equations of a line, introduction to functions, introduction to systems of linear equations in two and three variables, absolute-value equations and inequalities, rational exponents, operations and equations with radicals, introduction to complex numbers, quadratic equations and various application problems on these topics. No credit for this course if taken after D004 or any higher level MATH course.
MATH 1200 College Algebra
Tier I Quantitative Skills (1M)
Class #2385, 2393, 2391 | First Summer Session
Description: Equations, functions and graphs, including linear equations and systems, polynomials, rational and radical expressions, quadratic equations, exponential and logarithmic functions, and inequalities are covered. Students who will not need MATH 1200 for their intended majors or as a prerequisite for other classes should consider MATH 1090, MATH 1250, MATH 1260, or another Tier I quantitative skills course instead. No credit for both this course and MATH 1321 (first course taken deducted).
MATH 1300 Pre-Calculus
Tier I Quantitative Skills (1M)
Class #2383, 2392 | First & Second Summer Sessions
Description: This course provides a rigorous treatment of graphs, inverses, and algebraic operations of polynomial, rational, exponential, logarithmic, and trigonometric functions, trigonometry and analytic geometry. The course also includes introductions to linear systems, polar coordinates, vectors, conic sections, sequences and series. Recommended only for students intending to enroll in MATH 2301 Calculus I. Students also should register for MATH D300 PLTL for PreCalculus to make the course automatically transferable within Ohio. No credit for both this course and MATH 1322 (first course taken deducted).
MATH 1350 Survey of Calculus
Tier II Applied Science & Mathematics (2AS)
Class #2400, 2364 | First & Full Summer Sessions
Description: This course presents a survey of basic concepts of calculus for students who want an introduction to calculus but do not need the depth of 2301 and 2301. Note: Students cannot earn credit for both MATH 1350 and 2301 (MATH 1350 always deducted).
MATH 2301 Calculus I
Tier II Applied Science & Mathematics (2AS)
Class #2301 | First Summer Session
Description: This is the first course in calculus and analytic geometry with applications in the sciences and engineering. It includes basic techniques of differentiation and integration with applications including rates of change, optimization problems, and curve sketching; includes exponential, logarithmic and trigonometric functions. No credit for both MATH 2301 and 1350 (always keep 2301).
MATH 2302 Calculus II
Tier II Applied Science & Mathematics (2AS)
Class #2388, 2398 | First & Full Summer Sessions
Description: This is the second course in calculus and analytic geometry with applications in the sciences and engineering. It includes techniques of integration, conic sections, polar coordinates, infinite series, vectors and vector operations.
MATH 2500 Introduction to Statistics
Tier I Quantitative Skills (1M)
Class #2382 | Full Summer Session
Description: This introductory course in applied statistics covers organization of data, central tendency and dispersion, descriptive bivariate data, correlation, designed experiments, probability, random variables, binomial and normal distributions, distributions, inferences from large samples, estimation, confidence intervals and hypothesis testing. Students cannot earn credit for MATH 2500 and any of the following: COMS 3520, ECON 3810, GEOG 2710, ISE 3040, ISE 3200, PSY 1110, PSY 2110, QBA 2010.
MATH 3200 Applied Linear Algebra
Class #2394 | First Summer Session
Description: This course on linear algebra with an emphasis on applications and computations covers solutions to linear systems, matrices and matrix algebra, determinants, n-dimensional real vector spaces and subspaces, bases and dimension, eigenvalues and eigenvectors, diagonalization, norms, inner product spaces, orthogonality and least squares problems. No credit for both this course and MATH 3210 (first taken deducted).
MATH 3300 Calculus III
Class #2396 | Full Summer Session
Description: This third course in calculus and analytic geometry with applications in the sciences and engineering includes partial differentiation, multiple integrals, line and surface integrals, and the integral theorems of vector calculus.
MATH 3400 Elementary Differential Equations
Class #23906 | First Summer Session
Description: This is an introduction to ordinary differential equations and their use as models for applications with an emphasis on exact solution methods for linear equations and systems including Laplace transform methods.
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