2014-2015 Undergraduate Course Catalog 
    
    Nov 29, 2024  
2014-2015 Undergraduate Course Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Applied Mathematics, BS


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Contact:

Advisors:

S.P. Diaz, L. Kovalev, D. Zacharia

Faculty

Uday Banerjee, Pinyuen Chen, Dan Coman, J. Theodore Cox, Steven Diaz, Helen M. Doerr, Jack E. Graver, Philip S. Griffin, Peter D. Horn, Tadeusz Iwaniec, Hyune-Ju Kim, Mark Kleiner, Leonid Kovalev, Loredana Lanzani, Graham J. Leuschke, Adam Lutoborski, Joanna O. Masingila, Terry R. McConnell, Claudia Miller, Jani Onninen, Evgeny Poletsky, Declan Quinn, Lixin Shen, John Ucci, Gregory Verchota, Andrew Vogel, William Voltermann, Stephan Wehrli, William Wylie, Yuan Yuan, Dan Zacharia

Two degrees in Applied Mathematics are offered: Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science.

B.S. in Applied Mathematics is recommended for those students who intend to pursue a career in a field that requires advanced mathematical training, often beyond an undergraduate degree. Students who plan to pursue graduate study in applied mathematics should obtain the B.S. degree and consider taking at least one first-year graduate (600-level) course.

Preliminary and Extra-disciplinary Requirements


Preliminary and extra-disciplinary requirements for both B.A and B.S. degrees

  1. Complete 18 credits in the following classes with no grade below a C: MAT 295 , MAT 296 , MAT 331 , MAT 397 , and MAT 375  or CIS 275 . These courses are prerequisites for most upper-division courses. The following sequence is recommended: MAT 295  in the first semester; MAT 296  in the second semester; MAT 331 , MAT 397  in the third semester; and MAT 375 /CIS 275  when appropriate. However, a student with knowledge of trigonometry and a year of high school calculus may be able to enter the sequence at MAT 296  or even MAT 397 ; a student with less preparation may be advised to complete MAT 194  before beginning the calculus sequence. Students considering becoming mathematics majors are strongly encouraged to talk to a mathematics major advisor as soon as possible to ensure appropriate selection of courses.
  2. Complete a course in computing such as CPS 196 , ECS 102  or ECS 104 . A similar course may be substituted with advisor’s approval.
  3. Complete two sequences of two approved science courses outside of the mathematics department, such as BIO 121  - BIO 123 , CHE 106  (CHE 107 ) - CHE 116  (CHE 117 ), PHY 211  (PHY 221 ) - PHY 212  (PHY 222 ), ECN 203 - ECN 302 , ECN 203  - ECN 311 , ECS 221  - ECS 222 , ELE 231  - ELE 232 , or another, more advanced sequence with the approval of a mathematics major advisor. This requirement is waived if the student earns either (i) a minor in Applied Statistics, Biology, Chemistry, Computer Science, Economics, Engineering disciplines, Information Management & Technology, or Physics, or (ii) a major in one of natural sciences, engineering/technology disciplines, economics or finance. 

B.S. Degree Requirements


Students interested in pursuing the B.S. degree in Applied Mathematics obtain, in advance, the approval of a mathematics major advisor and the department chair of a petition to the effect that the upper-division courses to be taken satisfy the requirement for a B.S. degree.

In addition to the preliminary and extra-disciplinary requirements described above, the student must earn credit for the following courses, with a grade average of at least 2.0.

Table 1: sequences for B.S. in Applied Mathematics


Linear Transforms Sequence:


Analysis Sequence:


Probability and Statistics Sequence:


Electives:


9 credits of elective mathematics courses numbered 490 or higher. With prior approval of the student’s major advisor, mathematically rich 500+ level courses in other departments may be substituted for the mathematics electives.

Additional Information


Distinction in Applied Mathematics is awarded by the Mathematics Department upon completion of a B.S. in Applied Mathematics with a minimum cumulative GPA of 3.4, a minimum GPA of 3.6 in mathematics (MAT) courses at the 300+ level, and either an A or A- in the Senior Seminar or a high-quality Honors Thesis. See the Mathematics Department undergraduate advisor for additional requirements.

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