Fall 2007: Final Exam
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Our final will be Tuesday December 11, 2007 at 10:30 AM~12:30 PM , The room for final will be:
Section 001-002 ARJ 105
Section 003-004 MONT 143
Section 005 FS 103
Section 006 MONT 143
Section 007-008 ARJ 105
Section 009 ARJ 303
Section 010 MONT 143

The exam will cover everything we do this semester: in lectures, in quizzes in the homework, and in the book. However the focus of the final will be on the material that we've learned after the second midterm.From the book, this means that the final exam will focus on
Section 5.8, 6.1-6.7, 7.2, NOT 7.4 :
Section 1.1-1.5, 3.1-3.4 A6-A8. (Midterm 1)
Section 4.1-4.5, 5.1-5.6. (Midterm 2)


Review Sheet
Review Sheet for Midterm 1
Review Sheet for Midterm 2
Review Sheet for Chapter 6 and 7

Practice exam
Practice Midterm 1
Answer key to Practice Midterm 2
Practice Midterm 2
Answer key to Practice Midterm 2.
Practice Final Exam
Answer key to Practice Final exam.

Old exams
Spring 07 Midterm 1
Spring 07 Midterm 2
Spring 07 Final

There will be two additional review sessions. All Math 106 students are welcome to either or both of these sessions.
Dr. Ning Khamsemanan will hold her review session on Sat 12/8 at 2-4 pm in PB 36.
TA Allison Haskins will hold her review session on Sun 12/9 at 12-2 pm in PB 36.

Bring pen, pencil and eraser. You may use your calculator but it must agree with the department policy (TI 84-or lower). Please see Course information for that. Computers, cell phones are not allowed in the exams. Please bring your student ID. You may bring THREE 4x6 note cards or a letter size paper)

An unexcused absence will be given a grade of 0. The instructor or coordinator must be notified before missing final exam if at all possible and immediately thereafter when not possible. The coordinator will determine if the absence from an exam will be excused. The contact information for all instructors can be found on the class home page , the department’s general number is 860-486-3932.

Academic Integrity: (From the UConn Policy on Academic Misconduct) A fundamental tenet of all educational institutions is academic honesty; academic work depends upon respect for and acknowledgment of the work and ideas of others. Misrepresenting someone else's work as one's own is a serious offense in any academic setting and it will not be condoned.

Academic misconduct includes, but is not limited to, providing or receiving assistance in a manner not authorized by the instructor in the creation of work to be submitted for academic evaluation (e.g. papers, projects, examinations and assessments - whether online or in class); presenting, as one's own, the ideas, words or calculations of another for academic evaluation; doing unauthorized academic work for which another person will receive credit or be evaluated; using unauthorized aids in preparing work for evaluation (e.g. unauthorized formula sheets, unauthorized calculators, unauthorized programs or formulas loaded into your calculator, etc.); and presenting the same or substantially the same papers or projects in two or more courses without the explicit permission of the instructors involved.

A student who knowingly assists another student in committing an act of academic misconduct shall be equally accountable for the violation, and shall be subject to the sanctions and other remedies described in The Student Code. Sanctions shall include, but are not limited to, a letter sent to the Dean of Students of the University; a grade of 0 on the assignment, quiz or exam; a grade of F for the course.

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