Midterm Exam, October 14th, 2005, In Class
Covers Chapters 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5.
Statistics: Count 30, Mean 67, Median 68, Max 100, Min 25 (Undergrad)
Statistics: Count 36, Mean 83, Median 90, Max 100, Min 35 (Grad)
Final Exam, December 13th, 2005, 8:00 - 11:00 AM, 1320 DCL
Covers Chapters 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11.
Statistics: Count 29, Mean 66, Median 64, Max 98, Min 44 (Undergrad)
Statistics: Count 33, Mean 86, Median 88, Max 100, Min 38 (Grad)
A study guide is available in HTML and PDF format.
Study Tips: The exam will be multiple choice with questions of similar difficultly to the quizzes, so make sure you really know all the quiz questions and answers. After you have finished studying the quizzes (and the midterm), try working all the review problems at the ends of the chapters. Go through the course notes and make sure you understand all the key points. Look through the text and make sure you understand the existence, uniqueness, and sensitivity of the problems which are are solving. Finally, for each chapter, what are the numerical methods, what solution do they produce, how much do they cost to implement, how stable are they. It's important to not only know the absolute cost and stability, but also the relative costs and stability (i.e. which method is best in which situation?). Make sure you know the methods well enough that you could actually apply the less complicated ones to a real problem (e.g., 3 by 3 matrix, 3 by 2 least-squares problem, 2 by 2 eigenvalue problem, 2 component Newton, 2 component Euler, scalar backward Euler, etc.) Although the exam will be comprehensive, it will be slightly more concentrated on the second half of the course (Chapters 6 - 11).