Review Information for the 21a Final Exam Spring 2005

The final exam will be held on Thursday, May 26th at 2:15pm.  This is a three hour, cumulative exam (i.e. it will have problems covering the whole semester's worth of material).

The class will be split up into two locations:
  • For students with last name beginning with A through L, please go to Harvard Hall room 202.
  • Students with last names beginning with M through Z, please go to Harvard Hall room 201.

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    As was the case for the earlier midterms, there are no calculators or notes allowed during the final exam.
     

    Coursewide Review Schedule:

    Thursday, May 11th,  2-4pm  Science Center Hall D (for all sections)  - Review 1 Video
            covering material from the first part of the semester up through midterm 1
    Monday, May 16th, 11-1pm  Science Center Hall A  (for all sections)  - Review 2 Video
            covering the material that was tested on midterm two
    Wednesday, May 18th,  2-4pm Science Center Hall C (for non-Biochem sections) - Review 3A Video Note the review starts about 16 minutes into the video (after the pizza/poster party from a previous class)
            covering the vector calculus material (Chapter 13).
    Wednesday, May 18th,  3-5pm Science Center Hall D (for Biochem sections) - Review 3B Video Note this review also starts about 16 minutes into the video        covering the material on probability at the end of the semester.
     

    Reading Period TF Office Hours:

    Andy Engelward - Wednesday, May 25th  2:30 to 3:30pm (note time change to start at 2:30, not 2pm today)  in office 435

    Eaman Eftekhary - Tuesdays & Thursdays (10th, 12th, 17th, 19th) from 2 to 4pm; in office 238.

    Albert Chau - Tuesdays (the 24th) from 5 to 7pm in office 426g

    Kathy Paur - Sunday and Tuesday nights at the Math Question Center

    Joachim Krieger - Monday and Wednesday from 5 to 7pm in office 239.
     
     

    Final Exam Topics:
    For the final exam, the problems will cover the whole semester's worth of material.  Naturally there will be an emphasis on the most recent topics as they haven't been tested as of yet.  The breakdown of questions is likely to be about 40-50% on topics since the second midterm, 25-30% on material covered on the second midterm, and 25-30% from the first midterm's topics.  Remember that the final is a three hour final, so there will be more questions on the final than there were on the midterms (probably around 9 or 10 questions in total).

    Below please find a list to help you work out what will be covered on the final – since the final includes topics from the first two midterms, then instead of repeating the exact same lists from the two previous midterm review sites, we've simply included the links to the first two midterm review sites for you to take a look at again.  Make sure you study your midterm exams and check the solutions if  you haven't already done so!

    There is a lot of material to study for the final.   It's easy to get overwhelmed if you try to do it all at once, so be sure to be systematic in your approach, and work through the semester's material topic by topic.  Pace yourself, and study a bit more each day.  Don't leave it off until the last minute!!  It's very unlikely to work out well for you if you do that.  Again, to get ready for a math test be sure to spend as much time as possible practicing doing math – go back to your homework sets and try redoing problems pulled out at random, and spend time going through practice exam problems.

    On the other hand, you don't want to end up just being able to do the specific practice problems you do, you also want to make sure that you really understand what you're doing, so that if you see variations of problems, that you'll be able to handle  them as well.  For instance, if you've just figured out how to compute triple integrals, but you don't really understand what they mean, then if you see a problem that says "a box located in the first octant with one corner at the origin has a variable density of f(x,y,z).  Find its mass"  then you might not figure out that it's simply asking you to compute the triple integral of f(x,y,z) over the region of the box.

    Topics for the final exam include everything from midterm 1 (so please see Midterm 1 Review again), as well as everything from midterm 2 (please see Midterm 2 Review).  In terms of the latest material, covered since the last midterm, then please check the following list covering topics from the end of Chapter 12 and all of Chapter 13 (the Chapter 13 material is just for the Regular and Physics sections - those in the Biochem section should check with their TF about the material covered in the last three weeks of the semester) :


    Old Exams for practise:


    Review Problems for Chapters 12 and 13 from our textbook