Prof. Wladis
alternate email: cwladis@nyc.rr.com (please use this email only if the bmcc email is not working)
212-220-1363
Office: N539 (inside the math department, which is room N520)
Office hours: Monday 1-4pm
Math department fax: 212-748-7459 (be sure to put my name on it if you want it to go to me)
My box can be found in the math department in room N520
Read this ENTIRE document carefully! It explains all of the details of how the course works and how you are graded. I strongly recommend that you print this out and keep it with you as a reference throughout the course.
If you have already read the syllabus and are just looking for an answer to a specific question, you can click on the links below to take you directly to that section.
Required TextbookDimensional Analysis for Meds , Third Edition for BMCC, by Anna M. Curren, Delmar Thompson Learning, 2002.
This is a NEW edition; it is different from the book used at BMCC last semester.
To see a few places where you can buy the book, click here.
If you need help writing symbols, see the help page under "Technical Help" on the main course menu.
If you need help writing symbols, see the help page under "Technical Help" on the main course menu.
This class has several kinds of assignments:
The discussion questions will be posted under the Discussion Board button on the main course menu.
You must always post your first response to the discussion board 3 days before the deadline for the assignments each week; if you miss this deadline, you will lost points on your discussion board grade because other students won't have enough time to respond to your post! This deadline is always listed on the Assignments page, under the Discussion Board description.
You can see which discussion questions have been assigned for the week by looking at the Assignments page for that week.
What is required to get full credit:
- You are required to give an answer to each discussion question in your own words.
If I respond to your post and ask you to fix or clarify something you’ve said, you must respond to my post.
If other students give you feedback on how to fix your answer or explain why they think that your answer has an error, then you must respond to them by either correcting the error and reposting your answer, or if you think they are mistaken and that your answer does not have the error they have described, then explain clearly to them why the error they have pointed out is, in fact, correct.
- You must then also to at least 2 of the other students’ posts for each question.
Your replies to other students’ posts should say something substantive! It is fine to reply to another student, “Your answer really helped me to understand the concept better!”, but this post does not contain any information about the math itself, and therefore will not count as one of your two required responses.
Each chapter has its own homework problems taken from the book, which you can find by looking at the Assignments page for that week.
- Be sure that you have the correct edition of the book, or the page numbers listed for the homework will not match the page numbers in your book. The correct edition of the book is available at the BMCC library, and you can photocopy the pages of the book that contain the homework if you like.
- To submit the homework: Click here to see the different ways that you can submit the homework.
Please do not send me attachments via email or documents in the digital drop box if you have recently had or suspect you might have a computer virus. Instead, copy your work into the BODY of an email and send it to me that way.
Some weeks we will have a quiz , which you can find by looking at the Assignments page for that week.
Whenever we have a test assigned for that week, you will see the test assigned on the Assignments page.
Tests are open book, but you must do them ALONE.
All tests will be open book, but they will be timed, and you will be expected to work on your own when you take the tests. Cheating by working with another student is still prohibited and carries and if I discover that you have cheated, you will receive a zero on the test, and if it happens more than once, a failing grade for the class.If you are caught cheating, you may also be turned over to the committee on academic standing, where they have the authority to expel you from CUNY if they think the offense is serious enough; if this happens, then the student can’t take any classes at any CUNY college. Cheating is very serious! So please don’t risk it!
Everything you write on the test should be in your own words.
If you give an answer to an essay question that you have copied word for word from my lecture, or from the book, or from another student's posts you will get a 0 on that question!
You will take all of your tests online.
You will have a week to take the test, during which time you can log in anytime to take the test. Be sure to take the test well before the deadline. The test will disappear after the deadline for taking it is past, and you will not be able to get in to take it after that without my permission!
Once you begin the test, you cannot log out and then get back in again to take the test.
Before you take a test, be sure to close all other programs.
While taking the test, DO NOT click on any of the browser navigation buttons (back, refresh, etc.). Otherwise, the test may freeze up and not allow you to log back in to take the test.
Before you take any of the tests, be sure that you are able to read all the equations!
If you are not sure that you can do this, go here to find out:At the end of the class, we will have a final exam. It will be cumulative. It will be very similar in structure and difficulty to the chapter tests. If you have studied and done well on all the previous tests, you will probably do well on the final. When it is time to take the final, you will see it on that week's Assignments page. Like the tests, you will have about a week to log in to take the final. The final will also be timed and be open book/notes.
Here is what you must do if you want to request an extension due to technical problems:
Every time you call Information Technology (IT):
(I know this can be frustrating, but unfortunately, I cannot fix technical issues. It is your responsibility as the student to keep calling the help desk until you can get through to a person who has the expertise to solve your problem. If the first person you talk to can’t help, then ask them to transfer you or give you the name of someone with more expertise who might be able to help you. Then contact that person. Keep this up until you can get someone to fix the technical issue.)
Each time you contact IT (or the Help Desk), write down the DATE and TIME you contacted them, and write down the NAME of the person you talked to.
Keep calling or emailing IT (or the Help Desk) until you get through to someone who is able to solve your problem. You may need to ask to be transferred to the right person.
Keep calling back until you get the problem fixed.
Do not contact me with technical problems until you have already contacted IT (or the help desk)! I cannot fix any technical problems; I am not a computer technician and will not be able to help you with computer issues because I do not have the knowledge or the website access needed to fix most technical issues. Only IT (or the helpdesk) can fix computer problems. The only reason you should contact me about your technical issues is so that:
Extra credit points go to any student who posts an intelligent answer to another student’s question!
Monday - Thursday |
Friday 10:00am - 7:00pm |
Saturday 10:00am - 4:00pm |
Sunday 11:00am - 4:00pm (Room S-500) |
The main menu for the course is the purple menu on the left of the course webpage. It has the following menu titles: