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    • 3.00 Credits

      Prerequisite: MATH 1410 with a grade of C or higher;Description: Topics include proportionality, algebraic thinking, geometry, and measurement. Emphases are problem solving, multiplicative reasoning, number sense, and communicating concepts with language, symbols, and concrete and pictorial representations. This course is reserved for students seeking elementary or middle school teaching licensure.
    • 1.00 Credits

      Corequisite: MATH 1420;Description: Elective mathematics laboratory for students desiring extra assistance with MATH 1420. Lab instruction will focus on problem solving. Pass/Fail grading.
    • 3.00 Credits

      Prerequisite: Students with deficiencies in Reading and Writing must be removed before enrolling in MATH 1530;Description: Measures of central tendency and dispersion for descriptive statistics, estimations of confidence intervals for means and proportions, probability distributions, hypotheses testing, the least squares method, and correlation analysis. Students with high school deficiencies in mathematics must sign up for E-sections which include a mandatory lab.
    • 3.00 Credits

      Prerequisite: Must complete deficiencies in reading and writing;Description: Categorization and collection of data. Representations of univariate and bivariate data. Measures of central tendency and variability related to distribution of data, correlation, confidence intervals, data driven decision making, probability and probability distributions, expected value, combinations, and permutations. Analysis of published data such as standardized test scores.
    • 3.00 Credits

      Description: Finite Math 1630 is a problem-solving course, which means you will need to discover your own solutions to problems rather than follow recipes as in most math courses. The problems you solve are all primary components of 21st century digital technology. Some problems you work on individually; others require teamwork. Finite mathematics is intended for students studying Information Systems, Computer Network Technology, Business Management, and for students fulfilling their general education mathematics requirement for other degree areas.
    • 3.00 Credits

      Prerequisite: ACT-M score of 19 or higher (or equivalent SAT or COMPASS score) or MATH 1530 with a grade of C or higher OR MATH 1010 with a grade of C or higher;Description: A study of functions and their representations with emphasis on the use of functions in problem-solving and modeling contexts. Topics include polynomial functions, rational functions, power and root functions, inverse functions, and systems of equations.
    • 3.00 Credits

      Prerequisite: MATH 1110 or 1710 with a grade of C or higher or ACT-M score of 25 or higher;Description: Circular functions and their graphs, inverses, identities and conditional equations, solutions of triangles, trigonometric form of complex numbers, DeMoivre's Theorem, exponential and logarithmic functions, parametric and polar equations.
    • 4.00 Credits

      Prerequisite: ACT-M 25 or higher and high school trigonometry or MATH 1710 with a grade of C or higher. Students who do not meet this requirement may challenge their placement by taking (at their own expense) the APSU Mathematics Placement Examination;Description: Analysis of functions and their graphs, inverse functions, exponential and logarithmic functions, theory of equations, conic sections, circular functions and their graphs, trigonometric identities and conditional equations, solutions of triangles, trigonometric form of complex numbers, DeMoivre's Theorem, parametric and polar equations. Structured primarily to prepare students for Math 1910.
    • 3.00 Credits

      Prerequisite: ACT-M 25 or higher or MATH 1710 or MATH 1110 or MATH 1730. Students who do not meet this requirement may challenge their placement by taking (at their own expense) the APSU Mathematics Placement Examination;Description: Designed for students whose major interest is outside the physical sciences but who require a working knowledge of calculus. Limits, the derivative, differentiation techniques, applications of differentiation, the definite integral, exponential and logarithmic functions, and applications of integration.
    • 3.00 Credits

      Prerequisite: MATH 1810;Description: A continuation of 1810. Functions of several variables, integration techniques, differential equations, Taylor polynomials, infinite series, and numerical methods.