Math 323 Section 01: Calc III

Spring 2009

MWF 8:30-9:30am in FA 209
T 8:30-9:55am in LN 1120


The Final Exam is on Monday, May 11th at 7:00-9:00pm in LH 14. I will be having extended office hours before the final. Here is the schedule

Good Luck.

Here is a Review Sheet for the third exam. This sheet may not be complete, so you shouldn't limit your studying to it. However, it is a good start for the kind of questions you should be able to solve on the exam


This is the official course wepage for Multivariable Calculus, Math 323, Section 01 in the Spring semester 2009. You will find all of the information you need for the class on this website.

Course Information:

Key Dates:

Note that the Tuesday meeting is not a discussion session. We will use it to discuss problems sometimes, but I will also use it to continue covering new material.

My office hours: My office is LN-2235, and my office hours are If you can't meet me during my scheduled hours just check with me after class, or send me an email, to arrange a meeting time.

Homework and Quizzes: There will be at least one graded thing every week. That means at least one homework or quiz. Quizzes will be announced ahead of time and will most often happen on Fridays.
     In addition to assigned homework problems, there will be suggested homework problems listed every week for each section. Even though these problems will not be collected, I encourage you to look at them.

Solutions to Some Homework:

Exams: There will be three in-class exams and one final. The in-class exams will be administered during the Tuesday meeting. The in-class exams are not necessarily going to be common to everyone taking Calc III, but the final will be common with everyone taking Calc III.


Textbook: Multivariable Calculus, 6th edition, by James Stewart. You should keep up in the book as we cover material in class. I won't have time in class to go over ever detail of every section, so you are responsible for reading the sections yourself. Ideally you should read the section before we talk about it in class. The problems in the book are a good example of the kind of questions you will see on exams and quizzes.

Interesting Links: This is just a list of math related interesting links.

Chris Dwyer's home page