Course Exams

Note: More information will be added as the exam dates near

Exam 1: Wednesday Feb. 23, in class

The first exam is not too serious (only worth 10% of your final grade), but the point is to give you a chance to examine your mastery of the subject before the Feb. 25 drop date. However, bear in mind that much of the material after the drop date becomes considerably more abstract than the material before.

Exam 1 will be on the material covered in lecture through Fri. Feb. 18. Namely, the following: matrix operations, systems of linear equations, row reduction, linear transformations (particularly in the plane), images of linear transformations.

In particular you should be able to do the following:

The format will include true/false and problems of the above type. I recommend you begin studying by first reviewing Homeworks 1-3, and doing practice problems on the above topics. Monday, Feb. 23 will be review. Please bring any questions you have to class or office hours (11:30-12:30, 1:30-2:30) on Monday.

Exam 2: Friday April 15, in class

Exam 2 will be on the material covered in lecture through Mon. April 11, with a focus on the topics covered since Exam 1. However the material is cumulative, and you will still need to know the material from the beginning of the course. Specifically, the following topics will be covered: vector spaces, subspaces, span, linear independence, bases, dimension, coordinates, the image and kernel of linear transformations, rank, nullity and the Rank-Nullity Theorem.

In particular you should be able to do the following:

I have made a sheet of

Practice problems (4/11: Corrected statement of #16 and #24.)

which will similar to the type of problems to appear on the exam. I recommend you attempt these before class Wednesday, check your answers with the

Practice problem solutions (4/13: Corrected answer to #15)

then bring any questions you have to class or office hours. (Please let me know if you spot any errors.)

Final Exam: Friday May 13, 1:30-3:30pm

The final exam is cumulative, so please review the topics listed under Exams 1 and 2. I expect a little more than half of the exam will focus on topics covered since Exam 2 (though the solution of these problems often requires understanding of previous material), which are: transition matrices, matrix with respect to a basis, determinants, inverses, eigenvalues, eigenvectors, diagonalization and exponentiation.

Specifically, you should be able to do the following:

To help you prepare, I have composed a sheet of

Practice Problems

which I encourage you to treat as a mock exam (prepare first, and try to do as much as you can on your own, though not necessarily in one sitting, and probably not under 2 hours). Check your answers against the

Practice Problem Solutions

You can bring any questions you have to office hours (Thursday, 2-4pm). Feel free to ask questions by email or set up an appointment with me.