Math 233 Exam Schedule


Exam 1 Wednesday September 12 6:30-8:30 PM
Exam 2 Monday October 15 6:30-8:30 PM
Exam 3 Wednesday November 14 6:30-8:30 PM
FINAL EXAM Exam Period XXVII Monday,
December 17
10:30 AM-
12:30 PM
Note that the FINAL EXAM is near end of the College's final exam schedule and in the morning!  We wish it were earlier, but this schedule is created by the Dean's Office, not the Math Department.

Please make your end of semester travel reservations early; a conflicting travel reservation is not a valid excuse for missing the final. If your parents are making your travel reservations, be sure they know your exam schedule before they do it.

Usually each in-semester exam will cover the material up through what was assigned for the Monday just before the exam. You are responsible for all the material in the assigned sections of the text or in the corresponding lectures, unless your instructor specifically excludes something.

You should always bring your Washington University Photo ID Card to exams; proctors will check student ID's. You should also bring several pencils with erasers.  Graphing calculators will usually be allowed (but NOT any model which contains a Computer Algebra System (CAS)--for example, the TI-89, TI-92, HP-48 and HP-49). Use of a calculator with a built-in CAS during an exam will be viewed as an academic integrity violation. Any changes of policy will be announced before the exam.

You may have a single 3x5 notecard with any notes you like.  Do not bring any "scratch paper." There should be sufficient space for your work on the exam booklet.

The answers to multiple choice and true/false questions are marked on machine-readable cards. (Years ago, we too used punch cards and had lots of problems after each exam with "hanging chads!")  Please mark your answer card clearly and completely erase any changes. (You might want to lightly shade in your answers on the card and then darken them later before you hand in the card.)  If your card becomes damaged or too badly marked up, ask the proctor for a new one. Damaged or unreadable cards must be hand-graded and will delay the grading of your exam.

Sometimes a student unintentionally blackens the wrong answer on the answer card.  We can correct this during a short period after the exam if we can see your "clear intent" (that is, clear and sufficient work written in your exam booklet to show that you actually solved the problem correctly).

From trig, you should (as always) be familiar with the definitions of at least sin(x), cos(x), tan(x), their graphs, and the standard trig identities. (You can find these on pp. A24-A26 in the appendix of the textbook.)
 
 

Exam Rooms

Just before each exam you can look up your exam room assignment on the web.  The room probably will not be your regular classroom, and it may change for each exam, so check it each time.  The seating assignments are also posted on the wall beside the 233 Bulletin Board (on the first floor hall of Cupples I) just before each test.

You will be allowed to enter the exam room a few minutes before the starting time to locate your seat and personalized exam booklet.  The booklet will have your name printed on it in large letters.
 

                                                                         Exam Scores

Exam scores are posted on the web when the grading is finished.  The multiple choice section of each exam is machine graded, and the scores for that part of the exam are usually posted by the end of the next day.  The hand graded part is slower to grade, so the scores for the whole exam usually appear the following Monday or Tuesday.  Click here to look up your exam scores.
 
 

Missed Exams

Legitimate excuses for missing an exam (such as verified illness or serious family emergencies) in all calculus courses must be approved by Professor Jack Shapiro  (Cupples I, 107B, 314-935-6787), preferably in advance.  Having one person approve excused absences for all sections of all the calculus courses helps to assure that all students receive uniform treatment.  Unexcused absences from any exam receive a score of  "0".

If you receive an excused absence from Professor Shapiro for one of the in-semester exams, you will not take a make-up exam.  Instead, a statistical formula called "multiple regression" will be used at the end of the semester to estimate your missing score based on your performance on the other three exams.  (The formula is complicated, but it takes into account the average class score on each exam and how far above or below the average you were on each exam you did take.  Therefore, you're not penalized if the exam you missed was one on which other students had high scores.)

Students who miss the final with an excuse from Professor Shapiro will need to take a make-up final at another time, probably early in the Spring semester.
 

Exam Returns
There will be a short time after each exam when you can go into the Math Office (Cupples I, Room 100) and look at your graded test if you feel that there was some error--for example, in how you marked your answer card.  Then the exams will be put out for you to pick up in a cabinet by the Math 233 bulletin board, on the first floor hall of Cupples I.
 Copies of Old Exams Online
Note:  These online files are maintained by the Math Department and Olin
Library.  Some exams are available with solutions, some without, some both
ways.  In setting up this webpage, we have included all the exams/solutions
we have available for recent semesters.
          Copies of some old exams are also available at the Reserve Desk on
Level 2 of Olin Library.  Any exams at the Resevre Desk older than Fall 1997 (when we began using the current textbook) may not be as useful as study aids.