This page does not represent the most current semester of this course; it is present merely as an archive.
As of March 19, this course will be taught online. Here’s how we plan to make that work. This may change if we determine better approaches to some elements.
We’ll try doing these via zoom. The time is unchanged from our usual lecture time (MoWeFr 10:00 EDT). The link to join is https://virginia.zoom.us/j/273905137. You will be muted upon joining; please un-mute only to ask a question.
I plan to attempt doing turn to your neighbor
parts of class via a feature called zoom breakout rooms. I have never done these at that scale, so we might have to adjust as we go.
Lectures will still be recorded and posted to the website as usual.
I am uncertain of the efficacy of this model. We may swap to having prerecorded lecture segments instead and use lecture time as additional professor office hours.
We’ll adopt an online queuing system. The process will work as follows:
You are welcome to come in groups by inviting other students to your meeting room.
If a more text-oriented help will suffice, we recommend using Piazza.
We expect this transition to be bumpy in various ways. Please feel free to use email, Piazza, or Collab’s Anonymous Feedback tool to let me know of any issues. We’ll do our best to work through them.
I have a lot of experience teaching in-person, but very little teaching online. As such, I will be watching for signs of decreased instructional effectiveness and may decrease course expectations so that course grades are not decreased by my inexperience with this teaching medium.
If you have a proposal for a different approach to how a component of this course could go, I’d welcome that suggestion.
This is one offering of Discrete Mathematics, a course designed to provide the mathematical tools needed for later CS courses, offered in a flavor designed to meet both the current Discrete Mathematics requirement and to fit with our pilot of a new curriculum. If that new curriculum is adopted, this course is expected to be called discrete math and theory 1
or DMT1.
You should take this course if and only if
At the conclusion of this course, a successful student will be able to
I hope to also have time to cover several additional topics, including
From time to time I create reference pages intended to supplement the textbooks (MCS and ∀x, the latter also having a solution book); I have no obvious place to list those supplements so I’m listing them here. They are:
proof