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Front Page > Current Education > Energy and Environmental Technology (EY) > 2015 > Year 2 > Differential Calculus (IYTP0212)

Differential Calculus

Structure Type: Study unit
Code: IYTP0212
Type: Compulsory / Basic Studies
Curriculum: EY 2015
Level: Bachelor of Engineering
Year of Study: 2 (2016-2017)
Credits: 2 cr
Responsible Teacher: Mäkelä, Jarmo
Language of Instruction: Finnish

Courses During the Academic Year 2016-2017

Impl.Group(s)Study TimeTeacher(s)LanguageEnrolment
7I-EY-2N2016-09-01 – 2016-10-31Jussi OjanenFinnish2016-08-22 – 2016-09-19

Learning Outcomes

After the course, the student knows the following concepts and can apply them in electrical engineering: limit of a function, continuity, derivatives of 1st or higher order. The student can differentiate the most common elementary functions, knows the significance of the derivative as a slope of a tangent line and as an rate of change of a quantity, knows the differential of a function and its use in error assessment , knows how to differentiate the products and quotients and composite function, knows the concept of extremum and can apply it and can solve an equation numerically using Newton's method.

Student's Workload

The total amount of student's work is 54 h , which contains 28 h of contact studies.

Prerequisites / Recommended Optional Courses

Analytic Geometry and Linear Algebra

Contents

Limit and derivative, difeerentiation of basic functions, composite function, study of functions. Partial derivative, total differential, maxima and minima of single-variable functions.

Recommended or Required Reading and Other Learning Resources/Tools

Majaniemi: "Matematiikka I ja II", Tietokotka Oy; the material prepared by the teacher.

Mode of Delivery / Planned Learning Activities and Teaching Methods

The basics of learning constitutes of lectures where the theory is explained and examples are given. A mere attending the lectures and listening to the lecturer is not sufficient for proper learning. In practice, an independent pondering of the contents of the course becomes best realized when a student solves independently, at home, the problems given by the lecturer. Solutions to the problems are given during the lectures. At the end of the course, students may be given exercises which are to be solved with a computer.

Assessment Criteria

Grade 1: The student knows those subjects of the course, which are necessary for the forthcoming studies and working life.
Grade 3: The student is well-abled to utilize the course contents.
Grade 5: The student is able to apply creatively the contents of the course.

Assessment Methods

An examination, homework exercises and tutored exercise sessions. The student is required to actively take part in exercise sessions, in the same way as in Physics laboratory exercises. All the given computer-related exercises must be handed in by the end of the course. At least 25 % of the given homework exercises must be solved in order to pass the course.


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