RUTGERS,
the State University of New Jersey
WeBWorK Login Page for Math 135, Spring 2003
You may login only in the section you have enrolled for.
Your User ID is usually your eden user name.
If you have given an email address to the registrar's office that is different
from your eden address, or if you have not given any email address to the registrar,
your User ID is your nine digit Rutgers Student Number (SSN).
In all cases, your initial password is your nine digit Student Number.
Please change it to something more secure as soon as possible.
If you do not belong to any of the sections above, you may login
as a practice user. Practice usernames are: practice1 -
practice4. The password is the same as the username. It does not
matter in which section you login as practice user!
IMPORTANT: Read your eden email!
Information:
- On User IDs/Passwords:
Your User ID is usually your eden user name.
If you have given an email address to the registrar's office that is different
from your eden address, your User ID is your nine
digit Rutgers Student Number (SSN).
If you have not given any email address to the registrar,
your User ID is your nine digit Rutgers Student Number (SSN).
In all cases, your initial password is your
nine digit Student Number. Please change it to something more secure as soon as possible.
- On using WeBWorK: For a brief introduction to WeBWorK at Rutgers, go to
http://www.math.rutgers.edu/courses/135/135-s03/rstudentintro.html
- On entering answers: Answers to WeBWorK problems may be numerical, strings (e.g. letters),
and mathematical functions. For most problems when entering numerical answers,
the user can (if he or she wishes) enter elementary expressions such
as 2^3 instead of 8, (2+tan(3))*(4-sin(5))^6-7/8 instead of 27620.3413, etc.
For a complete list of functions and symbols WeBWorK understands,
see
http://webwork.math.rochester.edu/webwork_system_html/docs/docs/pglanguage/availablefunctions.html.
- On downloading paper copies of problem sets:
WeBWorK will download a complete homework set in Portable
Document Format (PDF format). Both Netscape and MS Internet Explorer use
Adobe Acrobat Reader to open/print such files. The Acrobat Reader is
free, and should be installed in all computer labs;
you may ask the lab assistant to show you how to use it.
You can download the Acrobat Reader at
Adobe Acrobat Reader 5.