Undergraduate Mathematics Problem Seminar


Course Number: 01:640:491  (1 credit seminar, by special permission only)

For Fall 2006, the seminar will be taught by Professors Saks and Ferry. If you are interested in taking the seminar, please send email to Professor Saks (saks@math.rutgers.edu)

Details about the Fall 2006 seminar can be found here .

General Information

This is a seminar in mathematical problem solving.  It is aimed at undergraduate students who enjoy solving mathematical problems in a variety of areas, and want to strengthen their creative mathematical skills, and their skills at doing mathematical proofs.

One of the main goals of this seminar is to help interested students prepare for the William Lowell Putnam Undergraduate Mathematics Competition , which is an annual national mathematics competition held every December. Any full-time undergraduate who does not yet have a college degree is eligible to participate in the exam. (However, you are free to participate in the seminar without taking the exam, and vice versa.)

The seminar is being offered under course number 640:491 and is worth one unit of credit.   Students who have taken the seminar previously may not register for it, but are very welcome to attend.

The meetings of the seminar will be a mixture of presentations by the instructors, group discussions of problems, and student presentations.

The seminar qualifies as an honors seminar for the honors track .

All students taking the seminar are expected to:

  • Attend regularly.
  • Participate actively in group problem solving.
  • Take their turn presenting a problem solution to the class.
  • Read text book chapter to be covered in advance of the seminar meeting.
  • Work on some of the assigned problems and turn in a carefully written solution for at least one problem per week. Students taking the seminar for honors track credit will have additional requirements consisting either of doing additional problems or doing more extensive class presentations.