Math 221 - Introduction to Linear Algebra

Summer 2007 - Matthias K. Gobbert

Learning Goals and Detailed Learning Plan


This page can be reached via my homepage at http://www.math.umbc.edu/~gobbert.

Learning Goals

By the end of this course, you should:

Role of the Instructor

With the learning goals of the students as focal point of the course, it becomes clear that you as student are responsible for active participation in your learning. I urge you to follow the learning plan outlined below.

So, what is the role of the instructor in this learner-centered environment? The role of the instructor is to help you achieve these learning goals. Concretely, the instructor will:

In summary, the instructor will provide all help possible towards your learning, but, as student, you must take responsibility and initiative for your own learning in the end, because no instructor can learn for you.


Detailed Learning Plan

This learning plan is a detailed implementation of a strategy to reach the learning goals above, using the concrete teaching and learning aids available for this course. Remember that the goal is for you to actually learn the material and retain it in the long run.

We use the textbook as learning tool as well as to organize the activities throughout the semester. Moreover, we will use the course management software Blackboard to post additional information in the Course Documents area, organized by the numerical order of the textbook sections (not necessarily chronologically as covered in the course). Most information for the section will be contained there, including worked examples with voice-over and the on-line quizzes. The only other area of Blackboard that we will use is the Discussion Board that is available to ask questions on the material at any time.

The learning plan divides activities in three parts -- before, during, and after class --, which apply to every covered section of the textbook:

In addition to the instructor, the members of your learning group, other students, as well as the entire class (via the Discussion Board in Blackboard) are available for communications at all times.

A note on the worked examples with voice-over: They are flash files and no student has so far reported problems viewing them. They were prepared during Summer 2006, some taped in dedicated sessions and others taped during actual class. The underlying idea was that it would be good for you to be able to view repeatedly, to rewind, to pause, or to fast-forward examples of many crucial algorithms in this course. Additionally, despite the term "worked example", they are more than examples. Some are in fact actual lectures, but even the examples contain usually a thorough review of the theory behind the example, similar to what I would say in a lecture when working an example. Moreover, though many examples are taken from the textbook, which is done for clarity of the organization and to keep the workload of watching the examples manageable, many contain significant extensions. Many examples are also worked out in slightly different ways so as to demonstrate that there is more than one way to execute many algorithms. One student in Summer 2006 wrote to me saying that "Worked examples were different enough (insights, tricks, examples, history/background) that reviewing them was very worth while." Therefore, I urge you to take full advantage of the worked examples both in preparation for the class meetings as well as for review later on during the work on homework or during preparation for the tests. And do help everybody by letting me know if you find anything wrong or not working with the worked examples.

This learning plan relies on your active participation in all learning activities; precisely for this reason, you will learn the material better, retain more in the long run, and increase your self-confidence as a learner!


Copyright © 1999-2007 by Matthias K. Gobbert. All Rights Reserved.
This page version 1.0, February 2007.