There will be 8 recitations each corresponding to a HW covering the same material. Recitation will give you time to practice the material with your classmates and receive immediate feedback. By simply attending and participating in person, you will receive credit for the recitation. Alternatively, if you are unable to attend a recitation for any reason, you may print out and complete the handout and submit the work at the next recitation. Your work will then be graded for correctness.
Course discussions and announcements will happen on Ed.
All resources will be accessible via Canvas -> Files
A pre-version of lecture slides will be uploaded by the start of each class, and a complete/annotated version of the slides will be uploaded right after each class.
Please ensure you have access to all platforms (Ed, Canvas, Gradescope), and send the instructor an email otherwise.
All assignments will be posted on Canvas immediately following their corresponding recitation.
Gradescope will prompt you to label your pages when you submit. Please do so carefully; this is considered a required part of the upload process. Any problem that is not labelled will not be graded.
For writing up your solutions, we recommend using LaTeX. Overleaf is an online LaTeX collaborating platform that requires no installation. It has also a good introduction to LaTeX user guide. Handwritten answers or PDF files that cannot be opened will not be graded and will not receive any credit.
Assignments are due at 11:59pm on their due date with a no penalty grace period until 8am the next day. I will grade and return assignments to you by 5pm the day following the due date so you have sufficient time to make any corrections as needed.
You can discuss the homework with others, but you should write your solution on your own, and you have to mention who you discussed the problems with. If a solution or partial solution is reached during a discussion, everyone is responsible for writing down their solution based on their own understanding (so for example, transcribing a communally solved proof from a whiteboard or Google Doc and then later using these notes to write your own solution is NOT okay.) All collaborators on a given assignment should be noted at the beginning of the write-up. Submitting someone else's solution (even from previous years) with minor changes or asking for solutions on online forums will be considered academic dishonesty.
Looking at previous semesters’ materials/solutions is considered cheating.