MATH 141 Course Outline
MATH 141 Course Outline
Dr. Ishrat Zahan Room No. 116 [email protected] Sunday (09:00-12:00 pm)
Dr. Md. Abdul Room No. 263 [email protected] Zday (00:00-00:00 am)
Hakim Khan
Integral Calculus: Definite integrals and its properties; Walli’s formula; Improper integrals; Beta function
and Gamma function; Parametric equations and polar coordinates; Applications of integration: area under a
plane curve, area of a region enclosed by two curves and arc lengths in Cartesian and polar coordinates,
volume and surface area of solids of revolution; Multiple integrals.
Ordinary Differential Equations (ODE): Definition. Formation of differential equations. Solution of first
order differential equations by various methods with applications. Solution of general linear equations of
second and higher order with constant coefficients. Solution of Euler's homogeneous linear equations.
**Domains
C-Cognitive: C1: Knowledge; C2: Comprehension; C3: Application; C4: Analysis; C5: Synthesis; C6:
Evaluation
A-Affective: A1: Receiving; A2: Responding; A3: Valuing; A4: Organizing; A5: Characterizing
P-Psychomotor: P1: Perception; P2: Set; P3: Guided Response; P4: Mechanism; P5: Complex Overt Response;
P6: Adaptation; P7: Organization
13. Mapping of Knowledge Profile, Complex Engineering Problem Solving and Complex Engineering
Activities
K K K K K K K K P P P P P P P A A A A A
COs
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 5
CO
√ √ √ √ √
1
CO
√ √ √ √ √ √ √
2
CO
√ √ √ √ √ √
3
CO
√ √ √ √ √ √
4
K-Knowledge Profile:
K1: A systematic, theory-based understanding of the natural sciences applicable to the discipline; K2:
Conceptually based mathematics, numerical analysis, statistics and the formal aspects of computer and
information science to support analysis and modeling applicable to the discipline; K3: A systematic, theory-based
formulation of engineering fundamentals required in the engineering discipline; K4: Engineering specialist
knowledge that provides theoretical frameworks and bodies of knowledge for the accepted practice areas in the
engineering discipline; much is at the forefront of the discipline; K5: Knowledge that supports engineering design
in a practice area; K6: Knowledge of engineering practice (technology) in the practice areas in the engineering
discipline; K7:Comprehension of the role of engineering in society and identified issues in engineering practice
in the discipline: ethics and the engineer’s professional responsibility to public safety; the impacts of engineering
activity; economic, social, cultural, environmental and sustainability; K8: Engagement with selected knowledge
in the research literature of the discipline.
P-Range of Complex Engineering Problem Solving:
P1: Cannot be resolved without in-depth engineering knowledge at the level of one or more of K3, K4, K5, K6,
or K8, which allows a fundamentals-based, first principles analytical approach; P2: Involve wide-ranging or
conflicting technical, engineering, and other issues; P3: Have no obvious solution and require abstract thinking,
originality in analysis to formulate suitable models; P4: Involve infrequently encountered issues; P5: Are outside
problems encompassed by standards and codes of practice for professional engineering; P6: Involve diverse
groups of stakeholders with widely varying needs; P7: Are high-level problems including many component parts
or sub-problems.
16. Textbooks
• Calculus: Early Transcendentals by Howard Anton, Irl Bivens and Stephen Davis.
• Calculus by James Stewart
• Differential and Integral Calculus by B. C. Das and B. N. Mukherjee.
• Integral Calculus with applications by A. K. Hazra.
• Elementary Differential Equations by Earl D. Rainville and Phillip E. Bedient.
• A First Course in Differential Equations with Modelling Applications by Dennis G. Zill.