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R For College Mathematics and Statistics

Thomas Pfaff

$183

Hardback

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English
CRC Press
22 April 2019
R for College Mathematics and Statistics encourages the use of R in mathematics and statistics courses. Instructors are no longer limited to ``nice'' functions in calculus classes. They can require reports and homework with graphs. They can do simulations and experiments. R can be useful for student projects, for creating graphics for teaching, as well as for scholarly work. This book presents ways R, which is freely available, can enhance the teaching of mathematics and statistics.

R has the potential to help students learn mathematics due to the need for precision, understanding of symbols and functions, and the logical nature of code. Moreover, the text provides students the opportunity for experimenting with concepts in any mathematics course.

Features:

Does not require previous experience with R

Promotes the use of R in typical mathematics and statistics course work

Organized by mathematics topics

Utilizes an example-based approach

Chapters are largely independent of each other
By:  
Imprint:   CRC Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
Weight:   644g
ISBN:   9780367196851
ISBN 10:   0367196859
Pages:   326
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  General/trade ,  Primary ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Getting Started Importing Data into R Functions and Their Graphs A Piecewise-Defined Function. A Step Function. Polar Coordinates. Parametric Equations. Geometric Definition of a Parabola. Functions that Return a Function. Phythagorean Triples and a Checkerboard Plot. Graphing Graphing Functions. Scatter Plots. Dot, Pie, and Bar Charts. A look for loops. Boxplot with a Stripchart. Histogram. Polynomials Basic Polynomial Operations. The LCM and GCD of Polynomials. Illustrating Roots of a Degree–Three Polynomial. Creating Pascal’s Triangle with Polynomial Coefficients. Calculus with Polynomials. Taylor Polynomial of Sin(x). Legendre Polynomials. Sequences, Series, and Limits Sequences and Series. The Derivative as a Limit. Recursive Sequences. Calculating Derivatives Symbolic Differentiation. Finding Maximum, Minimum, and Inflection Points. Graphing a Function and Its Derivative. Graphing a Function with Tangent Lines. Shading the Normal Density Curve Outside the Inflection Points. Riemann Sums and Integration Riemann Boxes. Numerical Integration. Numerical Integration of Iterated Integrals. Area Between two Curves. Graphing an Antiderivative. Planes, Surfaces, Rotations, and Solids Interactive: Surface Plots. Interactive: Rotations around the x-axis. Interactive: Geometric Solids. Curve Fitting Exponential Fit. Polynomial Fit. Log Fit. Logistic Fit. Power Fit. Simulation A Coin Flip Simulation. An Elevator Problem. A Monty Hall Problem. Chuck-A-Luck. The Buffon Needle Problem. The Deadly Board Game. The Central Limit Theorem and Z-test A Central Limit Theorem Simulation. Z Test and Interval for One Mean. Z Test and Interval for Two Means. The T-Test T Test and Intervals for One and Two Means. Paired T-Test. Illustrating the Meaning of a Confidence Interval Simulation. Testing Proportions Tests and intervals for One and Two Proportions. Illustrating the Meaning of α Simulation. Linear Regression Multiple Linear Regression. Nonparametric Statistical Tests Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test for a Single Population. Wilcoxon Rank Sum Test for Independent Groups. Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test for Dependent Data. Spearman’s Rank Correlation Coefficient. Kruskal-Wallis one-way analysis of variance. Miscellaneous Statistical Tests One-way ANOVA. Stacking Data. Chi-Square Tests. Testing Standard Deviations. Matrices Eigenvalues, Eigenvectors and other Operations. Row Operations. Differential Equations Newton’s Law of Cooling. The Logistic Equation. Predator-Prey Mode. Some Discrete Mathematics Binomial Coefficients, Pascal’s Triangle, and a Little Number Theory. Set Theory. Venn Diagrams. Power Set, Cartesian Product, and Intervals. A Cantor Set Example. Graph Theory. Creating and Displaying Graphs. Random Graphs. Some Graph Invariants.

Thomas J. Pfaff is a professor of Mathematics at Ithaca College and served as the all college Honors Program director for three years. He was the PI on three-year NSF grant Multidisciplinary Sustainability Modules: Integrating STEM Courses. The scope of his publications range from traditional mathematics to applied mathematics, including the SABR newsletter, and sustainability to essays about higher education. His blog sustainbilitymath.org provides resources to incorporate sustainability ideas into mathematics courses and he is currently interested in using R for student projects in all courses.

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