| Volume 4 |
Summer 1996 |
Issue No. 2 |
|
1998 SYLLABUS
FURTHER DEFINED
Earl Mitchelle
At the grading of the advanced placement
calculus examinations in Clemson in June of this year, officials discussed information
which further defined the revised syllabus and the 1998 examination.
The 1998 examination will be 15 minutes
longer with the extra time being devoted entirely to multiple choice questions. The two
weeks of advanced placement testing will begin one week later in 1998 which will give
students additional time to prepare. Beginning with the 1998 examination, students who
take the BC examination will receive both an AB and a BC score. A teacher's guide for the
new 1998 syllabus will be available in the fall of this year. The guide will contain 10
sample syllabi which teachers can use to plan their courses for the 1997-98 academic year.
The new course description for the AB
examination does not include any of the current A topics, i.e., Functions and Graphs, and
students will not be tested directly on these topics. L'Hospital's Rule and integration by
parts have also been deleted from the AB course.
Any topic which is contained in both the AB
and BC syllabi will be tested at the same level of difficulty on both examinations. There
will be more emphasis on numerical and graphical data, separable differential equations,
broader applications of the definite integral, e.g., AB3/BC3, part (c) on the 1996
examination, and functions defined by integrals including composite functions.
The BC examination will cover only the indeterminant forms
for L'Hospital's Rule. New topics for the BC examination include the logistics equation,
Euler's Method, geometrical interpretah~n of solutions of differential equations, and
slope fields. Simpson's Rule and epsilon-delta proofs have been deleted from the BC
course.
A preliminary copy of the "Acorn
Book" for the 1998.examination has recently been released by The College Board. The
final edition will be released in the spring of 1997. A summary of the changes for the
1998 examination prepared by Steven W. Olson of Hingham High School and Northeastern
University in Massachusetts follows this article. Olson recently retired from the Test
Development Committee.
Changes in the Course Description
1997-1998
AB
No A topics
No L'Hopital's Rule
No Antidifferentiation by Parts
B Topics tested at the same level in AB and BC
More Emphasis on numerical and graphical data
Separable Differential Equations really are in the course
Broader range of applications of the Definite Integral
Functions defined by an integral indude composite functions
BC
L'Hopital's Rule only for 
Logistic Equation
Euler's method
Geometric interpretation of solutions to Differential Equations
Slopefields
No Epsilon Deltas
No Simpson's Rule
SUMMARY OF CHANGES
Prepared By Steven W. Olson
The following table is an attempt to distill
the changes in emphasis dawn to a few recurring themes. 
Five graphing calculator active
multiple choice questions
WHAT DO GRAPHING CALCULATORS (GCs) MEAN FOR AP EXAM QUESTIONS?
1. Same old problems, exotic or approximate
inputs/answers. e.g.,
i. If f(x) = x^(3/5), then f'(32.0001) = ?
ii. Find the area of the region bounded by
the axes, y =
x, and y= cos x.
2. Same old problems, exotic functions (for
which traditional analytic methods fail).
Find the x-coordinate of a local maximum on
the graph of y = 10x - x10
3. New problems that students couldn't (or
wouldn't) be asked before (because students couldn't or wouldn't solve them!)
a. Given a table of values ...
predict from function values (and
knowledge that the function is a cubic polynomial, for instance) the location of a point
of inflection.
distinguish among function, 1st
derivative, 2nd derivative
distinguish among function, derivative,
antiderivative (note that this is really the same question as above)
b. Given a graph or graphs ...
distinguish among function, 1st
derivative, 2nd derivative
-
distinguish among
function, derivative, anti-derivative
of the 2nd derivative, predict location
of:
extrema on 1st derivative graph; point of
inflection on 1st derivative; point of inflection on function
extrema on graph of function; points of
inflection of function;
(these questions have already appeared, of
course, but will likely remain important as calculator neutral questions.)
c. determine the error in a definite
integral approximation or difference quotient approximation
4. Calculator inactive questions, for which the student who reflexively picks up a calculator is at a
disadvantage.e.g.,
i. Evaluate the integral from 1.0001 to
1.0002
of
1/(sin(arcsin(1/2x)))
Note: Questions can be contrived to foil
numeric integrators, and students may need to know when to make their calculator
surrender, and then try to use their brain!
ii. limit of (1 - cos
x5)/x10 as x goes to 0
5. Calculator "neutral" questions,
eg generic function descriptions:
i. d/dx (e^(g(x)) =
ii. Given f(-x) = f(x) and the integral from
0 to 2 of f(x) is 4, find the integral from -2 to 2 of f(x).
6. Questions that require students to apply
new skills they'd acquire because they use GCs regularly. For example, a function whose
first derivative is extremely ugly and unyielding to traditional analytic methods could
appear. Students must learn to graph the derivative on their calculator and use
information from the graph of the derivative to analyze the behavior of the original
function. They might also be required to use a root finder on some monstrous derivative to
determine critical points. These are similar to questions in category 3 above.
7. More emphasis on setting up definite
integrals to solve application problems, instead of evaluating them. Or questions will
specifically state that an analytic solution is required and that the calculator can only
be used to confirm the answer.
8. ... What do you think?
The All-Purpose Calculus Problem
Dan Kennedy
Chair of the Mathematics Department
Baylor School, Chattanooga, TN
and chair of the AP Calculus Committee.
Here's a caculus problem to end all calculus
problems. (And you thought your professor assigned you hard ones!) See how many familiar
themes you can find embedded in this problem.
A particle starts at rest and moves with
velocity along a 10-foot ladder, which leans against a trough with a triangular
cross-section two feet wide and one foot high. Sand is flowing out of the trough at a
constant rate of two cubic feet per hour, forming a conical pile in the middle of a
sandbox which has been formed by cutting a square of side x from each conier of an 8"
by 15" piece of cardboard and folding up the sides. An observer watches the particle
from a lighthoouse one mile offshore, peering through a window shaped like a rectangle;
surmounted by a semicircle.

This problem originally appeared in the
spring of 1994 in Math Horizons.
(a) How fast is the tip of the shadow
moving?
(b) Find the volume of the solid generated when the trough is rotated about the y-axis.
(c) Justify your answer.
(d) Using the information found in parts (a). (b) ,and (c) sketch the curve on a pair of
coordinate axes.
BLOCK SCHEDULING: THE BEAT GOES ON
Earl Mitchelle
College Board hosted a question and answer
session on block scheduling in conjunction with the grading of the advanced placement
calculus examinations at Clemson University in June.
Some of the points made during the session
are as follow:
One teacher reported that contact time in
a block schedule was reduced by 45 hours or 25% of the academic year.
A 90 minute class provides plenty of time
to cover a topic and to give tests.
The amount of material covered each year
is reduced, and the cumulative effect over the years is that students know less and are
less prepared for the next level.
Teachers need to be more creative and use
more teaching techniques when they have students for 90 minutes.
A number of schools schedule class time
for advanced placement courses over the entire year. In order to do this some schools
schedule AP classes for 80-90 minute periods every other day for the entire year rather
than 80-90 minutes every day for a semester.
AP scores in some schools dropped the
first year the block schedule was used.
When a student misses several days of
class in a semester block schedule because of illness, field trips, athletic events, etc.
the impact can be quite negative.
When teaching in a block schedule system,
teachers need to schedule out the entire year to be sure that all course goals are
achieved. One teacher observed that the work done in two periods in a traditional schedule
can not just be compressed into one period in a block schedule.
Some teachers feel that an average student
should not be subjected to more than one hour of anything each day.
Teachers of remedial students felt that an
80-90 minute period was very helpful.
There are still a lot of unanswered
questions about block scheduling and its impact on advanced placement courses. Experiences
over the next couple of years should help to answer some of these questions.
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