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Marcus Ruter
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Based on 9 Users
You don't need coding experience. You don't need to go to lecture because they just go over theoretical stuff. Discussion can sometimes be a waste because they elaborate on theory and work on similar problems. GO TO LABS they help you a lot with the code and it is the best place to ask questions. Some projects can be really weird and time consuming but if you start like halfway from the due date it'll be more than fine. USE THE TAs when you run into issues. Reports get REALLY annoying, but the grading for both report and code is extremely lenient.
Honestly, Professor Ruter didn't help much in the class with the code, but he was super helpful on the discussion section on Bruinlearn and on email, and replied super fast, and was super nice about it. THe final was this scuffed dynamics problem that was totally out of the scope of the class. It wa important to go to lecture then because he would give some equations you needed. That project sucked but he gave us an extension which was cool. Overall good class.
There are two parts in this class. The theoretical math part and the practical coding part. The total grade is calculated on 7 HWs (10% each) and 1 Final Project (30%). And for homework, half of it is math problems and it includes a lot of manual calculations and few elementary math proofs; the other half is MATLAB coding. The Final Project grade is based on MATLAB coding (70%) and a report (30%). Then, for the theoretical part, the professor gave all resources you can expect as a student, pre-recorded lectures/notes (First half by professor Ertugrul Taciroglu; second half by professor Steve Margulis), recorded live-stream lectures/notes(by professor himself), practice problems with solutions, homework solutions, lot of Office Hours, a very good textbook (most of the time you don't have to read because of other resources); basically, you just learn the theoretical part as much as you want, and a good grade is guaranteed (because the professor does not have a TA and he graded extremely lenient himself, and the theoretical part looks like practice problems). The hard part is the MATLAB coding part. It depends, if you know how to code and use the internet wisely, it should not be a big deal since the professor would provide a template to you. The Final Project is all about coding (70% of Final Project Grade), try to understand "Least-square approximation, all methods of interpolation, all methods for Initial Value Problems (ODE only), the only introduced method of solving nonlinear system, i.e., Newton Iteration very well for Final Project. It's obvious, the person who grades your homework matters, and usually it's not your professor himself, be aware of that. There exist 2% extra credits and 97.5% is A+, 90% is A, 85% is A-; if you really want to explore the world of numerical analysis, I recommend taking it with Professor Rüter.
I learned a lot from Dr. Rüter. The class is heavy on Matlab for homeworks and is related to linear algebra. I was scared knowing that, but I learned Matlab a lot more effectively in this class comparing to the "intro to Matlab" class. The professor clearly presented what he expects from us in homeworks and exams, and he was very clear in explaining all the concepts. He also motivated us by applying the material on real world applications. He is always willing to help and explain the details during his office hours. I highly recommend that you take this class with Dr. Rüter!!
If you're not programming-inclined, like me, this class will be a bit harder than you expect. However, Prof Rüter is the best to take this with. He is very accommodating and very helpful when it comes to responding to emails about homework/projects and granting extensions. He grades pretty leniently, trying to give you points wherever he can. The grade in this class was mostly calculated off of HW, there were no exams but there was a big final project.
I was really worried before taking this class because I had absolutely no coding experience but honestly I was worried for nothing. The first 2 assignments were a rough learning curve simply because I had zero experience and didn't really know what to do at all, but they were simple enough that I did well on them. Following those first 2 homework assignments, I learned to really utilize the discussion forums and the lab recordings. The discussion forum is super helpful and the professor or one of the TA's usually answers really quickly and you can usually get your problem resolved with that. I would HIGHLY recommend watching the lab recordings. The TA's provide a lot of pseudocode and explanation that I would not have been able to solve the homework without. If your TA isn't super helpful, you can always watch another TA's videos because one of the benefits of having everything recorded and posted is that you can refer to other TA's.
The class itself is easy but the assignments do take some time. Lectures and discussions basically outline all of the code for you so if you have any prior experience, this class should be extremely easy. Lectures and discussions were both very useful in solving the assignments so take a look before you start. Grading on the lab reports are pretty lenient. There were 7 total lab reports and 1 final project which is ~2 labs worth of work.
You don't need coding experience. You don't need to go to lecture because they just go over theoretical stuff. Discussion can sometimes be a waste because they elaborate on theory and work on similar problems. GO TO LABS they help you a lot with the code and it is the best place to ask questions. Some projects can be really weird and time consuming but if you start like halfway from the due date it'll be more than fine. USE THE TAs when you run into issues. Reports get REALLY annoying, but the grading for both report and code is extremely lenient.
Honestly, Professor Ruter didn't help much in the class with the code, but he was super helpful on the discussion section on Bruinlearn and on email, and replied super fast, and was super nice about it. THe final was this scuffed dynamics problem that was totally out of the scope of the class. It wa important to go to lecture then because he would give some equations you needed. That project sucked but he gave us an extension which was cool. Overall good class.
There are two parts in this class. The theoretical math part and the practical coding part. The total grade is calculated on 7 HWs (10% each) and 1 Final Project (30%). And for homework, half of it is math problems and it includes a lot of manual calculations and few elementary math proofs; the other half is MATLAB coding. The Final Project grade is based on MATLAB coding (70%) and a report (30%). Then, for the theoretical part, the professor gave all resources you can expect as a student, pre-recorded lectures/notes (First half by professor Ertugrul Taciroglu; second half by professor Steve Margulis), recorded live-stream lectures/notes(by professor himself), practice problems with solutions, homework solutions, lot of Office Hours, a very good textbook (most of the time you don't have to read because of other resources); basically, you just learn the theoretical part as much as you want, and a good grade is guaranteed (because the professor does not have a TA and he graded extremely lenient himself, and the theoretical part looks like practice problems). The hard part is the MATLAB coding part. It depends, if you know how to code and use the internet wisely, it should not be a big deal since the professor would provide a template to you. The Final Project is all about coding (70% of Final Project Grade), try to understand "Least-square approximation, all methods of interpolation, all methods for Initial Value Problems (ODE only), the only introduced method of solving nonlinear system, i.e., Newton Iteration very well for Final Project. It's obvious, the person who grades your homework matters, and usually it's not your professor himself, be aware of that. There exist 2% extra credits and 97.5% is A+, 90% is A, 85% is A-; if you really want to explore the world of numerical analysis, I recommend taking it with Professor Rüter.
I learned a lot from Dr. Rüter. The class is heavy on Matlab for homeworks and is related to linear algebra. I was scared knowing that, but I learned Matlab a lot more effectively in this class comparing to the "intro to Matlab" class. The professor clearly presented what he expects from us in homeworks and exams, and he was very clear in explaining all the concepts. He also motivated us by applying the material on real world applications. He is always willing to help and explain the details during his office hours. I highly recommend that you take this class with Dr. Rüter!!
If you're not programming-inclined, like me, this class will be a bit harder than you expect. However, Prof Rüter is the best to take this with. He is very accommodating and very helpful when it comes to responding to emails about homework/projects and granting extensions. He grades pretty leniently, trying to give you points wherever he can. The grade in this class was mostly calculated off of HW, there were no exams but there was a big final project.
I was really worried before taking this class because I had absolutely no coding experience but honestly I was worried for nothing. The first 2 assignments were a rough learning curve simply because I had zero experience and didn't really know what to do at all, but they were simple enough that I did well on them. Following those first 2 homework assignments, I learned to really utilize the discussion forums and the lab recordings. The discussion forum is super helpful and the professor or one of the TA's usually answers really quickly and you can usually get your problem resolved with that. I would HIGHLY recommend watching the lab recordings. The TA's provide a lot of pseudocode and explanation that I would not have been able to solve the homework without. If your TA isn't super helpful, you can always watch another TA's videos because one of the benefits of having everything recorded and posted is that you can refer to other TA's.
The class itself is easy but the assignments do take some time. Lectures and discussions basically outline all of the code for you so if you have any prior experience, this class should be extremely easy. Lectures and discussions were both very useful in solving the assignments so take a look before you start. Grading on the lab reports are pretty lenient. There were 7 total lab reports and 1 final project which is ~2 labs worth of work.