Contribution of the course to learning outcomes in the Bachelor in Mathematics programme. By the end of this activity, students will have made progress in:
- Recognising and understanding a basic foundation of mathematics to be able to :
' Recognise the fundamental concepts of important current mathematical theories.
' Establish the main connections between these theories, analyse them and explain them through the use of examples.
- Identifying, by use of the abstract and experimental approach specific to the exact sciences, the unifying features of different situations and experiments in mathematics or in closely related fields (probability and statistics, physics, computing).
- Showing evidence of abstract thinking and of a critical spirit to be able to :
' Argue within the context of the axiomatic method Recognise the key arguments and the structure of a proof.
' Construct and draw up a proof independently.
' Evaluate the rigour of a mathematical or logical argument and identify any possible flaws in it.
' Distinguish between the intuition and the validity of a result and the different levels of rigorous understanding of this same result.
- Being clear, precise and rigorous in communicating to be able to :
' Write a mathematical text according to the conventions of the discipline.
' Structure an oral presentation, highlight key elements, identify techniques and concepts and adapt the presentation to the listeners' level of understanding.
- Learning in an independent manner to be able to :
' Find relevant sources in the mathematical literature.
' Read and understand an advanced mathematical text and locate it correctly in relation to knowledge acquired.
Learning outcomes specific to the course. By the end of this activity, students will be able to:
- Find, read and understand mathematical texts in an independent way:
- perform interdisciplinary bibliographical research
- create a summary of documents
- interact in an active way with their supervisor.
- Write a complete and coherent mathematical text:
- write clearly, accurately and pleasingly
- give definitions, highlight the main propositions and theorems
- illustrate definitions, propositions and theorems by examples and applications
- cite sources used and use LaTeX as word processing software.
- Make an oral presentation:
- choose the important elements and adapt to constraints (audience expectations, time available)
- structure an oral presentation, hold the audience's attention, adapt presentation aids to the content
- answer questions in a suitable manner
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