Calculus - CA Content Standards
When taught in high school, calculus should be presented with the same level of depth and rigor as are entry-level college and university calculus courses. These standards outline a complete college curriculum in one variable calculus. Many high school programs may have insufficient time to cover all of the following content in a typical academic year. For example, some districts may treat differential equations lightly and spend substantial time on infinite sequences and series. Others may do the opposite. Consideration of the College Board syllabi for the Calculus AB and Calculus BC sections of the Advanced Placement Examination in Mathematics may be helpful in making curricular decisions. Calculus is a widely applied area of mathematics and involves a beautiful intrinsic theory. Students mastering this content will be exposed to both aspects of the subject.
1.0 Students
demonstrate knowledge of both the formal
definition and the graphical interpretation of limit of values of
functions.
This knowledge includes one-sided limits, infinite limits, and limits
at
infinity. Students know the definition of convergence and divergence of
a
function as the domain variable approaches either a number or infinity:
1.1
Students prove and use theorems
evaluating the limits of sums, products, quotients, and composition of
functions.
1.2
Students use graphical
calculators to verify and estimate limits.
1.3
Students prove and use special
limits, such as the limits of (sin(x))/x and
(1-cos(x))/x as x tends
to 0.
2.0 Students
demonstrate knowledge of both the formal
definition and the graphical interpretation of continuity of a
function.
3.0 Students
demonstrate an understanding and the application
of the intermediate value theorem and the extreme value theorem.
4.0 Students
demonstrate an understanding of the formal
definition of the derivative of a function at a point and the notion of
differentiability:
4.1
Students demonstrate an
understanding of the derivative of a function as the slope of the
tangent line
to the graph of the function.
4.2
Students demonstrate an understanding of
the interpretation of the derivative as an instantaneous rate of
change.
Students can use derivatives to solve a variety of problems from
physics, chemistry,
economics, and so forth that involve the rate of change of a function.
4.3
Students understand the relation between
differentiability and continuity.
4.4
Students derive derivative formulas and
use them to find the derivatives of algebraic, trigonometric, inverse
trigonometric, exponential, and logarithmic functions.
6.0
Students
find the derivatives of
parametrically defined functions and use implicit differentiation in a
wide
variety of problems in physics, chemistry, economics, and so forth.
7.0
Students
compute derivatives of higher orders.
8.0
Students
know and can apply Rolle’s theorem,
the mean value theorem, and L’Hôpital’s rule.
9.0
Students
use differentiation to sketch, by
hand, graphs of functions. They can identify maxima, minima, inflection
points,
and intervals in which the function is increasing and decreasing.
10.0
Students
know Newton’s method for
approximating the zeros of a function.
11.0
Students
use differentiation to solve
optimization (maximum-minimum problems) in a variety of pure and
applied
contexts.
12.0
Students
use differentiation to solve related
rate problems in a variety of pure and applied contexts.
13.0 Students
know the definition of the definite integral by
using Riemann sums. They use this definition to approximate integrals.
14.0 Students
apply the definition of the integral to model
problems in physics, economics, and so forth, obtaining results in
terms of
integrals.
15.0 Students
demonstrate knowledge and proof of the
fundamental theorem of calculus and use it to interpret integrals as
antiderivatives.
16.0 Students
use definite integrals in problems involving
area, velocity, acceleration, volume of a solid, area of a surface of
revolution, length of a curve, and work.
17.0 Students
compute, by hand, the integrals of a wide variety
of functions by using techniques of integration, such as substitution,
integration by parts, and trigonometric substitution. They can also
combine
these techniques when appropriate.
18.0 Students
know the definitions and properties of inverse
trigonometric functions and the expression of these functions as
indefinite
integrals.
19.0 Students
compute, by hand, the integrals of rational
functions by combining the techniques in standard 17.0 with the
algebraic
techniques of partial fractions and completing the square.
20.0 Students
compute the integrals of trigonometric functions
by using the techniques noted above.
21.0 Students
understand the algorithms involved in Simpson’s
rule and Newton’s method. They use calculators or computers or both to
approximate integrals numerically.
22.0 Students
understand improper integrals as limits of
definite integrals.
23.0 Students
demonstrate an understanding of the definitions
of convergence and divergence of sequences and series of real numbers.
By using
such tests as the comparison test, ratio test, and alternate series
test, they
can determine whether a series converges.
24.0 Students
understand and can compute the radius (interval)
of the convergence of power series.
25.0 Students
differentiate and integrate the terms of a power
series in order to form new series from known ones.
26.0 Students
calculate Taylor polynomials and Taylor series of
basic functions, including the remainder term.
27.0 Students
know the techniques of solution of selected
elementary differential equations and their applications to a wide
variety of
situations, including growth-and-decay problems.