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No clear-cut best option for Introductory Real Analysis course #7
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Here's a very good introduction to Real Analysis textbook that can potentially be used: https://digitalcommons.trinity.edu/mono/7/. There are no video lectures directly associated with the text, but looking at the Table of Contents, we should be able to easily find a Youtube playlist to accompany the text. |
Here's another Intro Analysis course for consideration: UCCS Math 3410 Intro To Analysis (has 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7), with video lectures here
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@bradleygrant MIT 18.100A now has a 2020 version with videos here. |
As 18.100A is currently the recommended course, and including lectures is a significant improvement over the same course from the same institution without lectures, I'm going to open a PR to bump the current recommended course to the 2020 version. This is not meant to close this issue, as feedback is important and assignments with solutions are a proxy that we should hope to attain. |
BLUF: I've been racking my brain trying to find a 1) good 2) free 3) introductory course in Real Analysis 4) with video lectures, 5) assignments and 6) an easily accessible book 7) that isn't Rudin. I want this to go in the OSSU Core Mathematics slot for Intro To Analysis.
I need some help.
Details: To clarify:
Here's what I've found so far, loosely ordered from Most to Least Complete:
Introduction to Real Analysis at Bethel University -- has 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7.
MIT 18.100A -- has 1, 2, 3, kinda 5, 6, 7.
Real Analysis 1 at Harvey Mudd -- has 1, 2, 4, 5, 6.
Several courses assigning homework out of Abbott's text, often regarded as a good first choice text, but without videos or solutions
Adapt Abbott to the Bill Kinney Bethel lectures and cobble a complete course together
Just teach yourself out of Book Of Proof and Mattuck/Abbott
I checked EdX and Coursera, and they seem to be fresh out of real analysis.
So, a few things I'd like us to consider:
And finally, the big takeaway:
I think from what I've seen so far, the Intro to Real Analysis at Bethel is the closest thing we have to the right first analysis course. In order for me to feel good about recommending it, we need to host the documents somewhere that isn't a Google Drive. I don't really know the best way to go about doing that (except perhaps by making a Github Pages site for the course).
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