Coordinates
TBD
Instructor: Pete Manolios
Office hours: TBD, and by request 
Email: 
Books
Ebbinghaus, Flum, and Thomas. Mathematical Logic 2nd Edition (Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics). Springer.Other materials will be distributed to the class.
Academic Integrity
Read and intimately familiarize yourselves with the Northeastern Academic Integrity policy.Grading
- Homework and Class Participation (30% of your grade).
- Presentation (30% of your grade).
- Project (40% of your grade).
Notes
-  You are expected to do the homework assignments on your own
   without consulting other students or sources other than those
   used in class, unless I state otherwise. You can talk to one
   another about high-level ideas and you can consult sources
   such as the Web about high-level ideas, but any significant
   insights into assignments gained from any source should be
   cited.
  The reason I give you homework is to help you understand the material and yourself. Sometimes things that seemed obvious in class turn out to be more subtle than you expected. Homework gives you the opportunity to show, yourself primarily and me secondarily, that you understand the concepts and their implications. I will ask that you read and develop some of the concepts on your own. The material we covered in class should act as the foundation that makes this possible. 
-  For your projects, please form teams consisting of 1,
  2, or 3 people. Projects and team composition have have to be
  cleared by me.  You will have lots of flexibility in the
  selection of projects.  I would like for you to suggest project
  ideas based on your research interests, but we can meet
  individually to brainstorm and during class, I will routinely
  toss out project ideas. Projects will be presented during
  class. In addition, a single project report is
  required.
  
  
- You are expected to do the reading before class. In class you have an opportunity to test your understanding, so things work best if you come to class prepared. We can then focus on the interesting issues, rather than on covering material that you could just as easily find in the book.