This intensive course provides a rigorous foundation in the essential mathematical toolkit required for calculus success. Focused primarily on AP Precalculus Units 1-3, students will master advanced function analysis, modeling, and transformation. The curriculum is designed to build deep conceptual understanding and procedural fluency, ensuring students are exceptionally well-prepared for their next steps in mathematics.
Course Description
Essential Questions
- How do the algebraic and graphical representations of a function reveal its core behavior and properties?
- How can we model real-world change by strategically choosing and transforming function families?
- How does function composition create new relationships, and what does an inverse function reveal about the original?
- In what ways do trigonometric functions model periodic phenomena, and how do their unique properties (identities, periodicity) provide tools for analysis?
- How does shifting between different mathematical perspectives enhance our understanding of relationships and graphs?
Other Information
- Students will be required to bring a laptop or similar device. The Robinson Center can provide a device if your student does not have access.
- This course required quite a bit (approximately 5 hrs a week) of homework to be completed outside of the program day.
Who Should Apply
- Students currently in 7th, 8th, 9th, or 10th grade
- This course requires documentation of completion of Algebra II.
Week Overview
| Date | Theme/Topic |
| Week 1 | Building the Core Toolkit: This foundational week establishes fluency in the language of functions, covering linear and quadratic modeling, complex numbers, and function composition to build the essential algebraic skills for the course. |
| Week 2 | Mastering Function Families & Transformations: Students dive deep into analyzing and transforming core function families, including polynomials, exponentials, logarithms, and their inverses, to understand advanced graphical behavior and growth models |
| Week 3 | Introducing Trigonometric Concepts: The focus shifts to trigonometry, exploring radian measure, the unit circle, identities, and the graphs of sinusoidal functions to establish a foundation for modeling periodic phenomena. |
| Week 4 | Applying Trigonometry & Course Synthesis
The final week applies trigonometry to solve equations and real-world problems using the Laws of Sines/Cosines; culminating in a comprehensive review and final exam. |
Instructors
- TBD
Details
Cost
- $1450
- $1400 (tuition)
- $50 (registration fee)
Time
9am - 2:30pm
Location
- University of Washington Seattle Campus
- Building and Room TBD
Date
- June 30th- July 23rd, 2026
- Monday - Thursday
- First Class is on a Tuesday
Refund and Transfer Deadlines
- Full tuition refund: April 10th
- 50% tuition refund: April 11th-May 8th
- No refund: after May 8th