On Waterloo LEARN (requires login). Students often save it as AMATH250_Syllabus_W22.pdf. Search that inside your university portal.
A growing trend is students uploading their own LaTeX-compiled notes to GitHub. Search amath250-notes.pdf on GitHub. Many computer engineering students share beautifully formatted notes with code examples for plotting slope fields.
While instructors vary (e.g., at University of Waterloo, where AMATH 250 is a standard offering), a high-quality set of notes includes:
Before you download any PDF, you need to know if the notes cover the current syllabus. AMATH 250 typically covers:
A good amath 250 course notes pdf should contain all six modules, plus worked examples from past Waterloo midterms.
| Source | What You’ll Find |
|--------|------------------|
| University of Waterloo’s Math Faculty | Archived course notes (if instructor shares publicly) |
| GitHub / student repositories | Annotated notes from past terms (search: amath250 notes pdf) |
| CourseHero / StuDocu | Uploaded student notes (requires free account) |
| Library Genesis (LibGen) | Textbook equivalents (e.g., Boyce & DiPrima) – use cautiously |
⚠️ Avoid paying for “official AMATH 250 notes” on random sites. Most are just compiled free resources.
The general form is $ay'' + by' + cy = g(t)$.
Does exactly what course notes should — efficient, correct, example-heavy. But bring your own intuition and a second resource for big-picture understanding.
If you have access to the actual PDF and want me to comment on a specific chapter, figure, or problem from it, just paste the relevant text or describe the section. I can give a much more tailored take.