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I am thinking about taking some college math courses (calculus, algebra, vector geometry, etc. ) What are these courses like? Of course they will be difficult, but are they attainable for an average student?

2006-08-07 15:39:14 · 13 answers · asked by bdazz 2 in Science & Mathematics Mathematics

13 answers

They are not to bad as long as you go to all of your classes, and do all of the homework. If you want to take the harder stuff, like linear algebra, PDEs, series, etc, you should have taken atleast calculus in high school. If not, plan on taking lots of No-Doze.

2006-08-07 15:54:02 · answer #1 · answered by rmtzlr 2 · 0 0

They get steadily harder up to the second calculus class(integration). Then they suddenly get easier, with abstract algebra, linear algebra and logic being a nice introduction to higher level math. Most people never take go beyond calculus, so the professors jam everything they can into that final class.

The sad thing is that once people pass calculus, they are only a few classes away from a minor in math, and about ten classes away from a major in math. But they nearly always give up.

2006-08-07 17:49:39 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

My advice to you would be finding a person who has already taken the courses that you are interested in, and asking what they thought of the professor (or by using something like pickaprof.com). In my experiences I have found that the difficultly of a course really depends on the professor you get. If a teacher has a reputation of not explaining things well, going too fast over the material, not being available for office hours, or other things like that, stay away from them because they will make the course hard. But if you get a good teacher who really knows how to explain things, and doesn't mind helping students out with questions or problems they have, I don't think things will be too hard for you.

2006-08-07 15:59:33 · answer #3 · answered by Scottie0210 2 · 0 0

I think that the college will have math placement tests to determine what class(es) you will be permitted to take in your first semester. If you need a remedial or refresher class, take it. The first algebra class will probably be a review of your high school class, then you'll go on to Intermediate Algebra, Trig, PreCalc and then Calc, etc. If you are going to Community College (Jr College), my experience is that your professors will want you to succeed, because they're grooming you for upper level work at State College or University. Try to avoid the temptation to search out the easy teachers! Good luck

2006-08-08 12:57:48 · answer #4 · answered by ronw 4 · 0 0

I enjoy math and took the advanced math coarses in College. However I remember that there various levels of math courses from "Math for Poets" to remedial math to "Beginning Calculus" etc.

I am sure that you will find something you can handle..

I am very encouraged by the person who said that college explains math better than High School.

2006-08-07 15:51:03 · answer #5 · answered by rscanner 6 · 0 0

i don't think of it is the type of courses on condition that concerns - its the prevalent of those courses. If a great college promises a important in arithmetic, and that they furnish a minimum of 20 courses, then you definately could desire to be ok. you will possibly take in basic terms approximately 12 math courses, precise? once you're interested in 3 specific factor of math, you will have the desire to verify that that particular course is provided. i think of you would be extra useful off staring at how many professors are there, which graduate faculties did the mathematics majors bypass to, and what's the common SAT score of the scholars. playstation . In precis, the type of courses isn't the main serious variable, its in basic terms certainly one of many stuff to look for. In a small liberal arts college there could be in basic terms 30 math courses, on the same time as MIT or any super college could have 50 math courses, however the numerous extra 20 training overlap or reproduction the numerous 30 "consumer-friendly" courses. i think of between the main serious scores is the only achieved by ability of US information & worldwide checklist.

2016-11-04 02:36:42 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Professors are unforgiving, and they give less personal help, and they go fast, but if you take AP classes in high school, then you have 2 years to do what college people do in 1 year + helpful professors

2006-08-07 15:45:26 · answer #7 · answered by ConradD 2 · 0 0

i agree with scottie about the professor note. also i highly recommend to take advanced placement math courses in high school (i assume that is what you are talking about). i did this and breezed through my first two college calculus classes while my classmates struggled.

2006-08-07 16:05:51 · answer #8 · answered by anonymous 1 · 0 0

i sucked at math in high school i usually made D's. when i went to college they explained everything so clearly and took the time to make sure you got it. i made A's.

2006-08-07 15:43:47 · answer #9 · answered by Blank 3 · 1 0

Like high school-but less time to learn.

2006-08-07 15:43:12 · answer #10 · answered by sandy 2 · 1 0

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