INTERNET go to google and type in cow. the third result will be a free site called calculus on the web. It gives you problems elctronicly, and it checks your answers. if you need help with the problem, there is an informational page. for each topic
2007-04-29 12:57:47
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answer #1
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answered by lcjjr87 2
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As mentioned by others, there are a number of resources available for free on the Internet (calculus on the web, wolfram research, etc.). Here is one more resource that I find useful. The OpenCourseWare site at MIT offers a number of free calculus courses for self-study.
Each course is broken into around 39 lectures, so it would normally take about 3 months of 3 lectures per week to go through the course. Usually homework assignments, solutions, and exams are also available and some courses also have a discussion group.
Doing the exercises in the homework assignments and recitations is probably the best way for the material to stick in your memory. If someone else is available to help you, discussing the problems with others is also helpful.
The textbooks for most of these courses are expensive but there is a good textbook by Gilbert Strang which is available online at the MIT opencourseware site.
2007-05-02 09:02:23
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answer #2
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answered by Priyadarshan K 1
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Make sure your geometry, trigonometry, algebra and problem solving foundations are solid. Buy a good introductory book to differential calculus first. Depending on your mathematical maturity your choices could range from Schaum's Calculus (a kind of self-instruction book) to Tom Apostol's Calculus or similar. Once you master differential calculus basics you can dabble in integral calculus. In my opinion, remembering is a factor of attention during studying, doing exercises of all kinds (keep a lab notebook around, and use it to solve exercises, this is a good thing for monitoring your progress also), and reviewing constantly as you move forward so your foundations are always solid.
Good luck!
2007-04-29 12:56:13
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answer #3
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answered by Bazz 4
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What level were you thinking? If I were you i'd purchase a college level textbook, perhaps Thomas's Calculus 11th Edition. An excellent book for Calculus 1-3. Best of luck, you'll need to be motivated!
PS: textbooks can be expensive, if you live near a college see if you can get your hands on one from a student used.
2007-04-29 12:54:03
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answer #4
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answered by Chris 2
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2016-12-29 17:38:41
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Unless you are a math genuis, it would be very hard to just learn from the book. You need to find a tutor or someone who knows it. Maybe pay a college kid to teach you.
2007-04-29 12:52:56
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answer #6
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answered by Johnny 3
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use the review book duh...
and try to visualize the derivative part, but not the integral part
2007-04-29 12:53:36
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answer #7
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answered by jinfeng l 2
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