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I'm planning on going to a state run four-year University, and I'm planning to major in Journalism. With that said, does anyone know what kind of math courses I would be required to take? I hate math and would never even think about dedicating the amount of time needed to learn Calculus or any other type of complex math syntax. If Calculus is required, please tell me so that I don't waste my time (and money!) applying to colleges.

Thanks.

2007-09-11 17:35:41 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

4 answers

It depends on the school. Most schools will have some math requirement, but calculus is usually only required for science majors. Often there is an easier and a harder calculus series, and only engineering, physics, and math majors will have to take the harder classes. There are usually lower level math classes like precalculus. But college isn't supposed to be super easy. If you challenge yourself with calculus, you will become smarter and better at problem solving, even if you never have to perform calculus as a journalist. By the way, calculus is a lot easier than geometry or trigonometry.

2007-09-11 17:52:08 · answer #1 · answered by jellybeanchick 7 · 0 0

Hi, thanks for asking.

There might be a test you can pass to opt out of math courses, or maybe your SAT scores, AP scores, or high school math courses will allow you to do this. I attend UC Berkeley, and I recently passed a math test to fulfill the math (quantitative reasoning) breadth requirement; therefore, I don't have to take any college-level math.

It all depends on what institutions you are considering going to. Check with their math departments and see what they can offer you in terms of alternatives to an actual class. Some may not require math at all.

At any rate, since your field is not related to math, there should be no reason that you would need to take more than one math class, at most. And you could probably take the class Pass/No Pass anyhow.

Don't let the inconvenience of the possibility of a single math class or test get in the way of pursuing your goal of studying and practicing Journalism. If you can get a quality education, the few classes that you don't really care for in college will be worth it in the long run.

May God bless you.

2007-09-11 22:50:46 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

As 'Arbitrary individual' has indicated, the only way you gets any college credit for Calculus is that in case you're taking AP calculus, and do properly on the examination. in case you're taking AB calculus (likely the conventional AP calculus type), that would desire to likely be the equivalent of Calc a million in college, which would be a one semester type (as might desire to Calc 2 and 3, that are in basic terms the subsequent better stages). BC calculus might desire to likely conceal a number of a Calc 2 type in college, yet i'm now no longer constructive it would desire to conceal all of it. at an identical time as you on the instantaneous are actually not likely perfect right into a math or technologies suitable field, passing the Calc AB AP examination might desire to be adequate to end math standards at many faculties, yet this might matter on your college and significant. some faculties and majors do now no longer even require calculus element training, and passing pre-calculus is adequate, so in case you particularly do in evaluation to math, it particularly is likely worth finding into.

2016-12-26 07:09:49 · answer #3 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

You really need to look at the colleges you would like to attend, and see what requirements they have. Its never a waste of time to attend college and get a degree, even if you have to take courses you may never use in real life. If anything, things like math teach you to think logically.

2007-09-11 17:45:18 · answer #4 · answered by BradNahler 2 · 0 0

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