NumbersGuy0520
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This is wild my brother is 6 years older and his instructor was Chinese...Did only people from Asia teach Calculus?My calculus instructor was from China and his accent was brutal. I can still hear him speak and wonder to myself how the hell I was ever going to pass the class. Thank god for tutors.
Stereotypes are stereotypes for a reason.This is wild my brother is 6 years older and his instructor was Chinese...Did only people from Asia teach Calculus?
Truth. Almost every programmer in our company is of Asian decent, but they all migrated or were relocated to the Canadian main office..Stereotypes are stereotypes for a reason.
Ok, I may as well be reading Mandarin (not a language I know, for clarity).
I took AP Pre-Calc in HS, I don't think they offered pure "calculus" when I was there as a part of our curriculum. And that was back in 2010But seriously... what is AP "pre"-calculus? Is this new? Is the point to give you an extra year of AP math? (Obviously, there are hard math problems that are not Calculus.)
You can eat your food when you solve the equation!What the hell does this even mean?? Can we please get this thread back to something I can understand.......like food?
I thought I'd be clever and pull up a 'quick' video that quickly breaks this down....
Me reading this with the Same energy:
The ELI5 is that there’s this whole concept of homology, which is basically like how many holes a shape has. It helps us count things and distinguish objects - even shapes that are made out of other shapes.Ok, I may as well be reading Mandarin (not a language I know, for clarity).
Can you explain that to me like I'm 5? I don't understand any of it other than it's showing the relationships between something? Lol, in the 3+ mins that I read and reread that and try to reduce it to something I could understand, that's how far I made it. But you have me intrigued.
What I imagine their main forum chatter is like...I'm sure the discourse over on the Auburn forums looks just like this.
What?? Not in College either? That's wild and I needed up to Calculus III for my major😔Never took calculus in HS or college.
The 1990s were truly a wonderful time.
Back to invariant theories 🧠
He must have gotten pushed into a sports major. You know, the kind of stuff Harbaugh complained about at Michigan before he left Stanford and the NFL to rejoin the skunkbears and do the same thing?What?? Not in College either? That's wild and I needed up to Calculus III for my major😔
What I imagine their main forum chatter is like...
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Nuke... I may be mis-recalling but I thought you went the Naval School in Charleston so you probably (definitely) took some high level mind bending courses.
Must've been something like History, English, Sociology or even Anthropology because my siblings from that era in College early to mid 90s in OSHA and Architecture certainly needed Cal.He must have gotten pushed into a sports major. You know, the kind of stuff Harbaugh complained about at Michigan before he left Stanford and the NFL to rejoin the skunkbears and do the same thing?
I never took Calc III, but I have heard it was way more intellectually and conceptually engaging than Calc II. Based on my experience in Calc II, I believe that. This probably contributes to the perceived ease.I'm a high school AP Calculus teacher. This was the second year that AP Precalculus has existed. The concepts don't tie into AP Calculus as much as you'd expect, I'm told it was designed to give students college-level Algebra credit. It has gaps compared to our regular Honors Precalculus, but the rigor and formal math language skills it builds make up for that.
Most college students I've talked to find Calculus II to be tougher than Calculus III, though I'm sure it depends on the program you're in.
That's exactly what one of my kids told me it's just a way to get a Math college level credit so I guess that makes sense.I'm a high school AP Calculus teacher. This was the second year that AP Precalculus has existed. The concepts don't tie into AP Calculus as much as you'd expect, I'm told it was designed to give students college-level Algebra credit. It has gaps compared to our regular Honors Precalculus, but the rigor and formal math language skills it builds make up for that.
Most college students I've talked to find Calculus II to be tougher than Calculus III, though I'm sure it depends on the program you're in.
If this thread were a grown man, it still has yet to ever kiss a girl.We have a Food thread...never in a million years would I have expected there to be a Calculus thread on this site.
Calc III wasn’t too bad conceptually if you understood Calc II well.I never took Calc III, but I have heard it was way more intellectually and conceptually engaging than Calc II. Based on my experience in Calc II, I believe that. This probably contributes to the perceived ease.