Hey,
Did you like Taking Math in School. Math as in, Any type of Math?
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Hey,
Did you like Taking Math in School. Math as in, Any type of Math?
Hated that I was so bad at it because I wanted to love it.
Thank you for reminding me that have a maths oral exam tomorrow which I really need to revise for. :wall:
BTW, mine's a double GAH with ice.
Speaking of which I have a math test the very day tomorrow.
It's an awesome subject since unlike others, there is only one real answer to whatever task you're presented. Well apart from quadratic and cubic equations and so on..
I am taking R1 math, the most advanced course I can take at this level; not that "advanced" means too much.
I've hated Maths until I was 30 years old, when I discovered how trigonometry was useful in my job (to calculate the tree's height without chopping it down).
But that's really the only thing I like about Math.
I always liked statistics....always hated everything else.
I'm the same. I always did well in it, but I hated doing it.Quote:
Originally Posted by Ronin
I liked math just fine until halfway through my freshman year in high school. I came back from Christmas break, and suddenly I didn't understand it anymore. It was too frustrating after that. :wall:
Was the only thing I could really understand because it's not that hard, had a terrible time trying to figure out the restQuote:
Originally Posted by Evil_Maniac From Mars
Always liked Math from a young age.
Interesting, today I got a gold certificate for a maths challenge in the UK :laugh4: (UKMC, intermediate level), but failed to go to the next round :embarassed: (was off by like 5 marks...)
Yes I did although I never took it past GCSE. I was at intermiediate level so I was not great at it, If I did my GCVSE's again I would probably inprove a grade to B but that is probably true of all subjects even though I only took them 2 years ago.
I took it but I sucked at it and hated it.
Math= ~:pissed:
I'm starting to understand it, says the kid who failed 4 consecutive years maths.
meh, I hate it. Last 2 years in school hardly made it to remain in..
I got an A* at GCSE. Not too sure why I didn't take it forward, I always found it easy.
At school it was fine, but we had an awesome teacher, so that always makes a difference. However, at Uni the only Maths I do is mixed in my Accounting class, and it sucks... big time.
The question in the poll is very different from the question in the first post. I despised math classes at my high school because they were hideously backward and taught by ignorant, resentful teachers.
Studying math, especially theory, on my own was quite a different matter, and well worth doing.
:egypt:
math, we love you. Just dont care much for many of those who teach it...:brood:
I like math mainly because I'm pretty good at it by nature.
My teacher is okay though, but the Calc BC stuff she's teaching right now (partial derivatives of multivariable functions) kinda confuses the whole class. Literally more than a third of a class fails her tests regularly and the class average on tests is like a 58%
I used to hate the fact that, in the highest stream of our education system, I always had teachers who would only tell you when to do something, not why you did it. That always frustrated me, because to grasp the theory I feel that you should know why you do everything in math.
They need to make that calculus and linear *#%! optional after geometry. Seriously. Only a certain, small portion of society is ever going to need it and it is easily learnable in college. Instead, they should teach practical math in HS and make it mandatory, so when people go out on their own they'll actually have a :daisy:ing clue about how to survive financially.
But NOOOOOO, never mind that! These kids are smart! They'll be able to figure out stuff like the tax code and how to balance a checkbook and how high credit card interest rates actually are, so maybe if they DO all figure it out our rates won't be so freaking high because people will actually PAY OFF THEIR DEBTS by themselves! Besides, none of that's important anyway! After all, there are functions to be derived and integrated! Isn't that exciting?
...I'll take my pills now.
Sounds like Mr. Godtlands class, except for the fact that he sucks all the time.Quote:
Originally Posted by Xdeathfire
I took that instead of Pre-calQuote:
But NOOOOOO, never mind that! These kids are smart! They'll be able to figure out stuff like the tax code and how to balance a checkbook and how high credit card interest rates actually are, so maybe if they DO all figure it out our rates won't be so freaking high because people will actually PAY OFF THEIR DEBTS by themselves! Besides, none of that's important anyway! After all, there are functions to be derived and integrated! Isn't that exciting?
Ah, looks like it's just my system that's all daisied up then. Either that or you're a lucky one.Quote:
Originally Posted by Ichigo
Figures.
Sounds like Math A here, all practical, no normal strand stuff.
Math B (I hate this assignment) Trig, Calc, Alg etc. Bleh
I enjoyed math but really enjoyed statistics, proving useless stuff with numbers is fun. Sadly though it's been 7 years since I took statistics and 8 years since a normal math class and I am ashamed to say that I can not do basic algebra anymore much less anything more advanced, even my beloved statistics. :no:
I was okish at maths but I never liked it that much.
Argh Maths - I hated it and still do in a way despise it.
It was more the teaching methods which put me off. Rather than simply doing one or two questions for practice, the teachers always forced us, as in the Maths class, to involve ourselves in repetitive question answering on the same subject.
:wall:
After doing two calculations which were exact theoretical clones of each other, I usually got bored, and begun to talk to the people around me and mention miscellaneous off topic subjects with the teacher. The teacher didn't seem to mind actually - probably was equally tired of just sitting there reading the answer book (which I once stole to do my homework from - copying was a lot more enjoyable :embarassed:).
In the end I got an A at GCSE. I didn't really care and wouldn't have minded just a C - I had no plans to take it any further.
:laugh4:Quote:
(which I once stole to do my homework from - copying was a lot more enjoyable ).
Exactly! Me too.... similarly, I like science, but I do hate how they teach it in school. They never tell you why differentiation is like that, or why there is a tricuspid valve in the right ventricle but only a bicuspid vavle in the left.Quote:
Originally Posted by Evil_Maniac From Mars
I rather enjoyed statistics and probability though. Those two topics were the only ones I enjoyed in Maths.
Yeah, just as I began to master this stuff (Algebra).... they toss all new stuff and me, and I can't learn some of it worth a dang :wall:
Well, let's say you wanted to differentiate f (x) =(2X+1)^5 without using any of the easy and straight forward rules.Quote:
Originally Posted by Quirinus
It should go like this
ΔY = (2(ΔX+X)+1)^5 -(2X+1)^5
f ' (x) =
lim (ΔY/ΔX)
ΔX --> 0
have fun. :clown:
hint: it'll take some time. ~D
I think I've done that, or started on the basics of it...
f (x)
is that a function of x ?
ΔY = (2(ΔX+X)+1)^5 -(2X+1)^5
is that x's relation to y ?
and whats this lim all about.... i think i understand most of that... don't think we've got that far in my maths work yet...
and well were on the subject anyone now where i can get the basics of motion under air resistance...
I used to be really good in math up until the 6th grade, when I changed school and I suddenly came on a ***** (not the B word, it's nicer; and she actually was like that!) which would only do like super heavy duty exercises which only like 10 people out of 30 would do.
Yes, f (X) is function of X.Quote:
Originally Posted by LittleGrizzly
if f (X) = 2X^2 then f (2) = 2*2^2
i.e. f (X) is another way to write Y.
lim is what Y value we are approaching when X is approaching a certain value.
lim 2X = 6
X-->3
Δ means change, ΔY thus means the change in the Y value.
so when you calculate ΔY/ΔX you'll get how much Y goes up per X value (there is a much nicer term for this..).
If the function is meter on the on Y axis and seconds on the X axis, the derivative can tell you the speed at any give point in the graph:
m/s
Edit: If you should really try differentiation, then do not use the first function I mentioned since it is hopeless to differentiate. Differentiating X should be more fun. ~D
Bah!, Definition of a derivative is easy to do, definition of an integral is hardQuote:
Originally Posted by Viking
limit Σ[i=1->n] f(ci)Δx
(n->oo)
where xi-1≤ci≤xi
Calculus is awesome! :2thumbsup:
Most boring, painful subject in the world.
I was good at it up until the Scottish Higher level, that's basically English A-level, no idea for the US.
Higher maths took up a lot of my time.
Finished with it for life now though.:2thumbsup: