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Quick! Can someone teach me Calculus!?!

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Seriously, though, I've been doing a lot of self-analysis and have come to the conclusion through some personality tests and some career counselors that becoming an civil engineer would be tons of fun. The problem is, I don't know anything about calculus other than limits. I took my last Algebra class about 4 years ago, and I don't know if I remember any of it either.

Can someone recommend a book or website that could help me out to determine whether I should take a pre-calc class or just jump right in? I know I can do this (I'm a pretty smart cat when it comes to math), but I just am worried, and don't know how much refreshment I'll need.

I'm also taking this at a community college, so I'm thinking my class size will be smaller than that at a large university. But I don't know if there are any tutors at my school.
 
I wouldn't count on class sizes being much smaller for a calc class-- I've taken them at both the university and community college and they've always been about 20-30 people in class.

I would recommend a pre-calc class. No matter how smart you are, it is no fun to play catch-up the entire semester. Getting yourself up to speed will let you concentrate on what is being taught, not the basics.
 
I.
Hate.
Math.

I am taking an intermediate Algebra class right now for the summer semester. I suck at math. Always have. I hate it. I'm already playing catch up because it's an accelerated class and I SUCK!

Sorry I can't help you with your question, and that I used your thread to vent. :P

I'd be surprised if your college didn't have tutors . . . then again, my community college is pretty exceptional. I can very easily get tutors in just about anything I need it in, for free. Math and English being the easiest to find help with.
 
I wouldn't count on class sizes being much smaller for a calc class-- I've taken them at both the university and community college and they've always been about 20-30 people in class.

I would recommend a pre-calc class. No matter how smart you are, it is no fun to play catch-up the entire semester. Getting yourself up to speed will let you concentrate on what is being taught, not the basics.

So no books or internet sites to help out with Calculus?
 
A Cliff's Quick Review sort of thing for algebra and pre-calc will help get you up to speed on that stuff-- even if it isn't difficult, it is easy to get rusty.

The REA Problem Solver series will help once you're taking calc. It has examples of pretty much every type of problem you might encounter, and gives you a different perspective on how to work it out.

Also remember that engineers need to study physics. Both those series of books have physics books as well.

If I recall, http://mathworld.wolfram.com/ is pretty extensive. They've also got physics somewhere. If you search for online differential and integral calculators you'll find some pretty good tools to help you out. There are also open source (free!) Maple/Mathmatica replacements.

I remember finding a lot of resources just by typing in whatever problem I was stuck on, and there'd always be a link to some neat site that walks you through it.
 
Pick up a Schaum's Outline book, they always had interesting problems to solve. For someone who also was not a math fan (I hear ya Corry!) it was pretty good.
 
Review Pre-calc on your own... Unfortunately, I don't have a book reccomendation, pre-calc was 7 years ago for me, and my HS didn't exactly choose their books well. As for reviewing in a class, you might be shooting yourself in the foot unnecessarily. I had Calc BC (or I and II from a college perspective) in HS, but decided to go back and take Calc II again so I didn't have to jump right into III or abstract algebras, and it turned out to be an unnecessarily difficult weeding class. I'd be a bit afriad that Pre-calc would be the same thing in a community college, so my advice is if you're looking at a class for review, either audit it, or do it on your own.
 
Calculas? Look up integration and differentiation. I did calculas hence it's not my favourite subject - too darned hard.
 
I would say this about calc. Calc is hard if you are terrible at algrebra. In calc I, there is really only two concepts: derivates, and intregals; and they are opposites so it's kind of like multiplying and dividing. For example, the derivative of x^2 is 2x and the intregal of 2x is x^2+C (the C is there for technical reasons but they basically opposites). So if you can understand that a dervative deals with rates (speeds) and intregals deals with areas, then you will have a pretty good grasp of calc I. Now the algebra is what can kick your butt. I had many problems that would take me a half a page to simplify (in Calc II I had 6 page problems).
 
I are good at math.

I are not good at Engrish.

U shud look n2 soshul injin eering. I here it's moor profit table than sivle injin eering.
 
I are good at math.

I are not good at Engrish.

U shud look n2 soshul injin eering. I here it's moor profit table than sivle injin eering.

And I'm your opposite! English is my strong suit! (just don't judge that by my posts here . . . I'm usually careless with them)
 
In college, I was top of my class in all my math and calculus courses...but I haven't seen anything like that since and probably couldn't solve a calc equation now (without looking up how to do it).

I'm sure the internet is filled with plenty of calc help...it just may take a bit of effort to find the good stuff. You could probably even find a math/calc forum or two...those nerds have been on the internet longer than any of us :er: :lol:
 
Buy a TI-89/Voyage 200 (same thing practically) or perhaps if your going into engineering an HP50G. Both will do the hard work of calculus for you (within the remit of a math course), but you'll still need to know what your doing and why your doing it.
 

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