DP, for the most part, conversations on DCUM are elite schools and elite standards. Not a single person DD has met at her Ivy hasn’t done Calc 1 at least. |
Unless you call knowledge of theorems "tricks", there are no tricks in USAMO (or AIME), not to mention the TSTST/TST/APMO and other IMO qualifying exams. And most of my MOPper kid's friends are excellent at school and advanced math. One is tops (in all subjects) at a top East coast private boarding, one got into MIT as a junior, one took undergraduate topology and real analysis at his state flagship as a senior, one did differential equations in 9th (NoVA) etc etc. |
Sounds like abuse Karen |
Had you taken Calculus BC freshman year of HS could you see that 4 years later that might had been to much of a gap in time to apply that to otter classes? |
Cry me a damn river. “Abuse” isn’t calculus Jane. Get a grip, some people have real problems. |
Maybe if they had just taken BC early and then stopped Math. I don't think that would have worked at their school, kids are expected to take a course in each core area every term. The kid is very smart, grades were never an issue. They focused on taking a regular load of classes each year with the most difficult rigor available at the school for their pace. They finished with 14 APs, a very high GPA and time for solid ECs and starting on a team that was ranked 8th in the country. They are a Math major at a school that parents on this board dream of daily and they don't feel at like they are at any disadvantage in terms of keeping up. One of their teammates (a year older) basically followed the same path and they are a math major at U Chicago, also no challenges. I don't think that acceleration beyond BC is necessary for success as a Math major at any of these schools but that just comes from watching a couple of very successful kids who stopped at BC. |
Complex Analysis 1 depends on a little bit of multi variable, and real analysis 1, which is just formal calculus, which often is that intro to proof course. Linear Algebra is great but not a prereq for complex analysis |
They aren't nearly as successful as yours. They are only a nationally recognized athlete at a T10 with an internship lined up in a well known area of NYC. Probably because they didn't accelerate enough. |
Your ill-informed commentary is proving my point. You're completely unaware of what advanced math is. Calculus is just a minor extension of algebra and geometry, anyone tiny thing called 'dx'. Kids who actually study algebra and geometry with proofs thoroughly, starting in elementary school or middle school , don't need a "college level" calculus class or intro to proofs class. They can go right from precalculus to real analysis. |
And you're mad because....? A kid who does well on AIME/USAMO who does Calc BC as a senior is definitely more impressive than a kid who gets a B in Real Analysis as a sophomore, in my opinion. |
By the way, most of the US national high school champions study under the tutelage of a coach who, besides winning a gold medal in the International Math Olympiad, says this: "Pronouns? Couldn’t care less, use whatever comes naturally to you. "Gender identity? Cis-het. Though I defected to girl fashion because guy fashion is idiotic." maga trolls are so stupid, they don't even know what smart looks like. |
Almost every AAP kid takes calculus their junior year. |
I was thinking of the USAMO and USAJMO combined. |
Real analysis 1 is usually after a formal proof class. Very few schools throw you straight into real analysis right after Calc 3 or linear. |
I think the PP is saying that it would be abusive to do that with the PP children. |