Anonymous wrote:Better to take Calc AB and get an A than to take Calc BC and get a C. It is all about having solid math foundations
Honestly, I think it will be good for him to have a bit of a challenge. To date, his math classes have come so easily to him, he gets an A with zero effort. I think it would be good for him to have to try a bit.
Anonymous wrote:My kid is in 8th and on a similar path. His MS offered Astronomy with Physics and he loves it. He’s in Alg2 now and it comes very easy to him.
For 9th grade, he’ll take pre calc and AP Physics 1. It’s not wasting a year taking by a science class, it’s what he enjoys. To him it’s an elective course—the fun class. He’ll take the required 9th grade bio class as his science.
For 10th, he’ll take calc and he’ll have to decide if he’ll take AP Physics 2 or Physics C.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he really wants to study physics he shouldn’t take AP physics 1. It a conceptual / not much math class while the higher AP physics classes use calculus. If he really wants to study physics he should self study in 10th and in 11th after taking calculus bc take AP physics C.
He should self study calculus and take Multivariable Calc. Self study Spanish and take AP Spanish. Self study programming and take AP CS A.
Self study bassoon and join Honors Orchestra.
Self study everything, don't bother with classes.
This is what the college board lists for prerequisite:
Students should have taken or be concurrently taking calculus.
You don’t have to have taken Physics 1 or 2. Many concepts are so much easier to learn if you know calculus. Physics 1 is not math based so that class is more like conceptual physics. So by self-study for AP physics C , it was meant watch some YouTube physics videos so you have done background knowledge. Don’t waste a year if a science class taking Physics 1
Anonymous wrote:DS has found AP Calc B/C to be the easiest/lightest AP so far. He took AP Physics 1 sophomore year and it was very intense in terms of workload. I'd go so far as to characterize it as grueling. Not sure how much of this is teacher-dependent .
Anonymous wrote:If he really wants to study physics he shouldn’t take AP physics 1. It a conceptual / not much math class while the higher AP physics classes use calculus. If he really wants to study physics he should self study in 10th and in 11th after taking calculus bc take AP physics C.
Anonymous wrote:Better to take Calc AB and get an A than to take Calc BC and get a C. It is all about having solid math foundations
Honestly, I think it will be good for him to have a bit of a challenge. To date, his math classes have come so easily to him, he gets an A with zero effort. I think it would be good for him to have to try a bit.
Better to take Calc AB and get an A than to take Calc BC and get a C. It is all about having solid math foundations
Anonymous wrote:To clarify, he was thinking he would take AP Physics I, AP Physics 2, and then AP Physics C.
He wants to be an electrical engineer and thinks a solid background in physics will be helpful. I don't have personal knowledge either way.
I am an EE and work in the field. I would say the priority should be to take as much Calculus-track math as he can - and to do well academically in that. That said, his Physics approach sounds ok to me. Yes, Physics will matter - most EEs will take 3 semesters of college Physics (statics & dynamics, E/M & optics, modern/atomic/quantum physics), but most EEs take 4-5 semesters of Calculus track college math (differential, integral, diff eqs, multivariable calculus, etc.). This means having a really solid grounding in calculus-track math is the single most important preparation.
Separately, please go to the College forum and read the older thread “Engineering Degree” to get a perspective on what is ahead for him. Then, please also look at some of the other threads in the College forum on math-track choices other folks have made, to provide a broader context. I say this not as discouragement, but just so you understand better what is coming…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he really wants to study physics he shouldn’t take AP physics 1. It a conceptual / not much math class while the higher AP physics classes use calculus. If he really wants to study physics he should self study in 10th and in 11th after taking calculus bc take AP physics C.
He should self study calculus and take Multivariable Calc. Self study Spanish and take AP Spanish. Self study programming and take AP CS A.
Self study bassoon and join Honors Orchestra.
Self study everything, don't bother with classes.
Anonymous wrote:To clarify, he was thinking he would take AP Physics I, AP Physics 2, and then AP Physics C.
This is great for someone who loves physics and wants to really learn it well, not skate by to pass a required course for a different major and then forget all about it.
He wants to be an electrical engineer and thinks a solid background in physics will be helpful. I don't have personal knowledge either way.