Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless your kid is aiming for MIT and has another opinion, for most kids, I’d get the TI 84 Plus CE because it’s good and what the teachers and SAT/ACT tutors know. Double check that whatever you get can be used on the SAT and ACT without a lot of caveats.
Which one in this case?
https://apstudents.collegeboard.org/exam-policies-guidelines/calculator-policies
For each manufacturer the ones at the end on the list are the more capable.
Thank you!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Buy or borrow a used calculator only when specifically demanded. The standardized exams don't need anything sophisticated. Calculators are only for making TI rich. Learning happens in Desmos and Geogebra.
You don’t want to show up at the AP Calculus or Statistics exam without knowing how to use your calculator inside out, it can be extremely helpful at the free response questions where you can easily solve everything on the calculator saving time and avoiding careless mistakes. There’s no access to Desmos or Geogebra during any exams like AP or SAT, you need to have a graphing calculator. Most course descriptions in the school catalogue will mention that and often will specify the model used in the class. You can also borrow calculators from some schools, but you still need to learn how to use it. You can also borrow textbooks, often people buy their own for convenience, it’s not that different for calculators and that doesn’t make TI an evil capitalist company.
Charging $100 for a $15 calculator is evil capitalist. The dinkiest smartphone is 100x better than a TI, except for thevcartel control of school exams that add pointless "calculator-only" questions just to promote calculator sales.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Buy or borrow a used calculator only when specifically demanded. The standardized exams don't need anything sophisticated. Calculators are only for making TI rich. Learning happens in Desmos and Geogebra.
You don’t want to show up at the AP Calculus or Statistics exam without knowing how to use your calculator inside out, it can be extremely helpful at the free response questions where you can easily solve everything on the calculator saving time and avoiding careless mistakes. There’s no access to Desmos or Geogebra during any exams like AP or SAT, you need to have a graphing calculator. Most course descriptions in the school catalogue will mention that and often will specify the model used in the class. You can also borrow calculators from some schools, but you still need to learn how to use it. You can also borrow textbooks, often people buy their own for convenience, it’s not that different for calculators and that doesn’t make TI an evil capitalist company.
Anonymous wrote:You could also just use desmos and save a few dollars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless your kid is aiming for MIT and has another opinion, for most kids, I’d get the TI 84 Plus CE because it’s good and what the teachers and SAT/ACT tutors know. Double check that whatever you get can be used on the SAT and ACT without a lot of caveats.
Which one in this case?
https://apstudents.collegeboard.org/exam-policies-guidelines/calculator-policies
For each manufacturer the ones at the end on the list are the more capable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless your kid is aiming for MIT and has another opinion, for most kids, I’d get the TI 84 Plus CE because it’s good and what the teachers and SAT/ACT tutors know. Double check that whatever you get can be used on the SAT and ACT without a lot of caveats.
Which one in this case?
Anonymous wrote:Buy or borrow a used calculator only when specifically demanded. The standardized exams don't need anything sophisticated. Calculators are only for making TI rich. Learning happens in Desmos and Geogebra.
Anonymous wrote:Unless your kid is aiming for MIT and has another opinion, for most kids, I’d get the TI 84 Plus CE because it’s good and what the teachers and SAT/ACT tutors know. Double check that whatever you get can be used on the SAT and ACT without a lot of caveats.
Anonymous wrote:At TPMS they already had them so you really didn't need to buy one.
Anonymous wrote:Texas Instruments 84 Plus CE Graphing Calculator
This is the one the school had us buy:
https://www.target.com/p/texas-instruments-84-plus-ce-graphing-calculator-bionic-blue/-/A-88829213?ref=&ref=OpsEmail_Order_80690&j=851229&sfmc_sub=161046288&l=652_HTML&u=42272671&mid=100019899&jb=3475330