Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depend on your school, in our school
Low math track kids take Calc AB then done
High math track kids take Calc BC directly
Ditto. Seems like a waste of time to take Calc AB and then repeat the same curriculum during the first semester of BC
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depend on your school, in our school
Low math track kids take Calc AB then done
High math track kids take Calc BC directly
Ditto. Seems like a waste of time to take Calc AB and then repeat the same curriculum during the first semester of BC
Does it? Do you also think there is no value in re-teaching addition year after year with more depth and complexity thrown in? Or do you think that we should show you addition once in your high powered rigorous preschool and call it quits? Math is learned through practice and struggle with concepts and problems. You can take Calc AB after being a Prof for many years and should be able to get some new insight from it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depend on your school, in our school
Low math track kids take Calc AB then done
High math track kids take Calc BC directly
Ditto. Seems like a waste of time to take Calc AB and then repeat the same curriculum during the first semester of BC
Anonymous wrote:Depend on your school, in our school
Low math track kids take Calc AB then done
High math track kids take Calc BC directly
Anonymous wrote:To hop onto this thread, my kid is a rising junior and will be taking AP Calc BC next year. He is taking an AP Physics course and his current sciences teacher (honors Chem) said he could do AP Physics 1 or do AP Physics C. He’s never taken physics before. Do people just go right to C?
Anonymous wrote:Not at all. Two years ago, a girl i know did this and got accepted in CS major in Harvard, Yale and Stanford.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In another thread (and here) people said strong math students don't do that sequence. They cut out Calc AB. And colleges would look at that sequence as weak and not rigorous.
Those people were incorrect. There is nothing wrong with taking AB and then BC. Indeed, it is the only route at many, many high schools that do not organize their curriculum in a way that allows a student to go directly to BC from precalc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In another thread (and here) people said strong math students don't do that sequence. They cut out Calc AB. And colleges would look at that sequence as weak and not rigorous.
Ridiculous.
In APS students on the advanced track (who do Int. Pre Calc in 10th) are expected to go to BC and skip AB. That is what they are being prepared for according to the teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In another thread (and here) people said strong math students don't do that sequence. They cut out Calc AB. And colleges would look at that sequence as weak and not rigorous.
Ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:In another thread (and here) people said strong math students don't do that sequence. They cut out Calc AB. And colleges would look at that sequence as weak and not rigorous.
Anonymous wrote:In another thread (and here) people said strong math students don't do that sequence. They cut out Calc AB. And colleges would look at that sequence as weak and not rigorous.