Why take courses in what you excel at?
My daughter, the Evo Child, is taking Astronomy this semester. She knows nothing about Astronomy and her professor seems to be the kind that gives one lecture and then does a 2 hour lab with exercises for advanced students, obviously to scare the holy bejeezus out of anyone that's not really serious. She said not one single person got anything right, so she's not too down on herself and is looking forward to class Monday since she feels she gets most of it now, in hindsight.
I asked her why she didn't take chemistry and she said that chemistry is so easy that she felt it would be cheating (She won some National Scientific Merit Award in High School for having the highest (or maybe near the highest) score in chemistry in the US. I'm not sure if they give out the award to more than one student per year.
Sigh.
And she wants to be a lawyer.
I asked her why she didn't take chemistry and she said that chemistry is so easy that she felt it would be cheating (She won some National Scientific Merit Award in High School for having the highest (or maybe near the highest) score in chemistry in the US. I'm not sure if they give out the award to more than one student per year.
Sigh.
And she wants to be a lawyer.
Total Comments 7
Comments
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Posted Aug20-10 at 08:59 PM by cronxeh
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Posted Aug23-10 at 10:29 AM by Greg Bernhardt
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This is why I study physics. If I were smart enough to understand it, it wouldn't be worth all the time and money. I wouldn't say my biology courses are a total waste though -- I pick up a lot of things to use in conversation or to help blend in with bioscience folks.Posted Aug25-10 at 09:57 PM by presbyope
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excel at or not is not the essential point, your interest does, i thinkPosted Aug31-10 at 10:57 PM by hgwangyongli
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Your title has an extra proposition. It should read: "Why take courses at what you excel" or "Why take courses in what you excel".Posted Jun2-12 at 08:14 AM by RoshanBBQ
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Posted Jun3-12 at 02:30 PM by Evo
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When I started college at age 30, I couldn't remember how to add fractions. So I started with the simplest math class with a goal of a degree in Physical Therapy. As I went on I found that math was pretty interesting and with a right brain problem, biology was complicated. When I started to take applied math and then an intro physics class, well, I was hooked. It definitely was not easy, but I really liked Physics and ended with my undergrad degree in Physics/Electronics. To me it was challenging and I really enjoyed it. Fifteen years later I find the PhysicsForum.Posted Nov8-12 at 12:56 AM by bengunn



