- #1
syphonation
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- 0
Hey everybody. I hope I posted this in the right section; it was either here or in Diff. Equations..
Anyway, here's the deal: I'm currently a sophomore at a community college, planning to transfer to a University in Fall of 2009 to finish my BS. By the end of next semester (Spring '08), I will have "Engineering Standing" by the standards of the subject University.
I am in Calc II right now because I had to take College Algebra and Trig my first semester of college to prepare me for Calc I. Anyway, I only have 1 semester left here before I move and was hoping to get all of my Calculus classes out of the way before I do so. I know of at least 1 person in the past - and a couple people I have classes with now - that have taken Calc III and Differential Equations at the same time.
Now, the Diff. Equations class at my community college transferes to the University as Calc IV..so..um..yeah.
My question is, is taking Calc III and Differential Equations at the same time - and passing both - a realistic goal?
It seems like trying to take Calc I and II at the same time, but I don't know. Maybe there isn't a lot of Calc III used in Diff. Equations?
Thanks for your input.
Jimmy
Anyway, here's the deal: I'm currently a sophomore at a community college, planning to transfer to a University in Fall of 2009 to finish my BS. By the end of next semester (Spring '08), I will have "Engineering Standing" by the standards of the subject University.
I am in Calc II right now because I had to take College Algebra and Trig my first semester of college to prepare me for Calc I. Anyway, I only have 1 semester left here before I move and was hoping to get all of my Calculus classes out of the way before I do so. I know of at least 1 person in the past - and a couple people I have classes with now - that have taken Calc III and Differential Equations at the same time.
Now, the Diff. Equations class at my community college transferes to the University as Calc IV..so..um..yeah.
My question is, is taking Calc III and Differential Equations at the same time - and passing both - a realistic goal?
It seems like trying to take Calc I and II at the same time, but I don't know. Maybe there isn't a lot of Calc III used in Diff. Equations?
Thanks for your input.
Jimmy