Femme_physics said:
My lecturer told me that it's best not to integrate when you're a new student to kinematics because it's important to understand the principles of operation-- which is why we're not using it. On the other hand, I keep being told by this forum that calculus is the true way to fathom mechanics.
Therefor, I'm completely confuse as to how do I bridge those contradicting statements. Can anyone clear the air for me?
In the end you need to know both.
It's mostly a matter of teaching methodology.
If a teacher throws too much theory at his students too quickly, the students will become confused, and won't know what to do any more.
I think it's important that a student can find a thread in a problem and pursue that thread logically. It the student stops looking for threads, because there are simply too many, the teacher has failed.
I believe however, that if a student can and actively finds threads into problems fine, and is asking for more, there's nothing wrong with giving more!

And seeing how different methods yield the same result will enhance the understanding.
You might compare it with "voltage drops" versus "Kirchhoff's laws".
Typically you're taught "voltage drops" first to gain an intuitive understanding.
In your case you learned it the other way around.
Somehow you were stumped by the concept of voltage drops, but once you saw how Kirchhoff's laws work, I think the voltage drops fell into place!
As for kinematics. I think it's fine to learn it in the order the teacher teaches it.
But whenever you want to know more, or want to see different ways of solving them, just ask!
As long as you are the one deciding what to learn and when to learn it in a way that fits into your thinking processes, you'll find you progress optimally.