ZapperZ said:
Luckily, some of us never lost sight of the fact that how something is taught often has nothing to do with what it is. Even when I felt bored in a physics class, I never felt bored with the topic itself, and part of growing up is making a number of these realizations.
I wish there were a "thumbs up" or "I like" icon here. This is absolutely the most important piece of input that you should internalize QuantumJG.
Just consider a few things though. You find the mathematical tools used in E&M boring/difficult/unappealing. But you find the physics interesting. Have you looked at Griffiths' book? He uses quite a bit of sophisticated mathematics, but all at roughly the same level that Jackson does (if you leave out the tensor stuff). Griffiths has far less material, and I think it often gets overlooked.
My personal opinion is that most people get to Jackson way faster than they should, before they have mastered Griffiths (a surprisingly underrated "freshman" E&M text!). It is possible to actually do every problem in Griffiths between your freshman E&M course and your first encounter of Jackson (which I'm guessing takes 2 years for most people).
Another thing you can do to get a better 'feel' of E&M is to plot the solutions computationally with MATLAB/Matheamtica and look at the problem from a physical standpoint. Depending on classes too much to derive interest isn't going to help as ZapperZ points out. Independent interest in a subject is unbeatable.
Sometimes, the 'appeal' of a subject is deceptive. When you get down to doing groups, rings and fields full time, say in a first course, or through a book, you'll find many 'trivial/boring problems' which would parallel the boring problems you seem to have encountered in your E&M class. For instance proving that 'G is a group' may not have as much appeal as understanding some advanced theorem from Lie groups or differential geometry.
Almost everything seems cool and interesting on a superficial level. As you scratch the surface and dig deeper, the
way you look at the subject changes. If you are still sticking to the outward impressions of a subject, you will often
not find it interesting at a deeper level.