Gaps in my mathematical foundations

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Starting a Physics major with a background in Calculus but some gaps in Algebra, Geometry, and Trigonometry raises concerns about preparedness for undergraduate studies. The individual acknowledges a solid grasp of fundamentals but recognizes forgotten concepts that may hinder progress. Despite finding review boring, there is a desire to focus on learning new material over the summer and addressing gaps as they arise. The discussion highlights the effectiveness of Just-In-Time learning, suggesting that it may be beneficial to learn necessary concepts as they come up rather than attempting to fill all knowledge gaps beforehand. This approach could help maintain motivation and adapt learning to immediate needs.
Justin Huang
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I'm going to start my first year as a Physics major in University, so I'll be taking first year Physics with one variable Calculus with Linear Algebra. I have taken math up to Calculus but I found that I have some gaps in Algebra, Geometry, and Trigonometry. Not any serious gaps, I know most of the fundamentals and I can still do math and physics problems pretty well without them; however, there are certain concepts or techniques that I just forgotten or didn't put that much effort into learn.

I fear that having gaps in my mathematical foundation could cause problems once I start undergrad, and I tried going back to review the basics but its so boring... I know most of it, but there are just wholes in my knowledge and some concepts I haven't practiced in a while.

I'm thinking I want to just wing it and learn new stuff over the summer rather than review and if I find that I have gaps I'll fill them along the way, but I don't know, anyone got advice?
 
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Honestly it sounds like you're already ahead of the curve a bit. I tend to be self-conscious about forgetting techniques and such, but I think it's best to learn what you need as you need it. I'm a huge fan of Just-In-Time learning, and it sounds like you already have a solid foundation to be able to do that.
 
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