How is calculus 1 over the summer?

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Geo_Zegarra2018
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How is calc 1 over the summer? How should I prepare myself? I don't care what grade I get, as long I get a C or B. Any suggestions? Are there helpful websites that cane help me?
 
on Phys.org
My parents are wanting me to take it over the summer tho. I can do it, I just need to know what helpful website are there
 
Geo_Zegarra2018 said:
My parents are wanting me to take it over the summer tho. I can do it, I just need to know what helpful website are there
BAD, BAD, BAD!
 
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I took high school calculus over a summer semester - 8 weeks - and it was bad news. Had I not self studied calculus for a solid year I wouldn't have been prepared for university. My classmates were often lost and hardly had time to get an understanding before we moved on. Then there were a few whose algebra was weak and they hadn't enough time to remedy that - they were lost in the dust.
This was only high school upgrading mind you, not university level calculus.
If you really wish to gain from your class, I would recommend not to take any math or physics courses over the summer.
 
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Geo_Zegarra2018 said:
My parents are wanting me to take it over the summer tho. I can do it, I just need to know what helpful website are there
I would also suggest to get your hands on a textbook and work through, rather than relying on video lectures. But if that's what floats your boat, the MIT videos are okay. They also have problem sets I believe.
 
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Geo_Zegarra2018 said:
My parents are wanting me to take it over the summer tho

Are you an adult?

Geo_Zegarra2018 said:
I can do it

How could you possibly know that? More importantly, the question is not whether you can cross the finish line with a passing grade. The question is whether you are building a good foundation for your next classes.

This is the same advice you got the last time you asked the question. If nothing has changed in the last few weeks, why would you expect the answer to be different?
 
Why calculus 1 over the summer bad? Is there something wrong with it? I really need to take it because, my dads university will only pay until I am 24. If I wait until fall to take calculus, that will set be back TWO more semesters.

I'm in a community college, and if I want to transfer I need to do it by fall 2017. I should be applying by fall 2016. Since Penn State has rolling admissions :)
 
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some professors and I have noticed that I do much better with one subject. So I don't think taking ONLY calculus will give me a lot of problems.
 
I just wanted suggestions.
 
Our suggestion is that it is generally a bad idea. Particularly if you want to gain from the course and move into calculus II.
 
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Geo_Zegarra2018 said:
I just wanted suggestions.

If you really really want to make the course, then self-study it and make sure you understand everything before taking the course. That is in my opinion the only way to pass this course comfortably and be prepared for the new material that will follow later.
If you want suggestions, then just buy the calculus book that you will be using and work through it carefully.
 
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Since summer session starts toward the end of May, and finals for spring 2016 end on May 12, I will have plenty of time to watch some videos of calculus. Will coursera be a good website to start right after I finish with my finals?
https://www.coursera.org/learn/calculus1
 
i actually have some old calculus textbook. Should I start from there? Do I need some precalc background before I can read some of the topics?
 
Where should I start from? What chapter? Limits? Derivatives.
 
I have the old versions of calculus stewart. I think 3rd and 4th edition with one solution book
 
Differential Calculus is USUALLY the course used to force you to mentally integrate all of your previous math learning. What students MIGHT be lacking is a solid knowledge of trigonometry. Only you can evaluate your knowledge of algebra, geometry, and trig. To answer your question, there is no reason that the FACTS you learn should take more than about a week or two. There is plenty of reason to believe that the SKILLS you should learn require a lot longer. Doing problems - as long as the answers are also given - might be ok. I doubt it, but its a start. I can remember from my first year of calculus on more than one occasion a problem taking the professor the whole hour to go over. That's not the type of thing you're likely to learn on your own, and it certainly will NOT be something that you can find in a book...and I'd doubt it likely that the superficial treatment they give in summer session will, either. Anyway, for the gifted, willing to study on their own in-depth and for the superficial who just want "the grade", summer school is adequate. For the weaker student (I include myself, I had an A average in high school through trig and calculus) I don't recommend it - IF you're going into the engineering or hard sciences or economics. Otherwise go for it. But you've obviously already decided "what"; the question you seem to actually have is "how". The answer to "how" is do enough problems so that you can pick up any textbook and do 8 out of 10 of any problem set. That requires spending the time to learn the SKILL and having several books with lots of problems and answers as well as lots of examples will be very important.
 
I already found a website where I can practice problems:) so I'm all set for summer.
 
So no getting help from someone? Try doing it by yourself the first try and see what you did wrong? I'm doing that with my intro to chemistry already. I'm thankful that I took a semester off from math. Learning chemistry made word problems much easy to understand. I used to hate word problems, but thanks to chemistry I am not that scared no more.
 
If you are a college student, then taking calc 1 over the summer isn't a bad idea if you want to graduate on time. Use khan academy and go through every video, and mathstockexchange for any questions you might have or thsese forums. Just need to be very disciplined.