alex77 said:
Do you have a chance to pass the exams for the disciplines math and physics if you finished a tehnological high school?
It depends on what you mean with technological high school.
I went to a high school which mostly offered vocational education (people learned to be a welder or a carpenter or ...).
However there were a few tracks that prepare you for higher education, most went towards some flavour of engineering.
The thing is that the specific track I took was extremely suitable for physics, the last two years we had 8 hours of maths a week.
But what was more useful was that since the 3rd year (age 14-15) we had separate courses for mechanics, physics and electricity. (1 or 2 hours each)
As a consequence I barely learned anything new in 1st year physics except the language somewhat changed.
For example with electrostatics we had to look at more general charge distributions when determining a field in college.
The only new things I learned in mechanics was to derive Kepler's laws and how a gyroscope works.
Second year physics we had electronics, I knew most of the syllabus by heart already and then some.
Long story short, it really depends on what you know.
More generally though eventually you'll have to invest time in truly understanding what you are doing.
That's what college is (should be) about, mastering your subject beyond plug-and-chug problems.
For maths I can't help you. But depending on the direction (and which electives) you take you'll learn a lot of maths. Calculus and Linear Algebra are a minimum. And a lot of the physics I've come into contact with during my masters uses group theory in some way (abstract algebra that is).
If the colleges around you are close enough you should check if they do tours.
I answered some questions for some of those and the thing is most students don't understand what physics actually is when they come by.