preluderacer said:
I just can't seem to get physics I put so much time in studying and it's just not coming to me. I am taking this class online and even when I went to the lectures it didn't help that much. I do fine in pure math classes. This class is moving pretty fast at a chapter a week. I just don't know if I should just switch majors ( which is currently electrical engineering) or just suck it up and try to get through this class. It doesn't look like I am going to pass. Anybody else completely bomb their physics classes?
I didn't bomb Physics, but I know the feeling of struggling. What I finally came to realize, is that I needed to adjust my study habits (don't roll your eyes just yet

).
Firstly, I came from a high school where my teachers really cared about us, and went out of their way to explain things clearly. But like it or not, unfortunately, college professors (like teachers also) are kind of a crap shoot. I had this delusion for a long time that they would be just like good teachers, and basically would pour all of their knowledge into me un-begrudgingly. Not so was the case for me in college. You're not their child, they don't care really, and they (most of those I have met anyway) are just not there for the love of imparting their joy for a subject. Teaching is just a job to them.
Moral #1: don't rely on your professors to help you. Crappy a realization as that is.
Anyway, what I learned is this: there are some classes that you are plainly better off, not going to but for the midterms and for the final (if you can get away with that academically speaking). Some things, you just have to teach yourself.
Moral #2: be disciplined, and spend your class period in the library studying the sections and chapters by yourself or with friends. Always do the assignments (even if you get them horribly wrong).
Lastly, don't worry about General Physics affecting you long term. It is important, but Complex Analysis (which is strictly math really), is probably more important to Electrical Engineering students. So if math is your thing, you'll be fine.
Also, I think if you stick it out for second semester General Physics course--and you should (don't give up) you'll enjoy it a lot more. That's usually when they begin discussing basic circuits (which was my interest for a long time too (that and Nuclear Physics).
Moral #3: try making your own notes (again, the library is nice and quiet, and you can really immerse yourself in the theory in peace that way).
Sometimes the textbook is better than the professor. I always started out by copying the definitions, theories, laws, postulates and formulae. Then I would move onto doing the example problems (they have the answers, so you can manipulate the numbers at least until it makes sense mathematically). When ever you have a test to study for, always work the example problems again, and also a couple of really interesting ones you got for homework. Hope this helps. AND DON'T GIVE UP WHAT YOU ENJOY LEARNING!