Teaching myself geometry, algebra 2, and calculus.

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A high school freshman with a strong interest in math seeks to self-teach geometry, algebra 2, precalculus, and calculus to prepare for a future in theoretical physics. They express dissatisfaction with algebra 1 and aim to skip courses in high school. Recommendations for resources include Khan Academy and MIT's OpenCourseWare, noting that Khan Academy is user-friendly but may lack practice questions. The discussion emphasizes the importance of consulting with teachers for textbooks and discussing potential course skipping with school administration due to graduation credit requirements. Self-study can be effectively supported through available online resources and communication with educators.
FuturePhysicist
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Hey, I am a freshman in High School and I have a very superior IQ but I am in normal classes. This is due to ADHD and I used to be lazy in school. Anyways, algebra 1 is VERY boring. I want to teach myself geometry, algebra 2, Pre Cal, and Calculus because I love math. Also I feel like it will prepare me for college (PhD in Theoretical Physics) and perhaps I can skip courses through the rest of high school. Anyways, I am wandering if there are any good books or free online classes to where I can teach myself these. I may also want to add that I am a very fast learner.
 
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DivergentSpectrum said:
http://ocw.mit.edu/index.htm
this is a great one and my personal favorite.
https://www.khanacademy.org/
although it specializes in self teaching, its probably not the best but other people say differently.
Thank you very much.
 
Khan Academy is lacking in practice questions for most subjects right now but is constantly being updated. The explanations are very easy to understand, and there are usually practice questions between subjects that force you to apply things you learn, as you learn.
 
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Also, a lot of popular textbooks are available for free in pdf form with a simple google search.
 
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One thing that you may also look into doing is talking with the teachers of those classes at your high school and see if you could check out a book for the subject for self study. Then you'll be doing the same things that the current students of those classes are doing. If you plan on skipping classes talk to your administration about doing so, as there is usually a credit requirement needed for graduation and you may have to take the classes anyways.
 
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guys i am currently studying in computer science engineering [1st yr]. i was intrested in physics when i was in high school. due to some circumstances i chose computer science engineering degree. so i want to incoporate computer science engineering with physics and i came across computational physics. i am intrested studying it but i dont know where to start. can you guys reccomend me some yt channels or some free courses or some other way to learn the computational physics.
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