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#16
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Re: How much Calculus?
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And don't limit yourself to instructors... purposely seek out and develop friendships with other students in each class who are serious about doing well. Make learning the subject material part of your common interest. |
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#17
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Re: How much Calculus?
With middle school roboteers no Calc, lots of geometry. We engineers have decided that PI=3 for all calculations. In a 12' space the .14159 part isn't making any noticeable difference.
In my job, lots of basic math and a ton of stats (project manager). Most along the lines of "probability of meeting the deadline on Tuesday is none." After slogging though calc classes, I'd rather have the stat classes. Gary mentioned matrix math, I did a ton of that when hand crafting graphics routines in hand crafted Fortran and assembler. Cycle times were slow and you had to wring everything out of each instruction. The Winter Session Matrix Math class saved me in some tough situations. |
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#18
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Re: How much Calculus?
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Gary said it better than I could: Quote:
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In my (brief) career, I've used a lot of calculus, algebra, and linear algebra, but the math that has proved most useful to me has been optimization theory and numerical methods. My favorite thing to do as an engineer is to describe my system as a series of equations (see Gary's post), massage those equations to describe what I want my system to do, and then translate it back. Or, even better, having a machine crunch over those equations and optimize them for me. Any weekend adventure you take is made better by the knowledge that something is doing your work for you while you relax. |
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#19
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Re: How much Calculus?
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Jason |
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#20
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Re: How much Calculus?
Upper classmen can be a great resource. I was struggling for a whole quarter with some math for Physics. A guy a year ahead of me saw what I was struggling with and gave a very simple explanation of what was going on. It took about 15 minutes to go from failing to a C. I still wish I had talked to him before Finals week.
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#21
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Re: How much Calculus?
It's kind of hard to quote every single post that was put on this thread, but if it didn't take up too much space would. Thanks for all of your advice. For me, it's not that I wasn't necessarily scared of calculus, it's just that I came across another forum where many engineers said they did not use calc that much. So I tried the same question on CD and got more of an opposite response.
However, a common response that I got from both forums is just the knowledge of calculus and knowing the meanings behind problems can be just as helpful as a small calculation. BTW here is the link to the other forum if you are interested. |
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#22
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Re: How much Calculus?
I use calculus and differential equations on a very regular basis.
For a job like mine, the most important thing is to know how to set up a calculus problem or a differential equation. Therefore, having a very good knowledge of what an integral or derivative really means is of utmost importance, and I think that gets lost on a lot of people. If a problem is put in front of you and you can say, "what we need is X, which can be determined as the integral of f(x,t,etc.)" and write the equation, that's the big deal. From that point on, most of the time the actual integration is done numerically in the algorithm that we're designing. I summary, VERY MUCH of my job is setting up the correct equations so the algorithms can do the calculus in real-time. In that respect, I use a lot of calculus and differential equations on a daily basis. |
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#23
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Re: How much Calculus?
I taught Calculus for 10 years and used Calculus as a mechanical engineer in my work - but not all the time. I always used to tell my students that Calculus makes your other math skills stronger. When I was an engineering student, all I wanted to be was a design engineer. But engineering teaches you how to solve problems, not just the ones that are Calculus-based. You can solve customer problems, field engineering, support, marketing and social problems - sometimes Calculus doesn't stand out. It is just a tool to describe a problem.
Marie's tips - know - really know the unit circle with all its common values both in decimal and radical form, 30-60-90 degree, 45-45-90 degree and pythagorean triples - most common 3-4-5 but there are others 5-12-13, 8-15-17, 7-24-25. Most engineering text books has exercises that can be done without a calculator knowing these relationships and the ratio of sine, cosine, and tangent. Watch - really watch the minus sign. The most common error is caused by this little sign. I once had a professor take off 20 points in a differential equation exam question. I filled two blue books to answer the question - got the correct value - wrong sign. Lesson learned. Units, units and more units. It is a must - most dont use until the end of the problem but know your units and use them - watch radians and revolutions; they are not the same. Label all answer with units. You should feel as comfortable with inches as you are with SI. Most engineering schools use SI units in the world - we are global. Marie |
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#24
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Re: How much Calculus?
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The best teacher I ever had was my high school chem AP teacher. He would constantly stress units to us saying his famous phrase: Quote:
-Brando |
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