joobz
Tergiversator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2006
- Messages
- 17,998
I'm an engineer and am all about the applied approach.The thing is that here, everybody knows what Math xyz means, just like people in the US knowing the specific meaning of Algebra 1 and Algebra 2 and Calculus AB or BC. As one has to take math courses throughout high school, the only distinction needed is whether or not one has "strong" sec 4 and/or sec 5 math.
In fact, my girlfriend applied for a teaching job at a private school which follows the American system closely, and it's a part time job to teach AP calculus, so I finally learned how AP calculus (at least the version offered at that particular school) compares to the Calculus 1 class I took in the first semester of cégep. It turns out that this particular AP class does not involve trigonometric functions at all (limiting itself to polynomial, "rational", exponential and logarithmic functions), which, to me, was quite a surprise. I was, however, not surprised by the "applied" approach taken, though it's not the approach I prefer. This is just to say that not all calculus courses are equivalent, so having done "a semester of calculus" may not give sufficient information for a person who is unfamiliar with the program. From my perspective, not touching trig functions in a calculus class doesn't make sense.
Although, i too am suprised they didn't do the trig functions in AP calc. I remember going over all of those in highschool. At least I think i did...?
This is obviously a sementic debate and there isn't really 1 right answer. Just one that you are comfortable with. The idea is what should be be teaching in a calc class vs. a mathXYZ class... If people you talk to understand, then it doesn't matter.
You frequent fark? I like that site.This also reminds me of an "internet tough guy" anecdote from fark.com. Someone preparing for PhD quals in mathematics said the algebra section would be really hard. Then some internet tough guy called that person an idiot because algebra was really easy, and tough guy knew this for a fact because he had taken courses all the way to calculus in high school...
As for algebra, it sounds like you are taking offense that people would consider your higher level/abstract alegbra courses as equivilent to highschool stuff.
But then, most engineers think that the DiffEQ is the height of math and get very uncomfortable when people start talking about the abstract maths.