My oldest sister took Physics in high school and complained about how hard it was, and she studied her butt off. I figured I couldn't be as smart as she was, so I wrote off ever taking Physics. If I had . . .
'Safe'
Natter 63: Life after PuppyCam
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
It's never too late. My mother graduated college about a year and a half ago. It took ten years, but she did it.
BC (?) Calc AP exam
I only had one year of calculus, so I only qualified for AP Calc. AB. The kids in my school prepping for AP Calc. BC were in the same classes as those prepping for A-levels.
I took AP Calc. AB, Chem., US History, and English Lit. I enjoyed the classes, and the exams. I am dismayed at how little I remember of any of it now.
HELP! I need a head shot for my newspaper column and I decided to take my own (bad choice). But they need it tomorrow and I have these to choose from. Or should I ask to go into the office and have them take one for me?
I like the fourth best. Fab hair!
My school didn't have calculus, though I think there was an advanced pre-cal course beyond trigonometry. The highest math I took was honors pre-cal as a college freshman. My teacher (the chair of the Math department) told me if I wanted to give up the Art degree I'd make a fine mathematician, and I promptly forgot everything I knew beyond long division in horror.
As much as I love the drunken, sweaty, cleavagey shots, might not due for a parenting column. Hee! I especially love the coaster in the cleavage.
Jim Cramer is booked for the Daily Show on Thursday.
My teacher (the chair of the Math department) told me if I wanted to give up the Art degree I'd make a fine mathematician, and I promptly forgot everything I knew beyond long division in horror.
Carnegie Mellon has a degree called Bachelor of Science and Arts where the students pick an art concentration -- architecture, art, design, drama, or music -- and a science concentration -- biology, chemistry, physics, or math. The science and math courses required, beyond the basics, are the ones that relate more to the art stuff, and it looks like the art classes required are some of the more sciency ones. Someone I worked with a few summers ago was concentrating in art and math, and some of the stuff she was working on looked pretty cool -- she was working on a drawing that included a bunch of figures that show up in math applications.
Cash, I like the first photo, myself.
My mother graduated college about a year and a half ago. It took ten years, but she did it.
Sing it. I didn't get my degree until I was 43 (18 years of school!) It's never too late.
Back when dinosaurs roamed the earth there was no such thing as AP classes. We had "college track" and "non-college track" courses. I took college track, so I ended up with Pre-Calc and Physics as a junior, which was virtually unheard of. They didn't offer Calculus in high school. What many kids did, instead of AP classes, was take college courses while they were in high school, then you could even graduate early. A couple of kids graduated as juniors.