aDimitri
i'm the cook
my most hated is conics.
m8
my most hated is conics.
Comics, matrices... Lelemy most hated is conics.
m8
As a matter of fact you use Integration almost everywhere in Mechanics so it doesn't make that much of a difference. Mechanics adds to improve application and understanding.Let me decide for you by saying integration.
I hate to tell you this but Unless you are doing something that is purely mathematics, you are going to be constantly having long tedious answers just like in conics. But like I said I'd hate to tell you that considering you are a bright one.integration because it's straightforward. and also because answers are short and not tedious (unlike conics, ew)
You only use integration in the resisted motion and variable gravity aspect of mechanics. Other than that, integration is not used.As a matter of fact you use Integration almost everywhere in Mechanics so it doesn't make that much of a difference. Mechanics adds to improve application and understanding.
Yeh thats what you use it for. If you really want to use it more then Harder MX1 Integration is always an option.You only use integration in the resisted motion and variable gravity aspect of mechanics. Other than that, integration is not used.
True, as you have a greater number of tools at your arsenal. I always enjoy making problems that combine more than one topic or type of problem. Even more so when the topics seem unrelated at face value.As much grief as they give me, the Harder 3U topics are the spice of the Extension 2 course. You get bored of doing the same old, over and over again, but the really cool proofs tend to seemingly crop up out of the Harder 3U topic. I feel like they tend to be the purest form of problem solving and logic, esp in the case of inequalities, circle geo, and probability.
Also, dat der satisfaction you get when you solve one of those tough cookies.
I think that the three most prominent reasons for students not ticking the box under Harder 3 Unit areHarder 3U is the most fun by far, it's the closest thing to real maths in the course.
Its surprising that so many people chose integration. I find it pretty bland.
The existence of computers also makes it not a particularly important skill to have in scientific or engineering careers. (Like, we should understand what integration means, but being able to manually integrate functions that are miraculously nice enough to have elementary primitives seriously isn't that important.)
I think the coolest things you can do with maths are the things that humans can prove but computers can't.
While I do agree with your point on proving things, we are also able to prove integrals that computers cannot. There are many elementary symbolic antiderigatives that humans can find but computers cannot, which overlaps with the point I agree with. There are also many definite integrals/improper integrals that we can do in closed elementary form but computers are still unable to evaluate them. honestly, as long as the problem can be done succinctly and elegantly instead of bashing it to death with a computer stick, it's pretty neat.Harder 3U is the most fun by far, it's the closest thing to real maths in the course.
Its surprising that so many people chose integration. I find it pretty bland.
The existence of computers also makes it not a particularly important skill to have in scientific or engineering careers. (Like, we should understand what integration means, but being able to manually integrate functions that are miraculously nice enough to have elementary primitives seriously isn't that important.)
I think the coolest things you can do with maths are the things that humans can prove but computers can't.
And most of these integrals generally aren't asked in the HSC (the integrals that get asked in the HSC are generally easy for the computer to compute).While I do agree with your point on proving things, we are also able to prove integrals that computers cannot. There are many elementary symbolic antiderigatives that humans can find but computers cannot, which overlaps with the point I agree with. There are also many definite integrals/improper integrals that we can do in closed elementary form but computers are still unable to evaluate them. honestly, as long as the problem can be done succinctly and elegantly instead of bashing it to death with a computer stick, it's pretty neat.
They totally should ask one though.And most of these integrals generally aren't asked in the HSC (the integrals that get asked in the HSC are generally easy for the computer to compute).