jc6chan wrote:
I'm in 2nd year Mathematical Physics and ya, CRAZY math courses. I don't understand how anyone going into math in university would know that they can handle it with just high school math experience. Like how do they know that they will be good at university math? My conclusion: just because you do excellent in high school math does not mean that you will even do decent in university math. Same goes with physics. Another conclusion (no offense to anyone who sucks at high school math or physics): In high school math and physics you memorize algorithms to solve problems. In university math and physics you need to know the concepts very well and USE YOUR BRAIN to think of how to solve the problem.
This is very true.
It's also why I lost all interest in math and physics in high school (stupid "do it my way" rules) and didn't regain it until I tried the two years of math and physics that start an engineering degree.
How I learn math is backwards to how they teach it in high school. My process is something like:
1. Get some idea of a topic and related problems that can be solved.
2. Throw away textbook.
3. Stare at the ceiling for a while.
4. Write down solutions.
5. Recall that "by staring at the ceiling" is not a commonly-accepted answer to "how did you get that?" Nor is, "but it just is that way." Set about creating either a proof or a process that can be explained to someone else.