That is pretty odd considering how much calculus uses algebra and trig. Maybe you fought with it at the lower levels and got a good understanding of the fundamentals. That would have prepared you well for calculus. The hilarious thing is how easy differential equations is compared to the harder parts of calc 2 and 3. Differential equations at my school had test averages in the 80s, while calculus classes taught by the same instructors had test averages in the 60s. Some of that was the calc classes filtering out the retards, but some if it had to do with how much easier the material is.
That could be it because I did work hard at algebra and trig. I shouldn’t say calculus was a breeze but I seemed to grasp it a lot easier. Was it a public school?
That is pretty odd considering how much calculus uses algebra and trig. Maybe you fought with it at the lower levels and got a good understanding of the fundamentals. That would have prepared you well for calculus. The hilarious thing is how easy differential equations is compared to the harder parts of calc 2 and 3. Differential equations at my school had test averages in the 80s, while calculus classes taught by the same instructors had test averages in the 60s. Some of that was the calc classes filtering out the retards, but some if it had to do with how much easier the material is.
That could be it because I did work hard at algebra and trig. I shouldn’t say calculus was a breeze but I seemed to grasp it a lot easier. Was it a public school?
It was. I took some at a community college and some at a university, and both were public.