Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
School math curriculum?
Good afternoon.
At school, I couldn’t make friends with mathematics, I don’t know the reason, perhaps banal laziness, because I can’t call myself stupid ... I want to, there were cases when I went through the entire academic year with a tutor in a few weeks and passed control tests for 4- 5.
Now , when the brains more or less fell into place, I realized that I had lost a lot of time doing everything except studying, so I want to improve the knowledge that I missed.
Did you go to the toaster ? a similar topic, a person was interested in courses, textbooks on the school curriculum of mathematics and there was one comment in which a resource was indicated for many school disciplines. The programs were divided into classes and you could start with what you need.
ToAs usual, I forgot to make a bookmark and now I ask you for help, mb who understood what I mean? Or perhaps knows a good analogue where you can study the school curriculum?
Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
And so I did not try
. In fact, the problem is not in your laziness or stupidity, but in your way of thinking. There is humanitarian and technical thinking. In the first case, a person has a good memory; in the other, logic is well developed. For example, I didn’t study mathematics at school, I saw it (it is around you in every subject, in every phenomenon), but I had problems with geography, history, literature.
I recently found my favorite math textbook online.
11klasov.ru/algebra/78-sbornik-zadach-po-algebre-8...
That's where you can get non-trivial problems for many hours-days.
The best resource, I will keep repeating, is khanacademy . The only problem is English, but knowing it today is just as important as being able to count. Indeed, in principle, one may not be able to count (like most), not to mention the ability to take integrals, but this will contribute to some difficulties. Where to know English? lingualeo or skype. In general, mathematics actually loves questions why and hates how. It's simple, it's more likely not even a science, but a craft that adapts to various types of sciences, but a craft with an extensive history, a high degree of intellectual work, but not without literary blacks. In short, a certain flexibility of the mind is required, and the ability to solve integrals using an algorithm is, of course, good, but to understand the physical meaning of it in order to be called a mathematician is more than necessary.
Didn't find what you were looking for?
Ask your questionAsk a Question
731 491 924 answers to any question