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Geometry Vocab Super Hard

Is summer school geometry hard?

I'm sure it will be very easy as most summer school classes are. however, you'll probably end up in a class with tons of people who failed the class and could care less about their grades, so you may feel out of place! good luck. it's a good idea to get ahead.

Why is high school geometry so hard?

There are basically 2 kinds of people who like math. They can be easily described by using a jig-saw puzzle as an example.Sequential learners are those who like to see everything in a proper order. A follows B which follows C. These persons look at the shape of the jig saw puzzle pieces and try really hard to find the appropriately shaped piece to be inserted next. Taken to the extreme, these sequential thinkers would almost as soon do the entire puzzle upside down. These are the persons who love Algebra the most, because it is all very logical and sequential. You build things up from little pieces.Holistic learners like to pick up a piece from the pile, and try to figure out exactly where it goes based upon the picture on the puzzle piece. After they can see the whole picture in their heads, then they can break it down enough to find the pieces. Persons who like geometry are generally persons who solve problems in this manner.Algebra people like the end result, whatever it is, and enjoy the surprise they get upon following the steps correctly.Geometry people like to figure out how to make the picture they desire, and want no inessential pieces to confuse them.Sequential persons make great accountants.Holistic persons make great artists.Most people who major in math or science can think both holistically and sequentially, and enjoy both.One way of thinking is not superior to another, but if you are mostly a sequential thinker, geometry seems much harder to you than persons who are holistic thinkers. God made us all how we are because society needs people of many skill sets. If we were all sequential thinkers, there would be no architects. If we were all holistic thinkers, accounting would never have been invented. If we think both ways, a job which requires only one way of thinking soon becomes very boring.

How hard is it to get a perfect score on the SAT?

Very, very difficult. I was talking to someone who got a 2400 and he said this

How i scored 2400 on the SAT:
I did ALOT of prepping on my own through a ton of books. I did not take a course because I find that learning on my own is more effective and productive. While an SAT class can be 2-3 hours long, I can do so much more in that time on my own and at my own pace. While an SAT class can be helpful to some people I did just fine without it.

here's a breakdown of what i did:
-Collegeboard Oficial SAT Study Guide, Kaplan SAT 2010 (I personally like Collegeboard's better, it had way more tests) - 2 books
-I used 2 vocab books. One was a book of most commonly used words on the SAT, the other was a vocab book that was sitting on a bookshelf in my den for quite some time. - 2 books
-math section - This is the section I was most concerned about. I used Barron's review books for algebra 1, geometry, and algebra 2 to brush up on my math. I also used these SAT math books: Kaplan SAT Math workbook, Princeton Review Math Workout for the SAT, Barron's Math Workbook for the SAT, Gruber's Complete SAT Math Workbook. - 7 books
-writing section - Kaplan SAT Writing Workbook, Baron's SAT Writing Workbook - 2 books
-critical reading section - Gruber's Complete SAT Reading workbook, Kaplan SAT ctitical reading workbook - 2 books

total number of books - 15

The reason why I used at least two books for each section was because even if I felt that I had everything I needed to know covered, got another book just to be sure so I could master everything and do my absolute best.

It took about a little over a year to get through all of these.

Is geometry easy or hard?

It's different for everyone because of the way our brains are wired but for me it was the easiest math I've taken to date because it is mostly just following formulas and drawing pictures :)
Hope this helped

How do math geniuses understand extremely hard math concepts so quickly?

Some years ago I was doing a penetration test for a large mobile operator's voicemail infrastructure. The test in itself took about 5 minutes from the moment I started till the moment I was able to get into the system and change the default welcome message to something of my own. I presented my findings to the local manager in charge and, surprisingly, her reaction was - "so you expect us to pay you 2000€ for 5 minutes of work?" My answer, although a bit of a cliche, was this: "You're not paying for those 5 minutes. You're paying for the amount of knowledge gathered over the years that allowed me to figure out in less than a minute what's the problem with your voicemail." As Satvik Beri perfectly described in his answer, when you spend most of your time focusing on a specific issue, whether that's math, information security, programming or anything else - you gather enough experience to start figuring out things in a snap. That doesn't make you special, nor innately talented - just a really hard worker and extremely passionate about what you do. Think about that the next time you feel cheated by a consultant who solves your problem in 5 minutes.

Why do we have to learn hard math like calculus?

http://thebestpageintheuniverse.net/c.cg...

Learning higher forms of math opens up new ways of thinking, reasoning, and problem solving. It allows for physics to make sense, which allows for greater feats of engineering, which permits us to improve our lives.

You may not need calculus, but the human race does. If you want to be of no value to the human race, then by all means, don't learn calculus.

How hard is calculus without pre calc knowledge?

I'm currently a freshman taking Calculus III over the summer; a class which, if you believe the student handbook, is a junior level class. I have never taken pre-calculus. Your question tells me that you, like many, are completely taken with a fear of math higher than basic algebra. A fear which makes about as much sense as parents not vaccinating their children because they were told it would make them autistic.I once put my calculus book on a table and a generic popped-collar frat guy said to his cohorts, "That looks fucking terrible." For reference, this is what my textbook looks like:It is blue. It has text on it. If I couldn't read I probably would've thought it was about beginner music because the integral symbol looks like the beginning of a treble clef. But because there's the word "calculus" the book becomes the goddamn Necronomicon and burns off retinas. I blame television and pop culture for equating calculus with "heinous and particularly difficult mathematics".The disgusting truth of calculus is that it is terribly, horribly simple. There is no magic to it; there is no Asian prerequisite. It's just a question of you and how motivated you are.Returning to the original question. Calculus is not particularly difficult. What you would learn in pre-calculus will almost definitely be gone over in your calculus class. On the off-chance that your professor does not pander to the lowest common denominator, there's always Google.

What math level can be grasped by people of 100, 120, and 140 IQ? *e.g calculus, linear algebra, etc.

Take a look at this picture.It contains two groups of things. Can you write down a symbol that tells us what they have in common?If you answered “5”, you have mastered the most difficult concept in all of mathematics. Being able to recognise the abstract property “fiveness” and associating it with what is, in essence, a random squiggle, is an enormously high level of abstraction and requires massive powers of conceptualisation and reasoning.Everything that comes afterwards is easier. What makes maths seem difficult is mainly two things:In order to keep maths books at a manageable number of pages, and to be able to study it in reasonable time, you have to skip steps. You have to rely on the student knowing so much by heart that you don’t have to explain multiplication every time you invoke the concept, and that they know intuitively what a function is when they learn derivatives. Some people find this easy and some find it difficult. This has very little to do with “IQ”, and a lot to do with interest.Bad teachers. Some teachers are not quite up to the task of explaining basics to beginners. Some teachers actually believe that maths is difficult, and will make their students despair. Some teachers believe a student who struggles is stupid and will never learn, and the student will eventually internalise this and start believing it themselves.Also, in maths, everything is built on top of everything else. Being away from school for a couple of weeks is sometimes enough to miss out on an important concept, and if that is never corrected, everything that builds upon it will seem mysterious and difficult.And of course, if you don’t find it interesting, no amount of IQ and good teachers will help.But the answer to the question, the way it is put, is that anyone who is not actually intellectually disabled (which means an IQ below 70 plus some other issues) can learn any mathematics, if they get it properly explained and have the interest and dedication. Barring dyscalculia, learning difficulties and other very specific issues.

SAT math hard or easy?

SAT math is all about finding out what the question is really asking. It's not as much of a "you know it or you don't" kind of math test. That being said, if you can think logically and find a way to get from A to B, you shouldn't have that hard of a time. Of course, you should also brush up on basic mathematical concepts like functions and geometric postulates. Just always keep in mind that the entire SAT is a logic test. It's trying to see how you think, not necessarily what you know.

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