|
|
 Rank: Student Body President Groups: Member
Joined: 3/5/2008 Posts: 1,396 Location: Wilfrid Laurier University
|
NEM99 wrote:reptilemk4 wrote:scarboro wrote:Lol, My school has absolutely no preventitive strategies. You can go to the washroom whenever you like without a supervisor. They do NOT reset your calculator. For most teachers you can use a graphing calculator. (I know kids who programmed entire english essay paragraphs into there) You can listen to music for most tests (record info and play it back to yourself lol)
For a chem test I found the multiple choice answers to 5 minutes before the test I plugged them into my calc as A=5 B=4 C=3 D=2 E=1 and was the ONLY person in the test with a CALCULATOR LOL. ...or u could just write them on a sheet of paper...darn rich people and their graphing calculators ...ya at my school theres a personal electronics ban, so no one can listen to music, but i heard people used to do that, or have information on their ipods and scrolled through it during a test (b4 the ban). honestly for the most part teachers dont care... i had a bell ringer for exercise science like 2 weeks ago...id say about half the class had a cheat sheet with the answers from last semester (the teacher keeps the bell ringer the same as last semesteR) and the other half were just copying off anyone next to them I wouldn't say graphing calculators are for "rich people". They're like $120 and required for high school. At least at my high school. They're required? For what? I took Calc and Discrete and I never owned a graphing calculator.
-Stringer
|
|
Rank: Student Body Vice-President Groups: Member
Joined: 3/4/2008 Posts: 841 Location: Alberta
|
Stringer wrote:NEM99 wrote:reptilemk4 wrote:scarboro wrote:Lol, My school has absolutely no preventitive strategies. You can go to the washroom whenever you like without a supervisor. They do NOT reset your calculator. For most teachers you can use a graphing calculator. (I know kids who programmed entire english essay paragraphs into there) You can listen to music for most tests (record info and play it back to yourself lol)
For a chem test I found the multiple choice answers to 5 minutes before the test I plugged them into my calc as A=5 B=4 C=3 D=2 E=1 and was the ONLY person in the test with a CALCULATOR LOL. ...or u could just write them on a sheet of paper...darn rich people and their graphing calculators ...ya at my school theres a personal electronics ban, so no one can listen to music, but i heard people used to do that, or have information on their ipods and scrolled through it during a test (b4 the ban). honestly for the most part teachers dont care... i had a bell ringer for exercise science like 2 weeks ago...id say about half the class had a cheat sheet with the answers from last semester (the teacher keeps the bell ringer the same as last semesteR) and the other half were just copying off anyone next to them I wouldn't say graphing calculators are for "rich people". They're like $120 and required for high school. At least at my high school. They're required? For what? I took Calc and Discrete and I never owned a graphing calculator. Maybe we are thinking about different things? They're required in calc for integrating functions that can't be done manually. And in grade 12 for the whole graphing unit we have.. Where we graph functions on our calculator and such. I'm sure i've needed it for many other things.
Taiyab wrote: Is it me, or is Karla Homolka gorgeous! Lamoid wrote: SHE HAS A KILLER BODY.
|
|
 Rank: Student Body President Groups: Member
Joined: 3/4/2008 Posts: 1,180
|
for ap calc at my school i'm pretty sure it's mandatory or 'suggested' enough that everyone buys them. for regular u level calc we use them and a few people have them but they're usually supplied by the school
|
|
 Rank: Senior Student Groups: Member
Joined: 3/4/2008 Posts: 181 Location: ON, Canada
|
NEM99 wrote:Stringer wrote:NEM99 wrote:reptilemk4 wrote:scarboro wrote:Lol, My school has absolutely no preventitive strategies. You can go to the washroom whenever you like without a supervisor. They do NOT reset your calculator. For most teachers you can use a graphing calculator. (I know kids who programmed entire english essay paragraphs into there) You can listen to music for most tests (record info and play it back to yourself lol)
For a chem test I found the multiple choice answers to 5 minutes before the test I plugged them into my calc as A=5 B=4 C=3 D=2 E=1 and was the ONLY person in the test with a CALCULATOR LOL. ...or u could just write them on a sheet of paper...darn rich people and their graphing calculators ...ya at my school theres a personal electronics ban, so no one can listen to music, but i heard people used to do that, or have information on their ipods and scrolled through it during a test (b4 the ban). honestly for the most part teachers dont care... i had a bell ringer for exercise science like 2 weeks ago...id say about half the class had a cheat sheet with the answers from last semester (the teacher keeps the bell ringer the same as last semesteR) and the other half were just copying off anyone next to them I wouldn't say graphing calculators are for "rich people". They're like $120 and required for high school. At least at my high school. They're required? For what? I took Calc and Discrete and I never owned a graphing calculator. Maybe we are thinking about different things? They're required in calc for integrating functions that can't be done manually. And in grade 12 for the whole graphing unit we have.. Where we graph functions on our calculator and such. I'm sure i've needed it for many other things. Neither my normal school or my private school requires a graphing calculator for calc. The graphing unit is done by hand, and we don't look at too many crazy functions. Integration is not taught at the high school level (at least at the two schools that I know of). Schulich BBA 2012
|
|
Rank: Student Body Vice-President Groups: Member
Joined: 3/4/2008 Posts: 841 Location: Alberta
|
bausman480 wrote:Neither my normal school or my private school requires a graphing calculator for calc. The graphing unit is done by hand, and we don't look at too many crazy functions. Integration is not taught at the high school level (at least at the two schools that I know of). ...What king of calculus are they teaching? Do you just learn derivative stuff?
Taiyab wrote: Is it me, or is Karla Homolka gorgeous! Lamoid wrote: SHE HAS A KILLER BODY.
|
|
Rank: Student Council Groups: Member
Joined: 3/28/2008 Posts: 395 Location: Scarborough,Ontario
|
NEM99 wrote:bausman480 wrote:Neither my normal school or my private school requires a graphing calculator for calc. The graphing unit is done by hand, and we don't look at too many crazy functions. Integration is not taught at the high school level (at least at the two schools that I know of). ...What king of calculus are they teaching? Do you just learn derivative stuff? I don't know what bausman's school is like but Integrals are more an an ENTIRE UNIT and we don't use graphing calculators but we use Winplot on computers (our class is a computer lab). Derivatives are also a bit challenging once you mix a few logarithmic functions with any trig function and throw in some radicals/chain rule + power rule 5 times over. UTSG Life Science 12'
|
|
Rank: Student Body Vice-President Groups: Member
Joined: 3/4/2008 Posts: 841 Location: Alberta
|
scarboro wrote:NEM99 wrote:bausman480 wrote:Neither my normal school or my private school requires a graphing calculator for calc. The graphing unit is done by hand, and we don't look at too many crazy functions. Integration is not taught at the high school level (at least at the two schools that I know of). ...What king of calculus are they teaching? Do you just learn derivative stuff? I don't know what bausman's school is like but Integrals are more an an ENTIRE UNIT and we don't use graphing calculators but we use Winplot on computers (our class is a computer lab). Derivatives are also a bit challenging once you mix a few logarithmic functions with any trig function and throw in some radicals/chain rule + power rule 5 times over. yeah i know.. I spent half the course on integral calculus. haha those aren't that hard. Its when you all of a sudden have to apply all your knowledge to some retarded oil spill question.. Or this bogus top curve minus bottom curve question that was supposedly the surface of a lake. Depth given by 3-x. Find volume..
Taiyab wrote: Is it me, or is Karla Homolka gorgeous! Lamoid wrote: SHE HAS A KILLER BODY.
|
|
 Rank: Senior Student Groups: Member
Joined: 4/6/2008 Posts: 173 Location: Mississauga, Ontario
|
in my school IB people are required to buy graphing calculators, the rest of us are supplier with them when we do a chapter with a graphing calculator, and then hand them back
UTM - Commerce '12
|
|
 Rank: Senior Student Groups: Member
Joined: 3/4/2008 Posts: 181 Location: ON, Canada
|
NEM99 wrote:scarboro wrote:NEM99 wrote:bausman480 wrote:Neither my normal school or my private school requires a graphing calculator for calc. The graphing unit is done by hand, and we don't look at too many crazy functions. Integration is not taught at the high school level (at least at the two schools that I know of). ...What king of calculus are they teaching? Do you just learn derivative stuff? I don't know what bausman's school is like but Integrals are more an an ENTIRE UNIT and we don't use graphing calculators but we use Winplot on computers (our class is a computer lab). Derivatives are also a bit challenging once you mix a few logarithmic functions with any trig function and throw in some radicals/chain rule + power rule 5 times over. yeah i know.. I spent half the course on integral calculus. haha those aren't that hard. Its when you all of a sudden have to apply all your knowledge to some retarded oil spill question.. Or this bogus top curve minus bottom curve question that was supposedly the surface of a lake. Depth given by 3-x. Find volume.. Yeah, all we do is derivatives, limits, related rates and optimization, and then vectors. "Antiderivatives are not in the curriculum so i'm not teaching them" is what says my private school teacher, and so do the teachers in my day school. I go to a standard york catholic district school board high school. Believe me, i've asked a million times over whether we could have even just a bit of an introduction to integration, but nooo. "not in the curriculum". Bah. Screwing us over for uni. Could this be geographical? which province/city are you guys all from? I'm in ontario, woodbridge (just above toronto). Schulich BBA 2012
|
|
Rank: Student Body Vice-President Groups: Member
Joined: 3/4/2008 Posts: 841 Location: Alberta
|
Weird. Thats stupid. Your teachers probably don't even understand them. hah.
I'm from Calgary Alberta. Of all the great education system we have here we don't learn math vectors at all. Only basic physics vectors.
Taiyab wrote: Is it me, or is Karla Homolka gorgeous!
Lamoid wrote: SHE HAS A KILLER BODY.
|
|
 Rank: Senior Student Groups: Member
Joined: 3/4/2008 Posts: 181 Location: ON, Canada
|
NEM99 wrote:Weird. Thats stupid. Your teachers probably don't even understand them. hah.
I'm from Calgary Alberta. Of all the great education system we have here we don't learn math vectors at all. Only basic physics vectors. we've got good teachers that could teach it, just they don't want to since its not in the curriculum, and most classes are behind anyways. no extra time = no extra stuff.  Schulich BBA 2012
|
|
 Rank: Student Council Groups: Member
Joined: 4/4/2008 Posts: 313 Location: COWTOWN
|
NEM99 wrote:Weird. Thats stupid. Your teachers probably don't even understand them. hah.
I'm from Calgary Alberta. Of all the great education system we have here we don't learn math vectors at all. Only basic physics vectors. WOOT COWTOWN 
Math/CA Waterloo '13
|
|
Rank: Student Body Vice-President Groups: Member
Joined: 3/4/2008 Posts: 841 Location: Alberta
|
bausman480 wrote:NEM99 wrote:Weird. Thats stupid. Your teachers probably don't even understand them. hah.
I'm from Calgary Alberta. Of all the great education system we have here we don't learn math vectors at all. Only basic physics vectors. we've got good teachers that could teach it, just they don't want to since its not in the curriculum, and most classes are behind anyways. no extra time = no extra stuff.  How can they fill an entire semester of just derivative stuff and limits? At least you'll understand it really good. hah. and annie. Hell yes. Calgary Rules. I'll be sad to leave in August.
Taiyab wrote: Is it me, or is Karla Homolka gorgeous! Lamoid wrote: SHE HAS A KILLER BODY.
|
|
Rank: Student Council Groups: Member
Joined: 3/5/2008 Posts: 448 Location: Sarnia
|
Don't you (Ontario) kids have to take (at least) two grade 12 math courses to get into university nowadays?
Calculus used to be one course for us... I would have thought with it being split into those two courses that you would learn more in them (e.g. at least starting intervals). Apparently not?
Honours BMSc Double Major in Physiology and Medical Science UWO '09
|
|
 Rank: Senior Student Groups: Member
Joined: 3/4/2008 Posts: 181 Location: ON, Canada
|
mynameismattgotmlgo wrote:Don't you (Ontario) kids have to take (at least) two grade 12 math courses to get into university nowadays?
Calculus used to be one course for us... I would have thought with it being split into those two courses that you would learn more in them (e.g. at least starting intervals). Apparently not? The first course is advanced functions - you don't even touch calc in there. its basically a review of grade 11. You learn all the functions all over again. I think the only new thing you do is logarithms. The second course is called Introductory Calculus and Vectors, which I already described. I have a feeling i'll be greatly disadvantaged when i come to uni, since all of you guys have all this exposure to stuff that they're refusing to teach us... Schulich BBA 2012
|
|
 Rank: Senior Student Groups: Member
Joined: 4/6/2008 Posts: 173 Location: Mississauga, Ontario
|
NEM99 wrote:How can they fill an entire semester of just derivative stuff and limits? At least you'll understand it really good. hah.
OMG thats exactly what i was thinging, (well it was half the semester, and the other half is vectors) but during the calculus part i kept wishing we would learn something new...and it was like..k so were doing derivatives...now logarithmic derivatives  ...now trigonometric derivatives  ...now u put them all together in application questions  gg lol good thing thats over now on to vectors
UTM - Commerce '12
|
|
 Rank: Student Council Groups: Member
Joined: 4/4/2008 Posts: 313 Location: COWTOWN
|
derivatives/limits were two units for us....weird
Math/CA Waterloo '13
|
|
 Rank: Senior Student Groups: Member
Joined: 3/4/2008 Posts: 181 Location: ON, Canada
|
I gotta admit, I thought I had no negative feelings about cheating, but... After relying on this one guy's answers to the multiple choice part of our physics tests (three times now, and i always got it wrong when i disagreed with him), i'm getting kind of like a weird feeling...
Sure i feel better knowing that I cheated but having a higher mark than I would feel if I didn't cheat and had a bit of a lower mark. But I dunno. Its kind of weird. My ego hurts, lol, like i'm not good enough. Like I need to rely on his answers because i can't do it myself. We wrote another test today, and for 3 of the multiple choice questions I didn't even bother reading them (I was running out of time), just put down his answers.
Although in my defense I'm not the only person who cheats off him, and there's no way I'd be moral enough not to look at his very-easy-to-see scantron. I mean come on... who throws away an opportunity like that? xD
Schulich BBA 2012
|
|
Rank: Frosh Groups: Member
Joined: 3/16/2008 Posts: 37 Location: AB, CANADA
|
in mi school everyone has a graphing calculators its like MANDATORY
*mz_alliyah*
SuMmEr 08 iS hErE !!!<done high school; gonna live it up....b4 i go 2 uni>
|
|
Rank: Senior Student Groups: Member
Joined: 3/8/2008 Posts: 112 Location: Stephenville,NL
|
our valedictorian is solely based on marks and my girlfriend beat me by 0.7 %  haha Queen's Commerce 12'
|
|