>>12957988btw, I went to a public school here in my country, which are known for having shitty education. OTOH, I studied a lot of stuff on my own, so maybe I'm wrong about this, but at least I can say that I had books provided by my school which had many of these topics.
>>12957944from the article:
>In addition to compulsory modules, students who follow the humanities and social sciences streams are encouraged to study Elective 1 modules and two lectures from Elective 3 (total 16 credits with compulsory modules).again, basic stuff.
>Those who aim to pursue further study in STEM fields – or some economics majors – may consider the combination of Elective 2 and two lectures in Elective 3 plus 2 lectures in Elective 4 (20 credits), or an additional 2 lectures in Elective 4 (total 24 credits) for those truly interested in polishing their math skills.in elective 2, "Derivative Applications" = calc? if so, I never had calc in HS. also not sur ehow deep are probability and statistics, but I saw those too.
in elective 3: not sure what "classificarion of closed surfaces" means, but judging by the wikipedia article, it does seem more advanced (I saw this topic in uni). I also saw basic group theory, but I remembe nothing about symmetry t.b.h... but I bet it's all watered down
in elective 4: there seems to be a mix of more advanced topics and basic topics. for instance: inequalities is basic stuff, isn't it? optimization, graph theory, etc I didn't see in school (fuck my math teacher for not helping me with this stuff, fucking lazy bitch)
so yeah, some more "advanced" topics, but they are taken as electives... and those electives also include basic stuff.