Hello /sci/
I would like to return to college next year, sometime in the summer or fall. I would like to study something practicable, hopefully a degree in either commerce or engineering. However, I'm 26. Barring some classes I took in college, I haven't studied math in close to 9 years.
I can more or less balance an equation, and I sort of understand how functions are graphed, but I probably need to review factoring, exponents, and other concepts that were included in the same course. I've tried Khan Academy but hated it - it felt like a lot of trivial concepts received too much attention at lower levels and higher level concepts not enough. I suspect it will be easy enough to find alternative resources elsewhere, but the problem is I don't really know where to start. I am looking for a curriculum that sets out the order in which foundational mathematical concepts are most commonly learned.
Could any of you gentlemen make a suggestion?
I would like to return to college next year, sometime in the summer or fall. I would like to study something practicable, hopefully a degree in either commerce or engineering. However, I'm 26. Barring some classes I took in college, I haven't studied math in close to 9 years.
I can more or less balance an equation, and I sort of understand how functions are graphed, but I probably need to review factoring, exponents, and other concepts that were included in the same course. I've tried Khan Academy but hated it - it felt like a lot of trivial concepts received too much attention at lower levels and higher level concepts not enough. I suspect it will be easy enough to find alternative resources elsewhere, but the problem is I don't really know where to start. I am looking for a curriculum that sets out the order in which foundational mathematical concepts are most commonly learned.
Could any of you gentlemen make a suggestion?