Purplemoon
New member
- Joined
- Jun 20, 2016
- Messages
- 149
- MBTI Type
- IxFP
- Enneagram
- 5w6
Recently I've been thinking about what major I should pick. This semester (and probably the spring semester and possibly summer semester) I will be taking online courses. However, I'm only taking three courses each worth three credits, due to personal reasons. The courses I'm taking are all "introduction" and lower-level courses, which is pretty embarrassing, considering I've been attending college for three years.
I've enrolled in college trigonometry this semester. The only reason why I'm taking this course is because I haven't taken a math course in three years (I took college algebra in the Fall of 2013), and I feel as though my mathematical and logical abilities have become horrible in these past three years. I'm aka enrolled in a western civilization history course, and an introduction to literature course.
My plan is to take trigonometry in the fall semester, precalculus in the spring semester, and calculus 1 next summer. However, I'm going to be honest. I suck at math. I usually forget everything I learned in a math class in a few months, and I'm horrible at word problems. I'm debating on whether or not I should take calculus if I have no intentions on pursuing a math-based career. My dream is to become either an art curator or a law librarian or a legal mediator, but I plan on getting a bachelor's degree (I don't know if I should pursue an art history or a writing-based English degree, or something else.), a paralegal certificate, work for a while, and then reconsider graduate school. I love law-based subjects, but I have no interest in being a lawyer.
Anyways, back to the main subject. Should I bother taking calculus 1 and beyond if I don't want a STEM career? Should I not bother taking trigonometry or precalculus? Another plan I came up with was to take trigonometry, and then just take a statistics course, and one of those "finite math" and "survey of calculus" courses. I'm just wondering because I struggle to get low B's in math, but still think math is important, and ending with college algebra makes me feel "empty" and not "well rounded".
I've enrolled in college trigonometry this semester. The only reason why I'm taking this course is because I haven't taken a math course in three years (I took college algebra in the Fall of 2013), and I feel as though my mathematical and logical abilities have become horrible in these past three years. I'm aka enrolled in a western civilization history course, and an introduction to literature course.
My plan is to take trigonometry in the fall semester, precalculus in the spring semester, and calculus 1 next summer. However, I'm going to be honest. I suck at math. I usually forget everything I learned in a math class in a few months, and I'm horrible at word problems. I'm debating on whether or not I should take calculus if I have no intentions on pursuing a math-based career. My dream is to become either an art curator or a law librarian or a legal mediator, but I plan on getting a bachelor's degree (I don't know if I should pursue an art history or a writing-based English degree, or something else.), a paralegal certificate, work for a while, and then reconsider graduate school. I love law-based subjects, but I have no interest in being a lawyer.
Anyways, back to the main subject. Should I bother taking calculus 1 and beyond if I don't want a STEM career? Should I not bother taking trigonometry or precalculus? Another plan I came up with was to take trigonometry, and then just take a statistics course, and one of those "finite math" and "survey of calculus" courses. I'm just wondering because I struggle to get low B's in math, but still think math is important, and ending with college algebra makes me feel "empty" and not "well rounded".