Calc vs Trig Based Physics

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Leonidas93

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So I've read on some threads that calc based physics is much more advantageous for students who can handle it. I just completed the trig based physics 1 and got an A with ease. I also got an A in Calc 2 with little difficulty. So I guess my question is would it be worth it to take calc based physics 1 next instead of trig based physics 2? Would it help me on the MCAT in ANY way and would it look good to medical schools even if i initially took the trig route? Thanks.

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I took calc based physics in college just because it was required for my major. I think I had to use calculus like 10 times or less in the classes ever and I heard algebra classes were a joke, but the classes I took weren't exactly hard either. However, the effing labs were brutal and that's no joke. I'm talking 5-8 hours to write up a lab report almost every week compared to the ones the other people took where they had specially prepared lab books they just had to fill things in.

I do think it was valuable though because it gave me a better understanding of error propagation, technical writing, and computer based analysis, but I doubt that's going to be a net positive for most people when time is so tight during semesters.
 
Calc based can definitely help you understand the concepts better because it is more in depth, can show the mathematical basis for physical phenomenons, and typically has harder tests/hw/lab work to go with it.
 
I finished trig/algebra-based physics a few months ago and for what you need in medicine, there's really no point in delving into calc-based physics. Unless you're an engineering major and require calc-based phys, save yourself the brutality and take something more beneficial, like biochem or molecular bio.
 
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I finished trig/algebra-based physics a few months ago and for what you need in medicine, there's really no point in delving into calc-based physics. Unless you're an engineering major and require calc-based phys, save yourself the brutality and take something more beneficial, like biochem or molecular bio.

Agreed - for what you need in medicine, you probably don't need calc-based physics. However, for the MCAT, it can be very beneficial as you go into more detail and (I would argue) become more familiar with the concepts on a basic level, rather than just memorizing the formulas.
 
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