Do I have to take calculus based physics?

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cheesier

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I was in calc based physics (called university physics at my school) and I dropped it and got a w. I had taken 1 semester of calc based physics prior so I was completing the sequence. My question is, will it raise eyebrows if I now take general physics 2 given my w in university physics 2?
 
Why did you make a new thread? And the answer is no, get an A in algebra-based physics and enjoy the non-calculus-based goodness...
 
Why did you make a new thread? And the answer is no, get an A in algebra-based physics and enjoy the non-calculus-based goodness...

Thanks. I'm not sure why it posted twice. I'm sure a mod will lock one of them up.
 
I was in calc based physics (called university physics at my school) and I dropped it and got a w. I had taken 1 semester of calc based physics prior so I was completing the sequence. My question is, will it raise eyebrows if I now take general physics 2 given my w in university physics 2?
That is an evil class stick with algebra.
 
no...take the easiest physics class possible.

At my UG they have physics and calculus classes made just for humanities majors. They are easy conceptually and don't have a big workload....lots of shrewd premeds take those classes.
 
no...take the easiest physics class possible.

At my UG they have physics and calculus classes made just for humanities majors. They are easy conceptually and don't have a big workload....lots of shrewd premeds take those classes.
shrewd = smart
 
Until the MCAT. You definitely don't need calculus-based physics for the MCAT, but you want a decent background (algebra-based for science majors sort of class) for it (and for biophysics in medical school)...
 
Just to clarify, I know general physics is fine and fulfills the requirement. I'm just worried about having the w for university physics followed by a retake in an easier class.
 
Just to clarify, I know general physics is fine and fulfills the requirement. I'm just worried about having the w for university physics followed by a retake in an easier class.
"I was originally strongly considering an Engineering undergrad degree and Physics made me realize that my passion did not lie in a math related field, so I switched to _____"
 
Why all the hate for calculus? I took calc-based physics and didn't have any problems at all. I even TA'd it for a semester. There's very little difficult calculus involved and I think learning physics with calculus is much more intuitive than doing it with algebra.
 
^ yeah, but that isn't the point. Calc based is harder than algebra based, so why take it if you don't have to.
 
I love calc-based physics, too, but it isn't for everyone, especially if someone has already tried it and dropped it...
 
I may be in the minority when I say calc-based physics is easier to understand than algebra-based physics. It's much more conceptual, rather than plug-and-chug, when calculus is involved, IMO.

But OP, the others are right. Calc-based physics is not required. You'll do fine on the MCAT with algebra-based.
 
I may be in the minority when I say calc-based physics is easier to understand than algebra-based physics. It's much more conceptual, rather than plug-and-chug, when calculus is involved, IMO.

I agree. I think it's a lot easier to get the concepts in physics when you take calc-based, and that will ultimately help you do the problems successfully.
 
As I said in your other thread...

Algebra-based physics is all you will be tested on for the MCAT. I can't imagine anyone will really care if you switch from "university phsyics" to "general physics". I can't imagine AMCAS and the schools you apply will look up the course descriptions on your school's website anyway.
 
As I said in your other thread...

Algebra-based physics is all you will be tested on for the MCAT. I can't imagine anyone will really care if you switch from "university phsyics" to "general physics". I can't imagine AMCAS and the schools you apply will look up the course descriptions on your school's website anyway.

Yeah I'm well aware. It's the issue of having a w in calc based physics followed by a retake in algebra based.
 
Like I said, I can't imagine they'll care since calc isn't required for most schools, and how will they know? It's not like the classes are called "Calc-based Physics that Cheesier couldn't handle" and "Algebra-based Physics that Cheesier took instead". 🙂 IIRC, you don't have to give a course description and I doubt anyone is going go to go to the trouble to look it up anyway.
 
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