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Please pardon this thread if similar questions have been asked. I did a search for this particular problem, but I did not find anything substantial. So here is the rub:
During my first year of college, I was an engineering major and, as such, was required to take calculus-based physics. I only took the first quarter of the sequence and I didn't do so hot. I actually ended up transferring to another university closer to home as a bio major.
As a bio major, only the year long algebra-based physics sequence was required, which I completed last year. The first quarter concepts were pretty much the same (kinematics and Newtonian mechanics) but at the algebraic level. My question is, should I retake the first quarter of calc-based physics I screwed up over 5 years ago or will this algebra-based physics be enough to count as a retake?
Thanks for any input.
During my first year of college, I was an engineering major and, as such, was required to take calculus-based physics. I only took the first quarter of the sequence and I didn't do so hot. I actually ended up transferring to another university closer to home as a bio major.
As a bio major, only the year long algebra-based physics sequence was required, which I completed last year. The first quarter concepts were pretty much the same (kinematics and Newtonian mechanics) but at the algebraic level. My question is, should I retake the first quarter of calc-based physics I screwed up over 5 years ago or will this algebra-based physics be enough to count as a retake?
Thanks for any input.