Chemistry and Geometry

<p>Here's the thing. Unless one plans on being a math major, most likely the only experience one has with proofs are in high school geometry!</p>

<p>Just for reference, I'm going to be taking high school honors level of these classes. Yeah i hear a lot of people complain about proofs...what's so bad about them, exactly? I know what you mean about algebraic long division, but our teacher just made sure we learned, gave us one quiz on it, and then we could use our calculator for it for the rest of the year.</p>

<p>in proofs you take the geometric theorems and postulates and prove statements true. it'll show you a quadrilateral or something and say Prove: SegAB is congruent to Seg CD. and then it'll give you something along the lines of a given, i'm not really thinking so this might not even work, but like SegAB is parallel to Seg CD. then you go from there proving it true. there are just time consuming and make you reference back to previously learned stuff, in geometry, you can't just skip a lesson, other than loci, and expect to be able to do proofs.
ehh, chem, call it honors w/e, it won't matter. if you are good at alg 2, then you should be good at chem. it is alot of calculations.</p>

<p>Geometry is damn easy.</p>

<p>If you're not very adept to Science, Chem will make you its *****. Good luck.</p>