<p>"Think about it this way - if you have a doctor, will you want him to have failed calculus? Don’t give yourself the idea that you are bad at math. Maybe you are approaching it from the wrong perspective? "
-This is strictly my approach. Math does not require any type of personal feelings about it. Math is straight forward, absolute universal language of science, nothing else. It is easily understood if explained by the right person. No special talent is reguired in k -12 or UG level classes. It is not something that reguire talent like writing, art, music, it is not something that might require you to be in line with teacher opinion (like History or Political science) or face the consequences. There is NO opinion about math facts, they are absolute, there is NO grey area about them, you do it right or wrong, just like that black or white ant nothing in between. So, get good tutor and you will be all set.</p>
<p>…and I would not want to have a doc. who has failed calc. This would be an indication that either doc. is not responsible person or the one who cannot think logically. Neither of these assumption are an indication of personal traits that I am looking for in my doc.<br>
However, I do not believe that Med. School applicants include those who have failed calc., one of the subject that is easier in UG than other Medical school pre-reqs.</p>
<p>I am attending Cedar Crest College this fall and will be majoring in Spanish with a Pre-med track. Hopefully during my Undergraduate experience I will take Statistics 101 and 102 for the pre-requisite or Calculus 101 and Statistics 101 to fulfill the 1 year of math requirement for most medical schools and to help me on my MCAT.</p>
<p>They also have a Global Diseases minor which I am interested in as well which I will hopefully add to my degree.</p>
<p>Re: calculus</p>
<p>You probably don’t want to be in this situation, though:
[A</a> Mathematical Model for the Determination of Total Area Under Glucose Tolerance and Other Metabolic Curves](<a href=“http://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/17/2/152.abstract]A”>http://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/17/2/152.abstract)</p>
<p>[url=<a href=“http://fliptomato.■■■■■■■■■■■■■/2007/03/19/medical-researcher-discovers-integration-gets-75-citations/]Explanation.[/url”>Medical researcher discovers integration, gets 75 citations | An American Physics Student in England]Explanation.[/url</a>]</p>