<p>Have you heard of the mnemonic "All Students Take Calculus?" It's suppose to help you memorize which trignometric function is positive in which quadrant. So "All" is positive in the first quadrant. "Sine" is positive in second quadrant, and so on. I was wonder if you know of any other mnemonics for this? Perhaps a different sentence.</p>
<p>iv always just rememberd CAST, i never thought to further complicate the issue</p>
<p>Yeah... in precalc this year the teacher told us "All Students Take Calculus", but I never think of that one. I prefer "Any Silly Tiger Can", which I learned last year in Trig. haha</p>
<p>All Students Take Calculus is the one I use. :)</p>
<p>A couple weeks ago the guys sitting behind me in math were thinking of all these off-the-wall ones... haha</p>
<p>What does that mean the All Students Take Calculus? I took pre-calc and we never learned that. We learned, of course SOH CAH TOA and in chem the Brian Helps Claire Find Out New Ideas.</p>
<p>"All Students Take Calculus" helps you remember A-S-T-C, All-Sine-Tangent-Cosine. Angles in Quadrant 1 have All trig functions positive (sin, cos, and tan). Angles in Quadrant 2 have a positive Sine. Angles in Quadrant 3 have a positive Tangent. Angles in Quadrant 4 have a positive Cosine.</p>
<p>Does that make sense?</p>
<p>"Yeah... in precalc this year the teacher told us "All Students Take Calculus", but I never think of that one. I prefer "Any Silly Tiger Can", which I learned last year in Trig. haha"</p>
<p>"Any Silly Tiger Can" is someone difficult to say. Don't you guys think?</p>
<p>I don't even think "all students" do this or "any tiger" does that. I'm fine with "ASTC".</p>
<p>In my alg II/Trig class, my teacher was like, "You can see it as All Students Take Calculus, or you can be weird and read it as "ACTS" if you want to read in a circle."</p>
<p>I use "All students take calculus," but the PR book uses "All silver tea cups," which for some reason ****es me off.</p>
<p>"'Any Silly Tiger Can' is someone difficult to say. Don't you guys think?"</p>
<p>XD, I don't think so. Besides, you don't have to say it; you just have to think it.</p>
<p>My school taught us the calculus one and this one:</p>
<p>All Cardozo Teachers Suck.</p>
<p>^ our rival school.</p>
<p>Or you could look at the unit cirlce and figure it out... you know like in real math.</p>
<p>A Silly Tacti*C*.</p>
<p>I was taught the All Students Take Calculus one though.</p>
<p>All students take crack?</p>
<p>Swear to god someone in my class suggested this when the teacher brought it up in precalc... lol</p>
<p>Well, if it works... lol</p>
<p>"Or you could look at the unit cirlce and figure it out... you know like in real math."</p>
<p>That's no fun at all! XD</p>
<p>And "all students take crack"... that's pretty good :D</p>
<p>Well, I live in the NY Capital District, so I use Albany-Schenectady-Troy-Cohoes, but most people use All Students Take Calculus.</p>
<p>CHO SHA CAO for inverse trig.</p>
<p>CHO could be Cotangent! CAO could be cosecant! Incredibly confusing. I just use SOH CAH TOA and flip around the one whose inverse is needed.</p>