multivariable calculus

<p>Hi!</p>

<p>I live near Glendale, and i want to take multivariable calculus, because I'll be finishing AP calc BC in my junior year. Where do I take such a class?</p>

<p>lol super bowl</p>

<p>Just do EPGY or CTY distance education.</p>

<p>Your best bet would be your local CC or local university; however, if you can't get transportation to a local CC or local university, definitely try distance education. Since you have exhausted your mathematics courses at your high school, see if you can get your high school to foot the bill. My school pays for every single online course I take, actually.</p>

<p>I was in the same situation as you in high school. I finished BC at the end of junior year, too. My HS only offered one math class that I hadn't taken (AP Stat), so I decided to take that. I thought of myself as more of a calculus person than a stat/prob kinda guy, but I absolutely loved that class. Now I'm a freshman in college, and I took multivariable first semester. That class *sucks<a href="imo">/I</a>. Not to discourage you, but if you do wind up taking it, be prepared to do ridiculous amounts of work trying to understand the material. Anyway, as Sligh mentioned, I'd recommend contacting any local universities or CCs. Good luck!</p>

<p>I don't know. Mutivariable Calc was just a rehash of single variable but applied multiple times. When taking partials, just hold one variable constant. When doing triple integrals just integrate in one variable first and then next variable and so on. The only hard part about the course is that you have to have good spatial visualization skills. Such as being able to see what the intersection of 2 cylinders looks like. </p>

<p>As for where you take the course, just take it at the local CC. Its cheap.</p>

<p>Is Cal III= to multivariable?</p>

<p>Usually. Calc1 is differentiation. Calc2 is integration and series. Calc3 is multivariable calc</p>

<p>Okay, thanks.</p>

<p>Thanks piccolojunior</p>

<p>In EPGY, i get 4 credits but i only get 1 credit in CTY.
Does it make a lot of difference? Normal high school classes are 5 credits.
Also, my counselor told me that if I take multivariable calculus, I would get four points even if I got an A because it is not an AP class. AP denotes that it's college level class, and shouldn't I get five points if I get an A in multivariable calculus?</p>

<p>credits vary from institution to institution. Dont stress over it.</p>

<p>At stanford EPGY and UCLA summer program/high school classes thing, I only get four credits. Does the four credits somehow transform themselves into five high school credits?</p>