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So, I've survived all my math classes from elementary school through college (BS), but I've gotten through without understanding why I'm learning what I was being taught. I felt lost and still feel lost. I'm finding it difficult seeing the whole picture. I'm looking for a chart, map or list of some kind that shows the major areas of math and how they are related to each other. I think if I have something visual to look at I will have a better sense of how everything fits together. Also, it would be helpful if it described where that area of mathematics is applied. Do you know where I can find this? Or can you help me out and make one. Thanks! John
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I have wanted to make a big chart of K-12 math, with interconnecting lines, summary of main points and links to further reading.
I just havn't figured out a neat way to do it yet (coz it would be so big, and need maintaining)
"The physicists defer only to mathematicians, and the mathematicians defer only to God ..." - Leon M. Lederman
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Hi ccmint;
Welcome to the forum.
I don't think a human brain can ever understand math the way it is taught in school. That would be like trying to understand pro football by listening to a sportscaster's comments. Math is not a spectator sport. You have to do it to achieve any degree of understanding.
Last edited by bobbym (2009-11-06 12:07:44)
In mathematics, you don't understand things. You just get used to them.
If it ain't broke, fix it until it is.
Always satisfy the Prime Directive of getting the right answer above all else.
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Hi ccmint,
Welcome to the forum...
I agree with bobbym .... Math is like that
Even I would like to have chart like that ... I mean just to revise....
It will be really helpful i suppose...
"Let us realize that: the privilege to work is a gift, the power to work is a blessing, the love of work is success!"
- David O. McKay
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