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Post by Deleted on Dec 30, 2017 9:48:35 GMT
You might find this useful for the kids Physics
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Post by MartinT on Dec 30, 2017 11:33:43 GMT
Thanks, Colin.
There are some good ones there.
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Post by dsjr on Dec 30, 2017 12:00:51 GMT
One of my life regrets is a total inability with any maths over basic numeracy level. Equations terrify the pants off me....
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Post by Deleted on Dec 30, 2017 16:33:38 GMT
I love them and combine them to solve problems, but compared to my son I am a dunce, Here to you Dr. Scott Harrison Musgrave-Wonfor PhD Maths, Happy New Year.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 30, 2017 18:51:53 GMT
One of my life regrets is a total inability with any maths over basic numeracy level. Equations terrify the pants off me.... Yeh but General Electronics is built over a standardised set of Equations that have never really changed.
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Post by Barrington on Dec 31, 2017 9:08:38 GMT
I was good at Maths but hated physics with a passion , quite liked chemistry , never did biology but would have loved to . We were all geared to engineering type jobs so things like art , music , cooking ,languages and biology were dropped .
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Post by Deleted on Dec 31, 2017 9:11:35 GMT
Chemistry was my passion but after my first job in chemistry I noticed my boss had fingers missing along with one eye, that is when I decided to move on to a safe job.
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Post by MartinT on Dec 31, 2017 10:40:14 GMT
Physics at A level was my best subject, followed by Electronics at university.
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Post by Chris on Dec 31, 2017 12:11:21 GMT
Might as well be Swahili to me
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Post by Deleted on Dec 31, 2017 12:27:39 GMT
Might as well be Swahili to me Think I’d understand Swahili better to be honest
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Post by MartinT on Dec 31, 2017 13:00:36 GMT
I struggle with Literature and languages. We all have our failings!
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Post by Slinger on Dec 31, 2017 14:01:36 GMT
When it came to choosing my O level subjects I kept up physics and biology and dropped chemistry as we were only allowed two pure science subjects. When we took the end of term exams and I scored 93% in chemistry. DOH! Of course, in those days we had to chisel our answers into stone tablets and share the class abacus.
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Post by MartinT on Dec 31, 2017 14:18:05 GMT
Blackboards, not whiteboards!
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Post by Chris on Dec 31, 2017 15:56:56 GMT
Yes. Racial equality and all that.
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Post by Chris on Dec 31, 2017 15:57:16 GMT
Oh wait
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Post by Chris on Dec 31, 2017 15:57:33 GMT
Damn I'm confused now
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Post by Slinger on Dec 31, 2017 16:09:34 GMT
Blackboards, not whiteboards! Do you mean chalkboards a.k.a. greenboards? The others would obviously be 'erasable marker boards' now.
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Post by MikeMusic on Jan 1, 2018 16:40:44 GMT
All Greek to me now.
Was a demon on pure maths, brilliant teacher. Grade 1 O level at 15 Applied Maths lost me - crap teacher. Physics somewhere inbetween
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Post by Deleted on Jan 1, 2018 16:57:38 GMT
Yes I believe a lot of good learning depends on how the teacher react with the student, I was lucky with Maths Chemistry and Physic but shit with English History and Art/woodwork/metalwork and geography and I missed out on kissing girls also.
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Post by MartinT on Jan 1, 2018 17:14:43 GMT
I had great pure and applied Maths teachers, Physics teacher and a superb Chemistry teacher.
I had rubbish English, History and French teachers and an appalling Geography teacher who just read out of a book from start to end of the lesson.
EDIT: kissing girls was entirely self-taught.
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