<p>My school has a collaboration with a community college, and during the first semester of our junior year we’ll take pre-calc., then on to Calc I. So, by following that, I’m pretty sure that by the end of my senior year, I’ll be in Calc III. Assuming this is so, what math course would I take in college? How are the math courses structured there?</p>
<p>At my college, after Calc 1-3, I took Differential Equations and Engineering Math. There are many courses such as statistics, linear algebra, etc, that are possible. </p>
<p>Your school will probably let you know what to take, and when you are in college you may have all math completed or not, depending on the degree program.</p>
<p>At my college, Calculus is the 100 level courses. Then you get into the actual college level math courses.</p>
<p>If ‘Calc II’ corresponds to Calculus BC, and ‘Calc 3’ corresponds to Multivariable Calculus, depending on how well you did in calc 3, you’ll probably either take calc 3 again in college or move up to the other courses, which are extremely varied. My college groups it into Algebra, Analysis, Applied, Geometry, and Statistics. (all past the multivariate calculus course)</p>
<p>if i only take math through trig in HS (9-algebra 1/2, 10-geometry, 11-Algebra 3/4, 12-trig/stats), what math do you think i will end up taking my first year in college?</p>
<p>Do you think that i should try and self study some calculus over the summer in order to start off in a college calc class? (btw I plan to major in chem)</p>