Bullshit, HSC eco has basically no mathseconomics i hard, maths is in alot of it its just a terribly hard subject to grasp your either good at itor not.
The HSC Economics course is absolutely basic, and as long as you have a vague sense of logic it will be simple. It contains almost no maths, but doing General Maths is advisable, as there is some equation balancing and applied algebraeconomics i hard, maths is in alot of it its just a terribly hard subject to grasp your either good at itor not.
Pray tell, where are these? I remember nothing of them in Economics.Wow. I find Economics easy, but a lot of people in my class find it disgustingly difficult. It also has quite a lot of maths, so far I've learnt stuff that requires differential calculus, as well as limits. The theory is not difficult per se, but applying it can be if you're not prepared for it. Id' advise that you have a decent maths base. Economics really helps explain a lot of what goes on in the world. it allows you to understand a lot of stuff better, and know stuff about the world you didnt know before. well that's my experience anyway.
lol.Differential Calculus - Price Elasticity of Demand, Cross Elasticity, Income Elasticity. Also involved in calculation of MPC and MPS. All involve some variant of dy/dx.
Limits - The maximum amount of income is the limiting sum of the multiplier coefficient k and dY (change in income).
Also i forgot to add I've used basic co-ordinate geometry in Keynesian Cross Diagrams and locating inflationary/deflationary gaps.
This is what I have learnt in Prelim Economics that involves maths after about a term.
If i picked Economics for year 11 and 12 (im in yr 10 atm).
What stuff do you learn?
Do i need a strong maths base?
Thanks =)
It's prelim for me atm. All my teacher has done is taken the basic Prelim course and jacked up the difficulty to Uni level in order to challenge the minds of James Ruse kids. This way, once HSC rolls around everything is dead easy. Also he's told us many times to not worry if we don't get it, as it's Uni level Economics.lol.
I don't think your teacher has actually taught you anything that's in the syllabus or will ever be touched upon in the HSC exam. We never learnt all that crap. Unless you guys have a different syllabus, which is unlikely, as I only did mine last year.
Fair enough, but perhaps you should've explained that because of this all that differentiation and maths isn't actually a part of the economics course. To do well you need to know very little maths...It's basically using a calculator, at least so far. You scared me there.It's prelim for me atm. All my teacher has done is taken the basic Prelim course and jacked up the difficulty to Uni level in order to challenge the minds of James Ruse kids. This way, once HSC rolls around everything is dead easy. Also he's told us many times to not worry if we don't get it, as it's Uni level Economics.
If i picked Economics for year 11 and 12 (im in yr 10 atm).
What stuff do you learn?
Do i need a strong maths base?
Thanks =)
Differential Calculus - Price Elasticity of Demand, Cross Elasticity, Income Elasticity. Also involved in calculation of MPC and MPS. All involve some variant of dy/dx.
Limits - The maximum amount of income is the limiting sum of the multiplier coefficient k and dY (change in income).
Also i forgot to add I've used basic co-ordinate geometry in Keynesian Cross Diagrams and locating inflationary/deflationary gaps.
This is what I have learnt in Prelim Economics that involves maths after about a term.
lol.
I don't think your teacher has actually taught you anything that's in the syllabus or will ever be touched upon in the HSC exam. We never learnt all that crap. Unless you guys have a different syllabus, which is unlikely, as I only did mine last year.
Actually, after doing it in uni last week, I remembered that Northey did actually teach us the elasticity formula and use. But it was never examined by either her or the Board. She should change that.We got taught pretty basic stuff - I can't have expected Northey to understand the deeper principles, let alone teach them to us.
I wouldn't say economics is dry at all. I've learnt much more I can take away and apply to the real world than I could from Modern History (which I also enjoy).Hi,
Economics involves a lot of wrote learning and summarising, and is basically a hyped up version of accounting or business management. There is no maths involved in VCE 1/2. We are currently studying various markets and also demand and supply graphs. If I could say one thing, that is, don't do it. It's extremely dry, and requires virtually no maths. It is basically trying to apply rules to something that changes everday-it is not an exact science like physics or chemistry and can be quite wishy-washy. I would think it would be better to do something like 20th century history as an alternative humanities.