leehuan
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- May 31, 2014
- Messages
- 5,805
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2015
Hopefully, this will be my only venting post.
It seems that there was a syllabus that was designed in around 2008 to be implemented. It looks more appealing than the current one, except for the absence of circular motion (which is just my bias anyway). Except, it was archived.
Differential equations seem much more useful today. On the contrary, I've only heard of a few uses for conics. Personally I'd rather learn something that would be more applicable to mathematics today. To varying extents, curve sketching also doesn't seem to be too useful. Varying translations etc. of curves are a nice tool to have, but we have graphing applications to produce a graph for us now. If we keep the "tools", then I get the feeling curve sketching could be made a smaller topic, and in return start squeezing something like matrices into the syllabus.
I have heard so many good things about matrices...
In my cohort's 3u class, we were discussing this with the teacher. Apparently the universities prevented the implementation of this syllabus, acclaiming the current one is still relevant today. Are they really just making the BOSTES set out a syllabus just for them?
It seems that there was a syllabus that was designed in around 2008 to be implemented. It looks more appealing than the current one, except for the absence of circular motion (which is just my bias anyway). Except, it was archived.
Differential equations seem much more useful today. On the contrary, I've only heard of a few uses for conics. Personally I'd rather learn something that would be more applicable to mathematics today. To varying extents, curve sketching also doesn't seem to be too useful. Varying translations etc. of curves are a nice tool to have, but we have graphing applications to produce a graph for us now. If we keep the "tools", then I get the feeling curve sketching could be made a smaller topic, and in return start squeezing something like matrices into the syllabus.
I have heard so many good things about matrices...
In my cohort's 3u class, we were discussing this with the teacher. Apparently the universities prevented the implementation of this syllabus, acclaiming the current one is still relevant today. Are they really just making the BOSTES set out a syllabus just for them?