- Mar 31, 2003
- 11,679
- 0
- 81
So I got a TI-89 Titanium in my Junior year of HS to use. Occasionally they would let us use calculators on tests. Senior year the same deal. I can understand that as they don't want us simply using the calculator as a crutch.
College of Engineering REQUIRES a TI-89 or equivalent calculator. Excited that I will finally be able to use it in college I am sorely mistaken. We still can't use the f***ing things. Not on HW not on tests NOTHING. Why order us to buy these things and then not let us use it. We are building off of skills we have learned at this point- why do I have to show over and over again that I can graph complex functions that take ~10 minutes while I can graph it on a Calculator in a few seconds.
I know they don't want us to use it as a crutch, but if they are going to make us buy the damn things LET US USE IT ONCE!!
As confident I am in math this is just starting to get old. When I get into Sophomore, or Junior or Senior or Graduate level courses will I finally be able to use this thing!?!?!?!?
-Kevin
(Test is on Solids of Revolution, Area of Solids (etc...) Essentially, stupidly hard to graph x^2+sqrt(x)+1/2x^3 or something without it.
College of Engineering REQUIRES a TI-89 or equivalent calculator. Excited that I will finally be able to use it in college I am sorely mistaken. We still can't use the f***ing things. Not on HW not on tests NOTHING. Why order us to buy these things and then not let us use it. We are building off of skills we have learned at this point- why do I have to show over and over again that I can graph complex functions that take ~10 minutes while I can graph it on a Calculator in a few seconds.
I know they don't want us to use it as a crutch, but if they are going to make us buy the damn things LET US USE IT ONCE!!
As confident I am in math this is just starting to get old. When I get into Sophomore, or Junior or Senior or Graduate level courses will I finally be able to use this thing!?!?!?!?
-Kevin
(Test is on Solids of Revolution, Area of Solids (etc...) Essentially, stupidly hard to graph x^2+sqrt(x)+1/2x^3 or something without it.
