11-09-2024, 06:12 PM
MrPanda,
This is where I got the two courses that were 2.67 semester credits each.
https://extension.ucr.edu/certificates/i...athematics
I took the courses 5 or so years ago when my old school district was covering the costs. MATH415 at UCR is what came in as MAT3610 at TESU.
I'd be really curious how they would count the linear algebra class at UCR. I have already started the one at Coopersmith, so I am not going to cough up the 600 bucks to find out. But since they counted the geometry class as 3610, they might just count linear algebra too.
On the Coopersmith linear algebra course I was relieved to see that they allow any calculator. The NSPIRE is like having a secret weapon!
I'd say that the Coopersmith Quantitative Analysis course is one of the cheapest ways to an UL MATH course. The History of Math (3010) course at TESU looks like a good option if you're going to do the 15 credit term. That's a class I would enjoy taking. Mathematical modeling (3510) looks cool too. TESU doesn't offer their UL math courses very often, so it could be tricky to get the ones you need at the same time. You can also get Stats 399 by doing the advanced SAS programming course at Coursera.
Cheers,
Tumbleweed
This is where I got the two courses that were 2.67 semester credits each.
https://extension.ucr.edu/certificates/i...athematics
I took the courses 5 or so years ago when my old school district was covering the costs. MATH415 at UCR is what came in as MAT3610 at TESU.
I'd be really curious how they would count the linear algebra class at UCR. I have already started the one at Coopersmith, so I am not going to cough up the 600 bucks to find out. But since they counted the geometry class as 3610, they might just count linear algebra too.
On the Coopersmith linear algebra course I was relieved to see that they allow any calculator. The NSPIRE is like having a secret weapon!
I'd say that the Coopersmith Quantitative Analysis course is one of the cheapest ways to an UL MATH course. The History of Math (3010) course at TESU looks like a good option if you're going to do the 15 credit term. That's a class I would enjoy taking. Mathematical modeling (3510) looks cool too. TESU doesn't offer their UL math courses very often, so it could be tricky to get the ones you need at the same time. You can also get Stats 399 by doing the advanced SAS programming course at Coursera.
Cheers,
Tumbleweed