It's good to have found a thread like this on Google. I haven't found much information or advice from people who have taken this test on the Internet at all.
I've got tons and tons of resources. I'm particularly fond of the Math Tutor (Calculus) that was suggested in this thread, which I bought. I have learned from his lectures and don't get too bored of watching his videos. I've seen some books mentioned here, which I've went out and bought as well.
After Christmas I went and bought the Calculus for Dummies set w/included workbook and the Humongous Book of Calculus Problems. I skipped most of the preliminary stuff because last semester I had taken college Pre-Calculus and Trigonometry courses. I've gotten along somewhat with the derivatives section because it's mostly just reading and not doing. The concepts seem simple enough. I haven't gone through the workbook yet.
I learned limits from Thomas and Finney's 9th Edition Calculus. It taught you about delta-epsilon as well, which I've mastered. Today I ordered online REA's CLEP Calculus and Barron's AP Calculus (2008) for problems and a way to condense what I learn so what I actually learn is for the test. I have tons of Calculus books. I just don't know exactly if I'm learning all I should. I'm on a schedule where I study 8 hours a day of Calculus, so that I can prepare well for the examination. I've never taken Calculus before at the high school level, so I've been learning these concepts for the first time. It's not too hard to get along. I've briefly touched integration right now in the Math Calculus Tutor's DVD's, but I'm still wanting to keep working on derivatives until I feel as if I've mastered them.
I've got tons and tons of resources. I'm particularly fond of the Math Tutor (Calculus) that was suggested in this thread, which I bought. I have learned from his lectures and don't get too bored of watching his videos. I've seen some books mentioned here, which I've went out and bought as well.
After Christmas I went and bought the Calculus for Dummies set w/included workbook and the Humongous Book of Calculus Problems. I skipped most of the preliminary stuff because last semester I had taken college Pre-Calculus and Trigonometry courses. I've gotten along somewhat with the derivatives section because it's mostly just reading and not doing. The concepts seem simple enough. I haven't gone through the workbook yet.
I learned limits from Thomas and Finney's 9th Edition Calculus. It taught you about delta-epsilon as well, which I've mastered. Today I ordered online REA's CLEP Calculus and Barron's AP Calculus (2008) for problems and a way to condense what I learn so what I actually learn is for the test. I have tons of Calculus books. I just don't know exactly if I'm learning all I should. I'm on a schedule where I study 8 hours a day of Calculus, so that I can prepare well for the examination. I've never taken Calculus before at the high school level, so I've been learning these concepts for the first time. It's not too hard to get along. I've briefly touched integration right now in the Math Calculus Tutor's DVD's, but I'm still wanting to keep working on derivatives until I feel as if I've mastered them.


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