Jul
I'm incredibly horrible at mathematics, but I love personal. Is there any way I can get into the computer science field?
Answer:
My sister wasn’t good in math. She… I don't know what the hell she does, lol! One of those complicated tech/business based jobs. She did not finish her degree. She is the primary bread winner between her spouse and her, first woman in my family to be the primary bread winner, go sis!
My husband thought he was bad at math. I never made it out of pre-algebra. I have the ability to do nearly any math in my head superior and faster than him. However, when he went back to college, he found that he was the best in his class. He’d to take like, 3 or 4 really hard math classes, but he was top in his class… I couldn't get out of high school pre-algebra and I do nearly any math in my head… I know I already said it but I just have to repeat it because it sounds so odd.
My DH landed a job making 6 figures before he even finished college.
Work ethic, being at least enrolled in school, and your determination will do so much more that just being good at math. I suppose there are types of personal related jobs that need math, but even then, you'd be surprised what you can pick up on when your learning while working.
Enroll in school. Apply at a good company and accept a low level, entry level position to get in the door. Continue to exceed expectations, show interest in learning and moving up and… Well I’m a looser, but my husband and sister aren't and that’s how they did it.
Remember that a lot of money is in the business information management area. So great personal skills and a knack for business really trumps being a turd with a degree from a school that instructs math involving numbers that aren't really real…*(I think that’s called something like, Theoretical Math?? I dunno, but if 'r' not being a number confuses you, how are you gonna get theoretical math??) Actually, you'd be surprised. I aced my Honors Mathematical Logic course but couldn't do algebra… I can do it in my head but math teachers are all about showing all your work, and I'm not about that, lol.
Know anyone good at math? You can enroll in on line classes, just for math and maybe English 101 or something and then have that person come over and walk you through the class. If you get it by the time the final exam comes, then you know you can do it, but have math-phobia, which I believe most of us who say we’re bad at math actually have.
Go begin getting your experience! I've never seen anything work better for getting on track for a career than working and getting experience, doing well, showing interest and willingness, catching on fast, and then getting promoted…
Good luck.
Answer:
Sure, there are many areas in the personal field that don't require much math. Among them business programming, systems administration, data base administration, network administration and — of course — management
As to the question of how much math you will need to get a degree it depends on the program you choose. For example Temple University in Philadelphia had (and perhaps still has) two programs, one run by the math department and one by the school of business. The stipulations are quite different.
In terms of real work when you do encounter math problems what you need to know is how to solve them — using a personal. Then you let the personal do the math for you.
Answer:
Im horrible at math and im already taking courses for personal science
the mathematcis you do in computer science aren't complicated, they are mostly just addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division.
Unless you are trying to get into the aspect of robotics, or AI software technicians, then i would suggest that you stay away from the subject, otherwise you should go ahead and try it, i enjoy it, its fun, and its easy!
Answer:
I've worked with any number of computer programmers/software engineers over the years. Some were very good at math while others had a great deal of difficulty with it. Computer science is much more about problem solving than it is about math.
I'd suggest checking the CS curriculum at various colleges to see what the actual requirements are in terms of math courses.
Answer:
I dunno, for most CS degrees, you’ve to take at least 7 maths I think. Up to enjoy…..Real Analysis maybe? So you might want to try a different path.
Answer:
business-
http://hyparoffice.com/
Book Mark it-> del.icio.us | Reddit | Slashdot | Digg | Facebook | Technorati | Google | StumbleUpon | Window Live | Tailrank | Furl | Netscape | Yahoo | BlinkList