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jcurto
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Hi, although I discovered this forum some time ago, this is my first post, so Hello!. I just want a bit of advice. I'm an spanish student, and I'm on my first year of telecommunications engineering (I'm 18 years). For what I've been reading, it's quite simmilar to your electric engineering. The educational system here is really different, you have to choose what you want to study at the first beginning, no gpa,... Well, the fact is that I'm starting to hate university a bit, let me explain it. Till the end of high school It did not concern me the fact we just did cookbook approach. I said myself so many times: when i'll enter university it will change. But here I am, and all remains the same. My first year is divided into two periods of four months each one. I did well on the first, where I was taught "calculus", algebra, lineal circuits, c programming and elemental physics. But another time, all calculus I did, was just using formulas, no thinking and at all, the same happens with physics and algebra. The fact is that we haven't done any real maths. Likewise, we do quite a lot of labs, but it works the same way, you have to hurry to finish on time, without really learning anything, with no time to real experimenting. And now, on my second half of the year, I'm doing vector calculus, differential equations, digital systems, circuits and physics (elecricity and magnetism). (Another big difference here is that profs don't use a book, the majority just rely on her notes, they recommend some (awful) books the first day, but they do not follow anyone). The fact is that I'm sure that just passing the exams is not my goal, i want to really learn, and i say it fully hearted. Some time ago I left my confidence and motivation, but then I come across physics forums and i recovered my faith on maths and physics as I saw other people struggling with the same problems. For that reason, i 've tried to find a solution, I've search the best books books for self-study I've been able: in amazon and here, in the forum, and I've found some interesting that please me ("ordinary differential equations" by Morris tenenbaum, "Physics for scientists and engineers" by Serway, Digital Systems: Principles and Applications by Ronald Tocci, I'm also trying to get a copy of "div, grad, curl and all that" by Schey...), but the truth is that as i want to understand the concepts that in class simply use, I'm falling behind of my classmates (they thing that just passing is the important, but that's not my goal), and I'm getting a bit nervous. I don't know if I'm doing right. But the truth is that when i read those books, i really enjoy myself, i find that that's the way it must be done, but when I'm in class, i feel a bit angry: they just put the formulas, no insights into, no applications, I end up tired of 6 hours of classes and i arrive home just willing to continue with the books. Moreover, I'm not the class learner type, so I'm not able to learn anything till i face up alone at home. So, i want to go to class, but I'm beggining to hate it, and i don't know what to do. Please give me some advice.
Thanks to all (it helps a lot to find a place where people talk in a vivid way of maths, physics, engineering, it really makes me feel better)!
(Sorry for my english, I'm trying to improve it)
Jcurto
Thanks to all (it helps a lot to find a place where people talk in a vivid way of maths, physics, engineering, it really makes me feel better)!
(Sorry for my english, I'm trying to improve it)
Jcurto