Good news is, you pro ably dont have to pay for just 1 sit in. Many professors are happy to have sit ins here and there, but for every lecture maybe they will try to charge? But if they charge you, then they are obligated to give you credit which means actually accepting you into the school, I presume.
@@akhilrajj8261 no it's a four year degree but if you are a lazy it might take 7 years . Sleep and free time isn't available when you are doing this this degree . I'm only surviving because it's my passion and I love it sincerely . The point is it's very difficult but it's doable . Good luck I hope you enjoy like me .
@@Yahweh5995 this is very inspiring for me. I am currently reteaching myself math (had bad education) from Khan academy and have passed everything (and taken good notes) with a 99%-100% level from 2nd grade level math up to Algebra 2 (3/10ths). currently working part time and do not have a degree, but this is something I kind of want to do. I also taught myself some C programming language from CS50. Currently thinking about enrolling in community college soon. Is it feasible for me to go back to school and get an appllied mathematics degree? Your comment just gave me hope that I DEFINITELY NEEDED!
@@felixcamber4726 That's how it was for me too . I was a budding musician and hated school and Mathematics. I saw an interview by Steve Jobs and decided I'm going to be a Computer Scientist and Applied Mathematician I taught my self some math and c# programming and went back to University.
@@Yahweh5995 Lol same here! Except I was an aspiring visual artist! The way they taught in school was BS, but then I realized after looking at Erdos and Ramunujan and seeing the creators of the C language and from professor Malan from CS50 that math and computer science can be fun! Also, glad to see another follower of the lord. God bless you for your story and keep going! Its really inspiring me rn to go back to college for this. Keep chasing the dream and pray to the lord!
I attended his seminar for UMSA last quarter at UCLA, an absolutely fantastic presentation on geometry, topography, art, and society. The guy is passionate about what he's doing and extremely brilliant.
Well, a skillful speaker can make everything sound exciting. On the surface. But you don't really expect the dry maths to be that exciting or "flashy".
@@Elite7555 depends on what you find exciting, I personally find the proofs I construct about function spaces to be just as exciting and flashy as using partial differential equations and advanced numerical methods to model the evolution of a system of masses around a black hole over thousands of years. I understand this is not the case for everyone though. But both are essential, even to applied math.
@@samsmusichub Most people do so poorly in high school that they aren't prepared for college. At least there are more resources and stuff available these days, though.
I’m considering taking a course in applied mathematics with a masters degree in data science. But here’s the catch..Math gives me so much anxiety and I am so bad at algebra and statistics…
I know this is a late thread but I wanna say --- Being bad at math in middle/high school does not mean you can't learn it. A LOT of what gets taught in school is boring number crunching and formula memorizing.
Try reading Steven Strogatz' books like "The Joy of x". It really changed my perception of what math really should be taught like rather than the engineeringy practical side this prof in this video says is the past 20th century view of math
math doesn't give you anxiety. the anxious reaction is caused not by the math, but a context involving comprehension of math.maybe if you focus on the basics and work your way up, you can enjoy it. or maybe your not a stem person and you just don't enjoy conceptualizing quantities.
Stochastic complex, Real, Functional, and Harmonic analysis for Engineering and digital signal and image processing, and the list goes ON AND ON. Graph Theory for traffic flow and chemical architecture, etc.
Applied math is intuitive that's why I love it, in my literature class it's like someone's always trying to convince me to believe what they're saying. Math? just apply on the world and see if it works 😅
@@princesharming8693 I believe pure mathematics is more theory based. There are some parts of math that we aren’t able to apply to real world problems… Just yet 😉 eventually some bright mind individuals might just make a connection on some Mathematical concept that is just pure theory. But I guess you could say pure math as a whole is harder if you’re looking at it to cover all of mathematics. But generally those who study pure math don’t take differential equations which is used in physics and engineering but might take something like number theory instead which is heavily proofed based. So it really just comes down to personal preference on what you think is easier. I’m currently an undergrad math student so I might have this all wrong but l think I have the right idea. I would love to see a video about this topic though.
Engineers should use mathematics more. I'm a civil eng student and somehow I'm the only one liking maths and always into ways of applying it to model things. It's extremely powerful and the potentials it can be used to is insane
Mathematics is usually divided into two main camps: pure and applied. The difference between them is their end goals. Pure math is done for its own sake. Basically doing math for math's sake. Applied math is using math to create mathematical models of the real world. You can think of it this way: pure math is using math to solve math problems, whereas applied math is using math to solve real-world problems. However, this professor is giving us a new perspective. He is telling us that all of math you can imagine is applied math. He says that what was once considered to be only math for math's sake is now seeing applications in real-life settings, such as number theory (pure math) in encryption (applied math).
@@manofsteel9051when I googled " applied math" I think its where people study every type of math and can go into specific fields that are math heavy such as engineering etc.
Good afternoon sir , May I ask you some help in our thesis title, do you have any suggestion for our research title in Bsmath ? I'm hoping your positive response sir
Not all Mathematics are Applied in any field , Motivic Homotopy Theory is not anywhere , nor langlands program is used anywhere , nor perfectoid Spaces , K groups , prismatic cohomology , Grothendieck s whole work , Perelman s Proof , Reimann Surfaces , Delign Stacks . Kontesvich proof , Infinity Groupoids , Derived Algebraic Geometry and the deepest theme Motives and Motivic Cohomology and many other concepts etc.