Akebi-chan no Sailor Fuku - Vol. 15 Ch. 80.3 - Tamura Yori’s Christmas Eve

Dex-chan lover
Joined
May 1, 2023
Messages
296
??? That's junior high math. I'm not even Japanese and that's how I was taught in junior high.
??? Wdym junior high? Junior high is 12-15 y/o. When I was 15, I barely knew how to solve quadratic equations and learned about basic trigonometry. You want me to tell, that at age 15 at max, you were solving things that are taught in like most of Europe's unis?
Like, I'm chemistry major, not math, and to be honest, math isn't my nation "forte" in terms of how we were taught throughout our whole public education, but I still find it kinda hard to believe what you said.
 
Dex-chan lover
Joined
Feb 25, 2023
Messages
272
She can definitely make that work!

What the heck was this math problem. Do they really require that level of math from high schoolers? Like, I've had that kind of questions in my 2nd semester of mathematical analysis at tech uni, lol.
Buddy aren't you mixing it up ! This my countries 11th(Japanese Highschool 2nd year equivalent) class math !
Current me can't solve it though! Shame full as it is!
 
Dex-chan lover
Joined
May 1, 2023
Messages
296
She can definitely make that work!


Buddy aren't you mixing it up ! This my countries 11th(Japanese Highschool 2nd year equivalent) class math !
Current me can't solve it though! Shame full as it is!
No, I'm not mixing things up. In my country integrals are in curriculum only if you're taking advanced mathematics class, and only in the most basic form. At university I was learning from "The Chemistry Maths Book" by Erich Steiner. And as far as I know, most of universities of technology in Europe that had some kind of chemistry related fields, like chemical technology or chemical engineering, were using that same book. And boy, that question seems like it's straight from that very book if my mind is not failing me.
 
Dex-chan lover
Joined
Feb 25, 2023
Messages
272
No, I'm not mixing things up. In my country integrals are in curriculum only if you're taking advanced mathematics class, and only in the most basic form. At university I was learning from "The Chemistry Maths Book" by Erich Steiner. And as far as I know, most of universities of technology in Europe that had some kind of chemistry related fields, like chemical technology or chemical engineering, were using that same book. And boy, that question seems like it's straight from that very book if my mind is not failing me.
You made check my math syllabus!it will give me nightmares for few days! Yeah seems like it really was in my syllabus " 5th chapter Integration & Integral: Concept & uses" ! This and "probability" almost made me fail 12th my nightmares. You said it was in your college, most probably pretty in depth explanation then!(I also checked the book you mentioned)
 
Dex-chan lover
Joined
Dec 25, 2018
Messages
1,387
??? Wdym junior high? Junior high is 12-15 y/o. When I was 15, I barely knew how to solve quadratic equations and learned about basic trigonometry. You want me to tell, that at age 15 at max, you were solving things that are taught in like most of Europe's unis?
Like, I'm chemistry major, not math, and to be honest, math isn't my nation "forte" in terms of how we were taught throughout our whole public education, but I still find it kinda hard to believe what you said.

I'm not sure what you mean. For us here in Indonesia, trig was 1st grade junior high, limits and matrices 2nd, integrals 3rd. Quadratic eq was 5th grade elementary. Algebra is an elementary school subject. Also, everyone had to learn this. Kids weren't divided up into STEM vs. Humanities until high school proper. In HS, if you're Humanities, the math classes then got easier, but with a lot of statistics and probabilities. If you're STEM, you started learning diff-eq, statistics and probabilities, imaginary numbers and tensors. There was also a bit of stuff about series, number theory, and logic.

Edit: Oh also, logarithms was 6th grade elementary, so we were already playing with exponentials and natural logs in 1st grade junior high. It actually blew my mind how exponentials worked in differentials and integrals when we got to it.

I went to uni in the US, so I had to spend most of the first two years redoing all that stuff. What really bugged me was that we weren't allowed to do diff-eq out the door, because I could have cleared that in first year if they had allowed me to.
 
Last edited:
Resident Yuripig
Contributor
Joined
Feb 4, 2018
Messages
677
Ma'am, you're not just "making it work", you're CRUSHING it.
She's also good at math, so why's she single??? Good in mind and body.
Probably b/c she's in a small town teaching Junior High and also teaching cram school (of sorts) for high schoolers and she's busy with all that and probably doesn't get enough sleep just preparing for teaching and then the actual teaching. I'm guessing she doesn't get out much to even FIND anybody........
 
Dex-chan lover
Joined
Dec 25, 2018
Messages
1,387
Probably b/c she's in a small town teaching Junior High and also teaching cram school (of sorts) for high schoolers and she's busy with all that and probably doesn't get enough sleep just preparing for teaching and then the actual teaching. I'm guessing she doesn't get out much to even FIND anybody........

Roubai is a non-co-ed elite boarding school, not a cram school. It's in an isolated location and everyone in it is female. The teachers are just as isolated as the students and just as unable to socialize with men.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top