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I'm 30 now and had a similar math education to you. Gifted track in middle/HS yet no algebra until 9th grade. No Calculus at all (although AP Calc was one of four AP classes my school offered).

I did not major in CS so I've never taken a formal Calc class. If anyone has a good recommendation for a MOOC or similar for a working professional to learn Calculus I'd love to take it. Doesn't need to be free, would probably be more motivated to do well if it wasn't :)




MIT offers a three-part calc series over EDX which seems good: https://www.edx.org/course/calculus-1a-differentiation-mitx-...

Paul's notes (http://tutorial.math.lamar.edu/) is apparently a really good reference too.


Coursera has a class called Calculus One for people with no previous calculus experience and another called Single Variable Calculus for people who've been exposed to it once. Pick your difficulty and there's an optional certificate you can pay for. The latter was definitely one of the best MOOCs I've taken.



Do they actually call it a "gifted" track?!


Yes. What do they call it where you attended school?

In the US, the term used is "Gifted & Talented" (abbreviated to "GT"). So, you frequently see courses or tracks labelled "gifted", "GT", etc.

At the high-school level, the label frequently changes to "honors" or "advanced". And you will also see Advanced Placement (AP) and International Baccalaureate (IB) which are brand names for honors/advanced curriculums that often offer college credit with high marks on exams.


Oh that's really interesting! I went to school in the UK and they just divided it into numbered sets e.g Set 1 (top set) to Set 6 (bottom set). The US naming is an interesting affirmation of the child's difference from their peers - I've not heard of that sort of thing over here.




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