100PERCENT
Yes, physics is important for a pediatrician. It is important as medical schools require a year of physics before enrollment.
"In a class of 150 students 70 passed in physics and 90 passed in statistics10 failed in both the subjectsThen what percentage of students who passed in atleast one subject failed only in statistic?" OPtions: A. 70 B. 35 C. 280 D. 40
topics for physics project
80
fourteen students offers physics only.
The Muslim students learn the Qur'an, Physics, Chemistry, Maths, Computer Science, History, Social Sciences, English, Urdu, Arabic, Islamic Studies, at schools.
Since 6 students like neither, 21 students like math, and 2 students like physics, then only one student likes both math and physics (30 - 29).
problem solving is one of the students problem in physics.
Show them what its all about. Make it interesting.
I got accepted for Fall 2010. These are the classes I took in my last 2 years: American History (Honors) English IV (Honors) Physics Chemistry AP Macroeconomics (3) AP Language/Comp (4) Sociology (Dual-enrollment) Religion (Dual-enrollment) Speech (Dual-enrollment) International Relations (Dual-enrollment) US Government (Dual-enrollment) Precalculus (Dual-enrollment) Trigonometry (Dual-enrollment) When I submitted my transcript to UF my GPA was 4.0 (unweighted) and 4.25 (weighted). I scored 1410/2110 on the SAT (730 Math, 680 Reading, 700 Writing). These aren't the best stats or the strongest courseload, but I think the 1 year of Dual Enrollment and the SAT score are what helped me the most.
No, but you can use physics to show students practical applications to the math that they are learning
I think you should learn grammar before you try to leearn physics.