It depends on the type of IP you want to work in. Copyright and trademark tend to be oriented toward the humanities, but someone with a math degree would fit in as a patent examiner.
Isn't it E=mc2
Many careers which require analytical thought will be a good fit for someone with a math degree. More particularly, jobs in finance, accounting, statistics, science, and, of course, academic research careers in math, will use a math degree.
I highly doubt if you need to be good in math to have a sports marketing degree. Here is a site that can help out in explaining: http://sportscareers.about.com/od/educationtraining/a/sptedrqure.htm
good in science and math. Also a masters and bachloar degree with 3 years in a bsc degree
Become a math teacher
nothing
They are the associative property, distributive property and the commutative property.
the zero property in math is when you multiply by zero which is the multiplicative property of zero or it is when you add zero to anything and get zero that is called the additive property of zero
Distributive property
Identity property of multiplication.
Usually a 5 year Bachelors of Science degree. Heavy on math and physicis. If you have the interest it is a good degree to seek. It will open many employment opportunities for you. Good luck.
He is good at math