When doing a comparison to petrol for math coursework you could compare the cost of petrol energy to the cost of electrical energy. For instance, camparing operating cost of a vehicle that runs on petrol verses a vehicle that runs on electric energy.
Yes, you will have to inquire about any prerequisite coursework required.
Most schools do the modular ( no coursework ) course. Module 1 Module 3 Module 5 These are the only modules remaining as the ones in between were coursework.
to measure land, and account for product and prices in purchase and sale
I think it depends on the course you are doing but I am on my second year of btch national certificate in applied science and on the first year there was a maths class but it's easy, the teachers really are there to help you and for us, there are no exams just coursework.
we do make project for all subjects all classes at nominal prices.
Yes you use math for flips and picking prices and speeds of the skateboards
It really depends on how old the coursework is. There are some subject areas that remain constant. For example the maths, physics, etc., while there have been advances in technology that required either change in existing coursework or new technology and methodology added to the curriculum.
It was 4 years ago... i got 33/40 on it and remember basically doing all the graphs i knew about (histogram, culmulative frequency graph, pie charts, box and whisker diagrams etc) just make sure you use them in the correct situation. Ive also heard it's pretty much impossible to get 40/40 unless you use original data... good luck
always compare maths with with your life. Then it will be easy to understand. Dependant means depend on something. As u depend on ur dad for money problem same in case of maths. When some value is depend on other for its solution. Then that value is dependant value.
Well you are always ringing up prices and sometimes you have to add them in your head if the till does not work. So yes, you do need maths to be a cashier.
if you put ... on your paper you'll get 10 extra credit points!
Some of the many examples are calculating tax, discounts/sale prices, interest, gratuities (tips), grades, pay increases.