So you’ve made it through Pre-Calculus and are ready for the good stuff! Calculus is the Mathematics of change and used to model and understand many phenomena in the real world – from science and engineering to finance, economics and medicine – it’s difficult to find a field which doesn’t employ Calculus in some way. We start the Calculus 2 course with some key concepts before moving onto core and advanced integration techniques and applications. We then turn our attention to parametric & polar functions, and sequences & series.
This Course is For You
I created this course to help you master integral Calculus through clear instructional videos and relevant practice questions.
There are many reasons why you might want to take this course:
To learn Calculus 2 from scratch
For additional support if you're taking Calculus 2 in school or college
To help you prep for a Calculus 2 assessment
To review key Integration techniques
To access more than 300 relevant practice questions with full solutions
As prep for taking further Math, engineering or other courses
21 hours of instructional video!
Whatever your reason this course will help you build key skills quickly.
What You'll Take Away From This Course
Calculus 2 is a challenging course with a lot of content. But by mastering core techniques you'll be able to answer a wide variety of questions both in class and in the real-world. Each instructional video teaches one technique and mixes a small amount of theory with example problems. You will then practice what you've learnt in the end of section review exercise. I've also included step-by-step solutions so you can check your work as you go. Take this course and you will learn:
The foundations of integration - antiderivatives and Riemann sums
Core integration techniques - the Power Rule, Chain Rule and Trigonometric rules
Integration by Parts which extends the functions you can integrate
Advanced differentiation techniques such as improper integrals
Applications of derivatives such as finding areas under curves and volumes of revolution
Parametric and polar function and common applications
Sequences, series, and series convergence tests
Power series such as Taylor Series and Maclaurin Series