I am looking for a good online video resource to start studying Calculus. I am studying it alone, not part of any school or university. Trying to learn and enhance my mathematical skills. Thanks!
migrated from mathematica.stackexchange.com Sep 6 '12 at 6:55
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I would suggest the following: http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/mathematics/18-01-single-variable-calculus-fall-2006/video-lectures/ I learned a lot from these lectures (not the ones in the link but the multivariable calculus ones) but these are just as good! |
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The Kahn Academy has many mathematics video courses. |
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You may find Adrian Banner's Calculus Lifesaver course useful. The series of 24+ videos are available at http://press.princeton.edu/video/banner/ and are also provided on the iTunes Store as Podcasts. The quality of the videos is variable, but the exposition is thorough, and his style is engaging. |
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The web site www.academicearth.org has a wide variety of entire courses in mathematics, especially in calculus (Not to mention history, philosophy, psychology, etc.). It's one of my favorite sites! |
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I found this I myself used Tom Apostol's Calculus volume 1.(I am not really an expert ) [MIT Open courseware] |
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Lectures from a calculus course taught by Edward Frenkel at UC Berkeley are available here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cw6pHhjhKmk. |
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I studies Single variable calculus from Thomas Finney and currently doing Multi-variable calculus from Kenneth Kuttler. NOTE: In Video lecture for Multi-variable Calculus by Edward Frenkel of UC berkeley, in the first lecture he is referring to an equation (function y=f(x)) and he says that there are 2 "independent" variables and 1 equation, so number of independent variables minus number of equations gives us the dimension. |
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Gilbert Strang's Highlights of Calculus videos are probably good. |
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Mathematicais a software tool – belisarius Sep 6 '12 at 6:52