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11th Grade Math

11th Grade Math Students embarking on their junior year of high school will find that the course work is more advanced than any they have tackled previously. Students also may discover that the expectations they must live up to in math are exceptionally high. It is expected by this year of school that students have mastered much of the skills needed in math. Juniors have a variety of math classes to choose from, and they will be expected to apply what they know from previous math classes to keep up in each of them. Algebra One of the most common classes that juniors have in high school is algebra. Depending on how advanced a student's math education has gotten, he may take algebra I or algebra II. Most students in 11th grade take algebra I. While students may have taken algebra in the past, the junior-year algebra class teaches students more than they have learned previously. In this class students learn such things as linear equations and inequalities, radical equations and inequalities and quadratic functions and equations.

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Geometry Another standard math class for the 11th grader is geometry. This is a more advanced level of the work students may already have been studying in math class since elementary school. Much of these geometry lessons still involve shapes, angles and properties. However, 11th-grade geometry involves quite a bit more than that as well. Students are taught such things as logical reasoning, formal and informal proofs, basic constructions and parabolic functions. Along with this comes much more work with triangles, angles, circles and polygons. Trigonometry One of the harder classes a high school junior may face in math is trigonometry. With lessons like graphing functions, trigonometric functions and complex numbers in polar form, students are expected to already know the basic math skills needed to complete these tasks. Trigonometry is an advanced form of the geometry juniors are already familiar with. The biggest difference between the two is that trigonometry measures angles where geometry does not. Pre-calculus Aside from the prerequisite class to taking calculus, the junior-year pre-calculus course takes what students have learned in algebra and expands upon it while at the same time introducing what they will learn in calculus. Pre-calculus students study things such as the law of sines and cosines, vectors, functions and operations and sequences and series.

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Equations Algebraic Equations (8th Grade), First Degree Linear Equations (8th Grade), Fractional Equations (6th Grade), Polynomial Equations (8th Grade), Quadratic Equations (8th Grade), Linear Equations (7th Grade), Solving Equations (8th Grade), Absolute Value Equations (8th Grade), Addition Equations (5th Grade), Subtraction Equations (5th Grade), Multiplication Equations (5th Grade), Division Equations (5th Grade), Multi-Step Equations (8th Grade), Radical Equations (11th Grade), Circle Equation (7th Grade), Logarithmic Equations (11th Grade), Systems Of Equations (9th Grade), Line Equations (8th Grade), Rate Equations (7th Grade), Literal Equations (8th Grade), Rational Equations (11th Grade), Graphing Equations (6th Grade), Parametric Equations (11th Grade), Factoring Equations, Trigonometric Equations (11th Grade), Differential Equations (11th Grade)

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