Neither of those are bad, from what I've heard. I haven't taken them, but 1F03 is basically a high-school course, and 1LS3 is applied very well, so you can approach the material from a "life sciences" perspective, from what I've heard. You don't need to be at all interested in math to do well in them.ain
In any case, 1F03 will contain a great deal of stuff you tackled in 1K - that is, the rules of differentiation and applications thereof. The analytic geometry part should be the only thing that's new to you (unless you took high-school physics), but that shouldn't be too bad either. 1LS3 will basically give you all the differential and integral calculus you would normally need for the life sciences (unless you end up going into biomathematics or something), so you'll review differentiation again before moving on to differential equations (equations that relate functions to their various derivatives), and solving these will introduce integration (in-practice) to you. The integration bit should be the most challenging part of 1LS.
Last edited by Mahratta : 12-21-2010 at 11:35 AM.
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