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Guest Johnny5g

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ok thanks! 

 

The Ti-89 Titanium I use was released in 2004... Just to give you an idea of how old we are talking. 

The next standard is going to be a Nspire CAS or newer.

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Ehh, 9th we did a lot of graphing. but I don't see the point in 7th. If they require one, they should probably give you one or let you use one like school supplied. 

ok thanks!

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CAS CX.

ok thanks!

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You don't need one for 7th grade lol

Maybe 9-10th grade. I didn't need one till 10th grade and a scientific did well till then. 

 

Don't buy an 89 now and expect it to still be modern by the time you need one for school and everyone has a CAS lol

It's funny my parents used ti-89's for their graduate studies. Calculator needs change extremely slowly. Most school/national standardized testing prohibits CAS calculators so getting a ti-89 titanium is never a bad idea. And honestly, it's as much as you will ever need. 

 

Imho there are some specfic casio models that are better and cheaper, but since everyone knows TI calculators it's way easier to get help using them than anything else.

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The Ti-89 Titanium I use was released in 2004... Just to give you an idea of how old we are talking. 

The next standard is going to be a Nspire CAS or newer.

ok thanks!

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what did you say?  :P

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Ehh, 9th we did a lot of graphing. but I don't see the point in 7th. If they require one, they should probably give you one or let you use one like school supplied. 

 

Most school/national standardized testing prohibits CAS calculators

 

My experiences are pretty similar.  They were provided by the school when I was in High School (my school was poor so we got Ti-83s) and in college, all of my math classes flat out prohibited them.  Not just during tests but we weren't allowed to bring them into the class during lectures (although you could still use them when doing homework because who on earth is going enforce that).

 

It's really not worth it to invest in one unless you have a legitimate real-world use for it.  You're better off waiting until you actually need one than to buy one in anticipation of eventually needing it.

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My experiences are pretty similar.  They were provided by the school when I was in High School (my school was poor so we got Ti-83s) and in college, all of my math classes flat out prohibited them.  Not just during tests but we weren't allowed to bring them into the class during lectures (although you could still use them when doing homework because who on earth is going enforce that).

 

It's really not worth it to invest in one unless you have a legitimate real-world use for it.  You're better off waiting until you actually need one than to buy one in anticipation of eventually needing it.

ok thanks!

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I got Casio CFX-9950GB PLUS. Which is from 2004 when I started what is close to college. But basicly for advanced mathematics and physics you want graphical calculator so you can verify functions.

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