Hard to pick trig substitution or partial fractions in Calc II integrals
#1
I'm a university student taking Calculus II, and while I understand the concepts in lecture, I'm really struggling with applying them to solve complex integration problems, especially those involving trigonometric substitution and partial fractions. I can follow the steps when they're shown, but I freeze up when I have to choose the right technique on my own during exams. For students who have overcome this hurdle, what was your approach to developing problem-solving intuition? Are there specific resources or practice strategies you used to get better at recognizing which method to apply to a given integral, and how do you efficiently check your work for subtle algebraic errors that can derail the entire solution?
Reply
#2
Practice is king here. Build a tiny decision tree for choosing technique and keep it visible while you work.
Reply
#3
I rely on pattern recognition. For trig substitutions, ask: does the integrand have a sqrt(a^2 - x^2) or sqrt(a^2 + x^2)? That cues the substitution. For partial fractions, check the denominator factoring and whether the derivative of the numerator resembles a denominator factor. Keep a mental map of standard templates.
Reply
#4
Develop intuition by solving many problems in different contexts, then 'teach back' what you did. After solving, write a one-paragraph justification for why you chose a method, and verify by differentiating the antiderivative. Create a checklist: 1) identify the inside pattern, 2) choose substitution, 3) simplify, 4) check by differentiation, 5) inspect for algebra slips. Keep a running list of common pitfalls (sign errors, missing constants, forgetting the chain rule in substitutions).
Reply
#5
Practice plan: two weeks, start with 20 problems focusing on each technique; three sets for trig substitution, three for partial fractions, and a mixed weekly quiz. Use Paul's Online Math Notes sections, MIT OCW problem sets, and supplement with spaced-review flashcards. Maintain a mistakes log and solve under exam-like time constraints; avoid over-reliance on CAS.
Reply
#6
Would you like me to tailor a 1- or 2-week intensive practice pack around your current difficulties (e.g., more trig substitution vs partial fractions) and include a categorized problem list and resources?
Reply


[-]
Quick Reply
Message
Type your reply to this message here.

Image Verification
Please enter the text contained within the image into the text box below it. This process is used to prevent automated spam bots.
Image Verification
(case insensitive)

Forum Jump: