Beginner to intermediate
A Calculus Roadmap: From Functions to Applications
A practical sequence for first-time calculus learners, connecting concepts, computation, and applications.
Start with the language of functions
Calculus does not start with derivative rules. It starts with functions, graphs, rates of change, and limits.
Before learning derivatives, make sure you can read linear, quadratic, exponential, logarithmic, and trigonometric graphs.
Use the sequence limits, derivatives, integrals, series
Limits describe approaching behavior, derivatives describe instantaneous change, integrals describe accumulation, and series describe infinite approximation.
Pair every rule with a graph and an application such as velocity, area, marginal cost, or probability density.
Practice deliberately
For each topic, solve concept questions, standard computations, and applied modeling problems.
When you miss a problem, record whether the error came from algebra, concept confusion, or notation.