Calculus I Study Guide
How to work through Calculus I effectively — textbook, workflow, and supplementary resources.
Primary Textbook
OpenStax Calculus Volume 1 — free, peer-reviewed, university-level.
-
PDF download available from the same page
-
Covers Chapters 1-6 of this course structure
Study Workflow
For each section:
-
Read the textbook section actively — pencil and paper, not passive reading
-
Watch visual supplements for geometric intuition (3Blue1Brown Essence of Calculus)
-
Work through all textbook examples by hand before checking
-
Complete the practice problems in the section file
-
Write the Section Summary connecting concepts to prior knowledge
-
Record personal observations linking to engineering applications
Problem-Solving Methodology
For Every Problem
-
Read the problem statement twice
-
Identify what is given and what is asked
-
Choose the relevant technique (limit law, derivative rule, integration method)
-
Execute the computation step by step — show all work
-
Verify the answer: units check, sign check, reasonableness check
Common Verification Techniques
-
Derivatives: Differentiate your antiderivative to check integration
-
Limits: Plug in values approaching the limit to verify numerically
-
Optimization: Check endpoints and critical points; verify second derivative test
-
Related rates: Check units consistency at every step
Supplementary Resources
| Resource | Purpose | When to Use |
|---|---|---|
3Blue1Brown — Essence of Calculus |
Visual/geometric intuition |
Before or alongside each chapter |
Paul’s Online Math Notes |
Worked examples, practice problems |
When textbook examples are insufficient |
MIT OCW 18.01 |
Full university lectures |
For deeper conceptual understanding |
Desmos graphing calculator |
Visualize functions, limits, derivatives |
While working problems — see what the math looks like |
Time Estimates
| Chapter | Estimated Hours | Notes |
|---|---|---|
1: Functions & Graphs |
8-10 |
Review — move faster if pre-calc is solid |
2: Limits |
12-15 |
Foundation — do not rush epsilon-delta |
3: Derivatives |
18-22 |
Core mechanical skill — drill until automatic |
4: Applications |
20-25 |
Problem-solving intensive — hardest chapter |
5: Integration |
15-18 |
New concept — FTC is the key insight |
6: Applications of Integration |
12-15 |
Geometric visualization critical |
Total estimate: 85-105 hours
Principles
-
No calculator. Build computational fluency by hand.
-
Write everything. If you can’t explain it in writing, you don’t understand it.
-
Connect to engineering. Every concept has a real-world application — find it.
-
Epsilon-delta matters. The rigorous definition of limits is not optional. It is the foundation.
-
Drill derivatives. Differentiation must become automatic before tackling applications.