Is it possible as a 27 yr old to pick up math, physics and chemistry from where I left off (that is, high school - only studied them for 4 semesters in HS) given that I have a linguistics degree and it's been probably more than a decade since I opened a math book?
>>18184532
Idk how it works where you live, but where I live there are two options for students going into those subjects: those who studied it to a particular level in high school can skip a couple of classes, while those who didn't or did a long time ago can do a course to learn the basics first.
>>18184537
Is self teaching a viable option? Like doing online courses or buying school books?
>>18184542
Possibly? I don't know, it really depends on where you live and what school you go to
What level do you want to get at? If you want to surpass experts in the subject, then no. But if you want to bring yourself back to your prime self's superior mathematical knowledge and maybe go a bit beyond, you've still got time.
>>18184550
>>18184563
I work :^) and I was looking to change field to a more science related one.
But schools around here don't offer such classes, and attending incognito college classes is out of the question since the difficulty is high
And I didn't follow this path when young and went for something easy because of concentration problems which caused a great deal of frustration even though I was considered 'smart' and usually top of my class
tl;dr I fucked up my life