Derivatives, both ordinary and partial, appear often in my mathematics courses. However, my teachers have never really given a good example of why the derivative is useful. My questions:
Other than the usual instantaneous rate of change, what are some common uses of the derivative?
What does the partial derivative tell us? And what does the total derivative tell us?
I find that often times, the derivative is simply explained as "the instantaneous rate of change".
I am thinking about switching my major, because the applications of math at such an elementary level seem trivial when professors just push symbols and don't have any real world motivation included in their lectures.
P.S. This question is not a duplicate of Why do we differentiate? I do not want to know why we differentiate. I want to know why it is important past our undergraduate learning. What are the applications beyond Calculus 3? Beyond academia, what makes the derivative important in complex situations?
The derivative has many important applications both from elementary calculus, to multivariate calculus, and far beyond.
The derivative does explain the instantaneous rate of change, but further derivatives can tell the acceleration amongst other things.
With optimization, the derivative can tell us where the best place to sit in a room is, if the room is filling up with smoke, and at what time it is the best to sit there. The derivative can help with many optimization problems.
The partial derivative tells us the direction of variables at a given time and the total derivative tells us where the slope increases the most and where. This is one way we can optimize in $\mathbb{R}^3$. The derivative can be applied to water flow and generally tells us much about how things change with respect to another variable.
The derivative further can help in industry with economics, healthcare, engineering (especially), and many other things. Business has many applications as well. Your professor might not have time to delve into these applications as much as you would like because it is a calculus class, not an "application of the derivative" class. Although, he should definitely discuss these issues at some point. I have had some professors in my time who glossed over such subjects, but in multivariable calculus, they go way more in depth with them. I don't suggest switching your major without speaking directly with your professor about your difficulties.
If you have further questions, I encourage you to ask your professor in office hours the same exact question and voice your concerns there. A good professor will encourage and motivate your learning outside of the classroom if you show initiative and ask.