The speaker really understand the essence of mathematics. It's nice to see someone else arrive at the same place I have. It's reassuring that I'm not just in my head when I think about things.
Actually, 3) try to predict what will happen 4.1) if you can check you got it right, congrats 4.2) if you can't (so, if you can check you got it wrong or if you can't check if you got right or wrong), go back to step 1), or 2), or 3).
When I was a toddler, I used to love count everything! From bottles at my grandfather's factory, to steps and train wagons. Every was about numbers to me. And it stayed so, until we moved to a small town and my parents divorced. After this, I fell behind everything and started having big gaps. I used to dream at being an astronomer when I was a kid, I still wish I had this chance. However, due to many reasons I fell behind and ended up not understanding maths at all! I used to love math, I still do! However, now it feels so hard and scary! I want to study data science, but the maths and statistics in it scare me! I wonder if ai can still fill enough of my gaps to do so. Thank you for the nice presentation!
So after watching this 10 minute video, where he repetitively states the importance of finding patterns and distinguishing similarities and differences is important in thinking mathematically, you don’t get anything? I’m seeing a pattern in your intelligence here…
The speaker really understand the essence of mathematics. It's nice to see someone else arrive at the same place I have. It's reassuring that I'm not just in my head when I think about things.
how would you describe a hyperbole to me then?
@@hunterkudo9832 too much bole.
1)Make connections
2)find patterns
3) predict what will happen next
Actually,
3) try to predict what will happen
4.1) if you can check you got it right, congrats
4.2) if you can't (so, if you can check you got it wrong or if you can't check if you got right or wrong), go back to step 1), or 2), or 3).
When I was a toddler, I used to love count everything! From bottles at my grandfather's factory, to steps and train wagons. Every was about numbers to me. And it stayed so, until we moved to a small town and my parents divorced. After this, I fell behind everything and started having big gaps. I used to dream at being an astronomer when I was a kid, I still wish I had this chance. However, due to many reasons I fell behind and ended up not understanding maths at all! I used to love math, I still do! However, now it feels so hard and scary! I want to study data science, but the maths and statistics in it scare me! I wonder if ai can still fill enough of my gaps to do so. Thank you for the nice presentation!
Hey lena
You can. You definitely can. Did you do?
Please could somebody explain the reasoning he uses to solve the problem at 9:29?
Why is this so underrated?
Because it is not that special.
TED why don't you SEO this video decently so it can improve humanity?
this video actually helped me to understand the operations im performing and now maths is good.
wow
only two comments
really informative!
I want to learn algebra can you please answer my questions
quite a lot of people here
Nope
Didn't understand anything. Rambling on about BS
So after watching this 10 minute video, where he repetitively states the importance of finding patterns and distinguishing similarities and differences is important in thinking mathematically, you don’t get anything? I’m seeing a pattern in your intelligence here…
@@GrandGourmand :v
@@GrandGourmand What does patterns have to do with anything? Patterns have nothing to do with doing math problems.
@@sneakerbabeful …have you not done basic algebra?
Yep.