. I was born in a family in which my parents are famer who live in a rural area in my country, and my country doesn't speak English or teaching by English. However, thanks to the internet has bring so great information for me and i want to send a great thankful to you teacher Eddie for uploaded free lessons to help every students like me and other can access these knowledge and can understand easily.
I'm pretty sure there isnt any proof for learning styles (so dont depend upon them to much). But I completely agree with you, he provides us with a deeper understanding of maths.
He is brilliant! Such clear explanations, infectious enthusiasm and great class control to boot! If only all maths teachers were as great as he is - tg for You Tube allowing him to go global
I really appreciate how you cover the intuition behind various formulas before having your students use them. So much of what I have been taught over the years has been formula memorization, to which from watching your videos I can somewhat have an intuitive sense of the formulas. I think this allows for a deeper understanding of the math and actually makes it more enjoyable, so thank you very much for what you are doing!
Despite having learned this a few years ago, I still love the way he explains things! Great video, and keep up the great work, you'll inspire many to pursue Math!
You could also say that y splits the kite/rhombus into two triangles with perpendicular heights of 1/2(x) - the area of each triangle would be 1/2[1/2(xy)], so the area of the kite/rhombus would be double that, or just 1/2(xy).
either my teacher in the 6th or the 7th grade skipped this, or i simply don't remember them, it's fun to try to come up with different ways to find the area and get to the same formulae, great video
I think an interesting application here is that since a square is a type of rhombus, if you only know the length of the diagonal, you can use this formula directly to find the area, rather than having to use Pytharogas to find the side length and then square the side length.
. I was born in a family in which my parents are famer who live in a rural area in my country, and my country doesn't speak English or teaching by English. However, thanks to the internet has bring so great information for me and i want to send a great thankful to you teacher Eddie for uploaded free lessons to help every students like me and other can access these knowledge and can understand easily.
I love how thorough this teacher is with his explaining, this is exactly what an audio learner needs.
I'm pretty sure there isnt any proof for learning styles (so dont depend upon them to much). But I completely agree with you, he provides us with a deeper understanding of maths.
He is brilliant! Such clear explanations, infectious enthusiasm and great class control to boot! If only all maths teachers were as great as he is - tg for You Tube allowing him to go global
I really appreciate how you cover the intuition behind various formulas before having your students use them. So much of what I have been taught over the years has been formula memorization, to which from watching your videos I can somewhat have an intuitive sense of the formulas. I think this allows for a deeper understanding of the math and actually makes it more enjoyable, so thank you very much for what you are doing!
Despite having learned this a few years ago, I still love the way he explains things!
Great video, and keep up the great work, you'll inspire many to pursue Math!
''peculiar"? more like _perpendicular_
[*puts on sunglasses, the theme for CSI Miami begins to play*]
*_YEEEEAAAAHHHH!!!!!_*
bro this is so helpful, I'm studying rn and my notes were like dead because of quarantine.
best teacher ever
You could also say that y splits the kite/rhombus into two triangles with perpendicular heights of 1/2(x) - the area of each triangle would be 1/2[1/2(xy)], so the area of the kite/rhombus would be double that, or just 1/2(xy).
He is literally better than my math teacher
either my teacher in the 6th or the 7th grade skipped this, or i simply don't remember them, it's fun to try to come up with different ways to find the area and get to the same formulae, great video
my maths teacher explained the pythagoras theorem in year 8 but i already knew it so i face palmed :p
I think an interesting application here is that since a square is a type of rhombus, if you only know the length of the diagonal, you can use this formula directly to find the area, rather than having to use Pytharogas to find the side length and then square the side length.
Wow, I hadn't thought of that. That's a great application!
Because a rhombus is also a special type of parallelogram, we should also be able to calculate area with the base times the perpendicular hight.
I would just turn them both 90 degrees and end up with a trapezium and a parallelogram, no?
Thankkkkkkksassaa🎉🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤❤❤love u sooooooo muchhhhhh
amazing
Terima kasih
Akhirnya nemu juga orang indonesia di channel kayak ini
Hahaha
Iya pak, semangat belajar
First first comment
Those students are in which class? Cuz, they look like 9th graders to me
Wootsup
im good wbu man?
In process to upload next video
@Tomas Bez did you mean the ceiling?....
Imagine u reply😅🥺✊🏿#blm