Calculating Square Root by Hand (Early Grades)

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  • Опубликовано: 4 янв 2021
  • Watch this educational video from the Spirit of Math Curriculum, presented by Spirit of Math founder and CEO Kim Langen teaching methods of calculating square root by hand.
    to find out more about Spirit of Math visit spiritofmath.com/

Комментарии • 255

  • @BubbaGooch1
    @BubbaGooch1 18 дней назад +34

    I too learned and later forgot this method years ago. I was amused that the presenter used chalk, which broke, while working the problem. That really brought back the 60s tome.

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  15 дней назад +4

      You know the problem is hard when the chalk breaks.

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  4 дня назад

      @@bowlineobama Care to expand upon your point? The more perspectives the better!

  • @bowlineobama
    @bowlineobama Месяц назад +47

    I learned this method 50 years ago from my Chemistry teacher. I later found out that this method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared. Not many knew this long division method in school these days. Thanks to RUclips, this method has been revealed. I love this method.

    • @Necrozene
      @Necrozene 18 дней назад

      It was not taught generally in class, but my primary school maths teacher taught me!

    • @pbworld7858
      @pbworld7858 16 дней назад +2

      @@Necrozene When I was in primary school, nobody even knew what a square root was.

    • @Necrozene
      @Necrozene 16 дней назад

      @@pbworld7858 I was very lucky I had a few excellent teachers who fed my curiosity.

    • @Necrozene
      @Necrozene 16 дней назад

      @@pbworld7858 I even had a teacher who taught me the formula for the Nth Fibonacci number with the phi in it. A friend was verifying that by hand in Chess club! And it worked!

    • @Necrozene
      @Necrozene 16 дней назад

      But he never bought Cantor's diagonalisation!

  • @ianboard544
    @ianboard544 19 дней назад +34

    We learned this when I was in 6th grade. Years later, I used Newton's method: start with any reasonable guess, then iterate: new guess = 1/2( guess + number/guess). It converges quite rapidly.

    • @SusanaSoltner
      @SusanaSoltner 18 дней назад +3

      Heron's formula

    • @ianboard544
      @ianboard544 17 дней назад

      @@SusanaSoltner I didn't know that - thanks.

    • @3Cr15w311
      @3Cr15w311 17 дней назад +2

      The advantage of the "divide and average method" is if you make a mistake, it will work out if you don't make more mistakes. With the way presented in the video (the way I first learned square root), any mistake will ruin the result from there on.

    • @impCaesarAug
      @impCaesarAug 16 дней назад +1

      @@SusanaSoltner Heron's method. Heron's formula is the area of a triangle, in terms of its sides.

    • @SusanaSoltner
      @SusanaSoltner 15 дней назад

      @@impCaesarAug Thank you for this distinction.

  • @johnbutler4631
    @johnbutler4631 17 дней назад +13

    My dad showed me this method many years ago, and I've never met anybody else that knows this method.
    This is the first video that I've run across that explains it step by step.

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  15 дней назад +1

      If you watch any more of our videos, please let us know if your dad would approve!

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

  • @TakeAbackPak
    @TakeAbackPak 23 часа назад +1

    I learned this almost 45 years ago. Thanks for refreshing my memory! Wonderful.

  • @paulgithens635
    @paulgithens635 17 дней назад +7

    Eventually after many math classes the love of learning was beaten out of me.

    • @toma5153
      @toma5153 12 дней назад +4

      Same. Never any explanation or real world examples. Just dreary rote practice out of the textbook.

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  4 дня назад +2

      We're sorry to hear that! We find the best way to learn is in a collaborative, group setting

  • @HedelTorres
    @HedelTorres Год назад +14

    Back when i was in grade six (in Canada), i went to Ecuador for the summer. I was bored as everyone was in school. So my mom enrolled me in school there for a couple of months. In that short period, my math skills jumped to a Canadian grade 8 level. I learned how to do square root by hand. When i got back to Canada, i went back to learning long division, and in grade eight, we learned to use calculators.

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  15 дней назад +1

      The lost art of doing mental math or calculating solutions to challenging problems by hand is one of the reasons our parents say they keep coming back!

  • @ScottESchmidt
    @ScottESchmidt 9 дней назад +1

    Thank you for reminding me why I forgot how to do this.

  • @DamirKipkaev
    @DamirKipkaev 27 дней назад +5

    Our math teacher showed us this method in extra classes. Everything was almost the same, except that she said that you can not only multiply by 2, but also add. For example, 48 * 2 = 96. But you can get 96 by adding 8x + x (88+8 = 96), which was usually intuitive, since we put two dots when we were guessing the number for multiplication.
    Exactly the same in the second case: 487 * 2 = 974, but you can get the same thing if you add 7 to 967. Thus, 967 + 7 = 974. It always works.
    That is, once again. When you have decided on a digit, multiplied, calculated the difference, and you need to multiply the top number by 2, we don’t have to do this. You can take the number that was the last one on your left and add it with the digit that you put the last (its own last digit).

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

    • @DamirKipkaev
      @DamirKipkaev 11 дней назад

      @@bowlineobama Thanks =)

  • @boeingpilot7002
    @boeingpilot7002 Год назад +14

    This is how I remember doing it in high school -- many moons, ago -- thanks for the refresher!

    • @commoveo1
      @commoveo1 5 месяцев назад

      Feel same. Been a bit and I feel as you, just a little reminder to do elementary problems! Want a nice square concrete pad and although few concrete workers remember and quiet likely never did by the fun of me when I mentioned hypotenuse they get a big laugh at there 10th grade drop out lol. He who laughs first laughs last right lol. Bless their hearts lol. I always like the 3,4 and 5 or even double the number helps. What I really love is running a say three foot diameter pipe through a floor system lol. Usually take my measurements home lay out on piece of cardboard then bring in to work and always fits so nice nothing even gets mentioned lol but that’s fine huh. I will give anyone who may be interested the Pipe fitters hand book is small and like anything the more you do it you get even noticed less but who wants noticed if it all works nicely. I was a Union Ironworker and modest. Again thank you for the refresher, very nice ❤️. Calculators are very handy lol.. Left 4 men to form up for a metal building and wanted the exterior sheets to run down the side of the concrete pad to eliminate water 💦 running inside the building. Many ways of laying out and having one nice square corner sure simplifies ✌🏼.
      Sincerely Grateful, HB

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад +1

      @@commoveo1 This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

  • @gdurandeau1143
    @gdurandeau1143 Год назад +4

    I appreciate your great and simple explanation.

  • @douggale5962
    @douggale5962 Год назад +9

    My schools never taught this, and I always wanted to know how to do it by hand.

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад +1

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method. It is very easy. I can show it to you in a few minutes. This teach makes longer than it is.

  • @smaug9833
    @smaug9833 16 дней назад +1

    My Dad taught me this method when I was in primary school. Remember it to this day, it has been 16 years.

  • @vanlepthien6768
    @vanlepthien6768 Месяц назад +2

    I learned this from my 3rd grade (4th year) math teacher. He made math fun. Subsequent math teachers varied in quality, but I didn't have another who was that good until university.
    Even if you pick a number that is too high for the next step, the algorithm is self-correcting.

    • @pietergeerkens6324
      @pietergeerkens6324 19 дней назад

      I too leaned this in Grade 3, at age 9, from my Dad. His explanation wasn't quite as tight as one now finds on the internet, but was sufficient for me to have some fun.

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      @@pietergeerkens6324 This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

  • @midnighttokyo4894
    @midnighttokyo4894 2 года назад +3

    Watched so many videos but this is the only one that helped me with this, thanks so much!

  • @lesnyk255
    @lesnyk255 3 месяца назад +4

    I learned this method in 7th grade, back in 1962 or -63. It wasn't part of the curriculum, but I asked our teacher, Mrs Galloway, if there were such a manual method, and she showed me after class. I'd long since forgotten it when I stumbled across this video. The Babylonian method is another way - much simpler to flowchart, but involves ever more lengthy long divisions.

    • @johnchristian7788
      @johnchristian7788 Месяц назад

      What was part of the curriculum? Square root using a log book or square root using a calculator? Did you use a calculator in class in 1962?

    • @lesnyk255
      @lesnyk255 Месяц назад +1

      @@johnchristian7788 Consumer-grade electronic calculators wouldn't be invented for another ten years. We were probably shown where to look up tabulated values in a handbook. Use of log tables wasn't introduced until high school (grade 9-10). My dad showed me how to use a slide rule at some point, but I don't remember when. Geez, this was over sixty years ago - I don't remember when they taught what.

    • @johnchristian7788
      @johnchristian7788 Месяц назад

      @@lesnyk255 It's funny to think that even before calculators became popular, they didn't teach square root by pen and paper. They should really include in the curriculum in all countries.
      I used to love using log tables.

    • @lesnyk255
      @lesnyk255 Месяц назад

      @@johnchristian7788 Well, personally, I wouldn't go back to using log tables, slide rules, or manual typewriters except maybe at gunpoint. There are easier ways to get rough manual estimates of square roots if you've left your calculator or iPhone at home - polynomial approximation, for example, or the Babylonian method. This video was a bit of a nostalgia rush - 7th grade, Walpole NH JHS... long time ago....

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

  • @Xiuhtec
    @Xiuhtec 7 дней назад

    Never learned this when I was in school in the 80s and 90s, likely by then they already just assumed everyone had calculators. I appreciate the method, it's very interesting! (Whenever I've wanted to do this without a calculator I've just basically made educated guesses and worked my way to something close, I have squares memorized to about 25 which helps.)

  • @ralphhenderson5276
    @ralphhenderson5276 11 месяцев назад +4

    I went through five bad videos before I found yours. One guy even helpfully blocked the view of the whiteboard while he explained what was on it.
    It took about a minute to catch on watching you. Thank you!

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  15 дней назад

      We're thrilled you found this helpful! If comprehension happens quickly, it means the approach and teaching strategy is the right one.

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      @@SpiritofMathSchools This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

  • @Reignspike
    @Reignspike 16 дней назад

    I was never taught how to calculate square roots. When I was in grade school, I tried a few different ways on my own, and they ended up being very much trial and error. This is a more refined approach that improves on what I figured out, but I see that it still involves some. Thanks for showing it!

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method. It is very easy. i can show you in a few minutes. This teacher makes it look longer than it really is.

  • @user-mv3ng9rj2l
    @user-mv3ng9rj2l 7 месяцев назад

    Amazing. Thank you, teacher!

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

  • @richardhole8429
    @richardhole8429 10 дней назад

    I have learned this method, for amusement, some number of times without ever having to memorize it. Calculators are king now. Thanks

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  4 дня назад +1

      An over-reliance on calculators makes your math muscles weak. We always encourage our students to learn the core concepts and do the arithmetic mentally or by hand whenever possible

    • @richardhole8429
      @richardhole8429 4 дня назад

      ​@@SpiritofMathSchools I tend to agree. Teachers can choose values that can be computed in the head or simple multiplication and long division on paper. Real world math rarely has those convenient numbers. Calculators, I would argue do not make one's math weak as doing the calculations is only the lowest skill on the math "tree." Knowing how to set up the problem is where the math skills shine.
      I suspect that those who do real world math will rarely use hand calculations, and they will quickly notice when their calculator have given faulty inputs.
      It is important that students learn the basic arithmetical calculation techniques and practice them in the classroom.

  • @MissPiggyM976
    @MissPiggyM976 Месяц назад

    Very well explained, many thanks!

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

  • @cipherxen2
    @cipherxen2 4 дня назад +1

    Instead of doubling you can add the left hand side number e.g. instead of calculating 2*48 we can just add 88+8=96 and at next step 967+7=974 etc

  • @geralynpinto5971
    @geralynpinto5971 18 дней назад +2

    I really appreciate your clear and methodical procedure, and very pleasant ways.

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  15 дней назад

      And we really appreciate the positive feedback! Perhaps you could check out some of our other videos and let us know if there's any other topics you'd like to see in the future?

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

  • @alllevelsmath9974
    @alllevelsmath9974 2 года назад +2

    thank you! well explained!

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

  • @antoniopango1841
    @antoniopango1841 4 месяца назад +2

    Superb! I took sometime shifting through many video clips to find out yours with simple explanation how to calculate the square root.

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  4 месяца назад

      We're so glad to hear that! Thanks for sharing 🙌

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

    • @montyhall-vs3ul
      @montyhall-vs3ul 4 дня назад

      @@bowlineobama Yuh, we know that
      But you said it about a thousand times anyway

  • @DLV42
    @DLV42 8 месяцев назад

    Your way of manually doing square roots is the way my 8th math teacher Mrs Wilker taught us how to do it . I will study this problem and do more problems like it. Lot of WHACK out ways of finding the square roots . They work, but very CONFUSING You is worth your weight in gold raised to 20^20 power . (HUNDRED QUINTILLION) Thank you.

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

  • @Muck-qy2oo
    @Muck-qy2oo Год назад +53

    It would be good if you would explain where this method is comming from. The binomial theorem. One can also use other algorithms as herons method.

    • @Franky566
      @Franky566 Год назад +8

      technicaly, the source of this math is Euclid.

    • @tomvitale3555
      @tomvitale3555 4 месяца назад +6

      I agree. I'd love to see the proof behind this method.

    • @Muck-qy2oo
      @Muck-qy2oo 3 месяца назад

      @@tomvitale3555 a²+2ab+b²

    • @robertveith6383
      @robertveith6383 Месяц назад +2

      * coming

    • @jwm6314
      @jwm6314 15 дней назад +4

      Title says "early grades." Clearly you are on the wrong video.

  • @jethrobo3581
    @jethrobo3581 19 дней назад

    Wow! I never knew that calculating a square root could be so fun!

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      Yes, it is fun. I learned it a long time ago. This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

  • @robertsullivan2396
    @robertsullivan2396 7 дней назад

    I was taught this in the 50s and still stretch my brain using this method

    • @montyhall-vs3ul
      @montyhall-vs3ul 4 дня назад

      try stretching your brain doing the method for cube roots
      No one taught this in grades 1 thru 12. But I got interested on my own
      When the stress closes in, I often find myself evolving the cube root of a number
      looks like you are about 5 to 10 years older than I

  • @RSLT
    @RSLT 16 дней назад

    GREAT VIDEO! Liked and subscribed ❤

  • @jabelltulsa
    @jabelltulsa 16 дней назад +1

    Very cool video, and you explained it well. It would definitely take practice and would need math-muscle memory.

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  15 дней назад

      People underestimate muscle memory, especially when it comes to mathematics! That's part of our approach with our students that we notice makes such a difference.

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method. It is very easy. I can show you in a few minutes.

  • @SVJIRLI
    @SVJIRLI 11 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you so much Madam ...

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

  • @davidgrisez
    @davidgrisez 17 дней назад +2

    I am now 73 years old. In my young years I was able to extract a square root using this method.

    • @jamesharmon4994
      @jamesharmon4994 15 дней назад

      I was also taught this method 60ish years ago. I had forgotten it and am SO glad for this video!

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  15 дней назад +1

      Happy to help you relive the glory days. Now, it's time to pass this knowledge on to the next generation of students.

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

    • @martyknight
      @martyknight 2 дня назад

      You and I are of the same vintage. I learned this method as a 7th grader, long before digital calculators were invented.

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  День назад

      @@martyknight Great minds age like fine wine

  • @johnbo964
    @johnbo964 10 дней назад

    I was taught that in 8th grade in 1970. I'm glad to review that.

  • @coaster1235
    @coaster1235 7 дней назад

    it’s neat to see a long division style algorithm for the square root!
    what makes long division not too bad is that the subcomputations for each digit (guessing the closest multiple below a given number) all involve numbers around the same magnitude, whereas here it seems getting another digit involves a subcomputation with numbers around a magnitude larger than those on the previous step.
    i wonder if there’s another long division like algorithm where the subcomputations don’t inevitably grow in magnitude? i also wonder if doing this in base 2 would feel simpler?

  • @DeckerCreek
    @DeckerCreek 17 дней назад

    I learned this method sometime in middle school I believe. That would be in the 1960s. Thanks for the refresher

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  16 дней назад

      Which other videos brought you back to the 60s?

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

  • @JonesFamilyRanch
    @JonesFamilyRanch 18 дней назад +1

    SQRT2500=50, 2376.592

  • @ThePowerfulOne07
    @ThePowerfulOne07 17 дней назад +1

    Was never taught this in school. Must have been a “lost art” in my state 😅

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  15 дней назад +1

      Good thing we offer this online!

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

  • @finjay21fj
    @finjay21fj 5 месяцев назад +3

    As always, when teaching, start simple then use a complex

  • @markdstump
    @markdstump 13 дней назад

    I haven’t started the video yet and I am interested to see it, but I always like to try things before I watch the video. I mean when it comes to math. So in a few seconds, I came up with an estimate that the answer is just shy of 50, since the number is shy of 2500 and then in under three minutes, I came up with a slightly better approximation of 48.77, which I got from interpolation between 48^2 and 49^2 (having already rounded to 2377^1/2, and rounding 103 to 100…and rounding 2401 to 2400.

  • @markgraham2312
    @markgraham2312 17 дней назад

    Good job!

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  16 дней назад

      Have you seen our All About Circles video? ruclips.net/video/3bUdPSsWoE4/видео.htmlsi=yEa2P_KDJrzMDBs9

    • @markgraham2312
      @markgraham2312 16 дней назад

      @@SpiritofMathSchools Not yet.

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  16 дней назад

      @@markgraham2312 We've got a bunch of additional curriculum videos that you might be interested in!

  • @peep39
    @peep39 День назад

    Thanks Stevie Nicks

  • @crisismanagement
    @crisismanagement 14 дней назад

    Would a slide rule come in handy for the middle calculations? 😊

  • @cipherxen2
    @cipherxen2 4 дня назад +2

    We teach this method in India at 7th grade

  • @subibrothersbrewing6598
    @subibrothersbrewing6598 11 дней назад

    brings back memories from grade school

  • @JubeiKibagamiFez
    @JubeiKibagamiFez 6 дней назад

    2:10 Also, how would we do this with the (√2)??

  • @JubeiKibagamiFez
    @JubeiKibagamiFez 6 дней назад

    How does this work for a cubed root or root of the 4th or etc? This is what breaks my brain with root calculations.

  • @raymondhagerty1769
    @raymondhagerty1769 7 дней назад +1

    The square root of 69 is ATE SOMETHING 😂

  • @VincentLauria6
    @VincentLauria6 17 дней назад

    I learned how to calculate square roots nearly 50 years ago. I’m certain they haven’t taught this for probably 30 years

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      It is a lost art, but I am glad that it is in the RUclips forever. This is Binomial Expansion Method (BEM).

  • @stevencarr4002
    @stevencarr4002 18 дней назад +1

    I got 48.75 in about 20 seconds.
    Divide 2376.592 by an approximate square root ie 50.
    That gets you 47.53184.
    Average 47.5 and 50 and you get 48.75
    Trial and error can get you 3 significant figures very quickly by hand.

    • @archimedesmaid3602
      @archimedesmaid3602 15 дней назад

      The point here was to do this by pen/paper only

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад +1

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method. It is better than guessing.

  • @albaiko
    @albaiko 6 дней назад

    My dad developed a method to manually calculate the cubic root as well.

    • @albaiko
      @albaiko 6 дней назад

      sedqialbaik.blogspot.com/2006/04/blog-post_114434901914567834.html

    • @albaiko
      @albaiko 6 дней назад

      The Cube Root: A Practical Method to Find It from Any Number
      The Cube Root
      A Practical Method to Find It from Any Number
      Sidqi Mohammed Al-Baik
      In the Abbasid era, Arabs excelled in mathematics, enriching the facts of arithmetic, establishing algebra and logarithms, dealing with exponents (powers) and roots, and organizing tables. It is not unlikely that they devised practical methods to find the square root or cube root, other than the method of prime factorization, but these were not known to modern mathematics scholars or were not published.
      However, students following the French curriculum recently learned a practical method to find the square root (as in Syria and Lebanon) while those who studied according to the English curriculum did not. I have not come across a practical method to find the cube root, nor have I found any mathematics specialists who know a practical method for the cube root. Therefore, I worked hard and for a long time, spanning several years, fluctuating between despair and hope, until I discovered this practical method to find the cube root of any large number, other than the prime factorization method.
      Many may now find it unnecessary to use this method and others by using calculators, which also spared them from many calculations. However, people, especially students, still need to learn different methods. This method may be an intellectual effort added to other mathematical information and facts.
      Here is this method, which requires knowing the cubes of small numbers from one to nine, which are (1, 8, 27, 64, 125, 216, 343, 512, 729).
      Method and Steps
      Divide the number into groups of three digits, starting from the right, after writing the number in the correct format.
      Start the first stage with the leftmost group, approximate its cube root, and place it above the group.
      Place the cube of this number under the leftmost group and subtract it.
      Bring down the second group next to the previous subtraction result and start the second stage.
      Prepare the root factor according to the following steps in the left section:
      A. Square the root obtained in the first stage and place a zero before it.
      B. Mentally divide the number obtained in step (4) by three times the squared root (from step A) by underestimating, and assume this result as the second digit of the root and place it above the second group.
      C. Multiply this assumed number by the previously obtained root with a zero before it.
      D. Add steps A and C.
      E. Multiply this sum by three.
      F. Add the previous multiplication result to the square of the assumed number.
      G. Multiply the sum in step (F) by the assumed number, place the product under the number obtained from bringing down the group (step 4), and subtract it.
      Bring down the third group to the right of the previous subtraction result, start the third stage, and repeat the steps in (5) as follows:
      A. Square the previous root (both digits) with a zero before it.
      B. Mentally divide the number obtained from bringing down the group (in step 6) by three times the squared root (from step A).
      C. Multiply the assumed number (from step B) by both digits of the root with zeros before them.
      D. Add steps (A) and (C).
      E. Multiply this sum by three.
      F. Add the previous multiplication result to the square of the assumed number.
      G. Multiply the previous sum (from step F) by the assumed number, place the product under the number obtained from bringing down the group (step 6), and subtract it.
      Continue this process. If a remainder remains after subtraction and no groups are left, add a group of three zeros and repeat the previous steps, placing a decimal point in the root as the result will have decimal parts.
      Practical Example
      Cube Root of (77854483)
      Divide the number:
      7 2 4
      77,854,483
      Approximate the cube root:
      The approximate cube root of 77 is 4, place 4 above the first group.
      Subtract the cube:
      The cube of 4 is 64, place it under the first group and subtract it.
      77 - 64 = 13
      Bring down the second group:
      Bring down the second group: 13,854
      Prepare the factor:
      Square the root with a zero before it: 40 × 40 = 1600
      Mentally divide 13,854 by 1600 × 3 = 2 approximately
      Multiply 2 by 40: 2 × 40 = 80
      Add 1600 and 80: 1680
      Multiply 1680 by 3: 1680 × 3 = 5040
      Add the square of the assumed number: 5040 + 4 = 5044
      Multiply 5044 by 2: 5044 × 2 = 10,088
      Subtract 10,088 from 13,854: 13,854 - 10,088 = 3,766
      Bring down the third group:
      Bring down the third group: 3,766,483
      Repeat the previous steps:
      Another Example:
      Cube Root of (12895213625)
      Divide the number:
      5 4 3 2
      12,895,213,625
      Approximate the cube root:
      The approximate cube root of 12 is 2.
      Subtract the cube:
      The cube of 2 is 8, place it under the first group and subtract it.
      12 - 8 = 4
      Bring down the second group:
      Bring down the second group: 4,895
      Prepare the factor:
      Square the root with a zero before it: 20 × 20 = 400
      Mentally divide 4,895 by 400 × 3 = 1 approximately
      Multiply 1 by 20: 1 × 20 = 20
      Add 400 and 20: 420
      Multiply 420 by 3: 420 × 3 = 1,260
      Add the square of the assumed number: 1,260 + 1 = 1,261
      Multiply 1,261 by 1: 1,261 × 1 = 1,261
      Subtract 1,261 from 4,895: 4,895 - 1,261 = 3,634
      Bring down the third group:
      Bring down the third group: 3,634,213
      Repeat the previous steps.

  • @bpark10001
    @bpark10001 5 дней назад

    You ought to see what happens if you apply this on binary numbers! You start as usual, grouping the numbers, etc. On the first digit, it is one for the first pair of non-zero digits (there are only 00, 01, 10, 11 cases). To generate the next test number to subtract, you take the answer you have so far, & append to the right of it 0 1. Why? Appending the 0 to the right doubles the number. Appending the 1 is the test digit. Multiplying by 1 is trivial case, just copy the number! If it "fits", write "1" for the next digit of the answer. If not, write "0" & discard the subtract.
    (You do not cover the case where even "1" is too large. In that case you need to write "0" in the answer & discard the result of the subtract, leaving the partial remainder intact. Then you being the next 2 digits down alongside the existing remainder & proceed from there.)

  • @krwada
    @krwada 6 месяцев назад

    This is how I learned it many years ago when I was in 8th grade

  • @someonespadre
    @someonespadre Месяц назад

    I do this on my antique calculator by subtracting successive odd numbers. That could really lengthy on paper, though.

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

  • @KungFuPadawan
    @KungFuPadawan 17 дней назад

    Cool ...

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад +1

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

  • @Vega1447
    @Vega1447 18 дней назад +1

    Just use Newton's method x=(x+a/x)/2 where a is the number whose sq root is to be found and x is the current approximation to the sq root. And iterate.

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      Better use Binomial Expansion Method (BEM). No need for iterations. BEM gives it to you directly in the long run, when you have very large numbers.

    • @Vega1447
      @Vega1447 14 дней назад +1

      @@bowlineobama Easy to find a starting approximation to the sq root. Then Newton's method converges quadratically.

  • @jeffw1267
    @jeffw1267 18 дней назад +1

    It's obvious that the square root lies between 48 and 49, because 48^2 is 2304 and 49^2 is 2401. I can use a linear approximation to determine additional digits. 2376.6 - 2304 is 72.6, and the difference between 48^2 and 49^2 is 97, so 72.6/97 is my linear approximation, which gives me the next digit of 7. So far I have 48.7, and I can use linear approximations to double the number of significant digits with each iteration.
    But everyone knows this.

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method. This method is much better in the long run.

  • @jeffdege4786
    @jeffdege4786 21 день назад +2

    I learned this as a kid, without explanation. I later proved to myself why it worked.
    But truth is, I never use it. Newton's method converges faster.

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      Better use Binomial Expansion Method (BEM). No need for iterations. BEM gives it to you directly in the long run, when you have very large numbers.

  • @trien30
    @trien30 27 дней назад

    I learned this from a high school classmate but I didn't get what he did. He wrote on paper so quickly. I didn't have time in class. I think if you're in an east or as Southeast Asian country or somewhere from South America they might have taught this. Asian countries taught tough stuff forvyoung kids that's not taught in the USA or Canada.

  • @hotironaircraftshop
    @hotironaircraftshop 29 дней назад +1

    The first rule of optimization is to identify the operations that take the most total time, and work on making those faster. If this is an infrequently used procedure, i.e. it won't represent a significant portion of a student's life, then why not teach the conceptually simpler approach of progressively refining an initial guess using a binary search?

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

  • @jbjohnson4728
    @jbjohnson4728 4 месяца назад

    Thanks mami

  • @aa_ha_hahahaha
    @aa_ha_hahahaha 13 дней назад

  • @mjs28s
    @mjs28s 16 дней назад

    I am pretty ticked off that I was never shown this in any year of schooling.
    Yeah it might have been rough at a young age, but the mental workout it would be if all kids had to learn this stuff. People would be way better thinkers as grown up as well as following rules for things and how to solve problems, in life not just math as the problem solving skills are applicable everywhere.

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  16 дней назад

      Is there anything else you wish you saw earlier? We can help share another video for you.

  • @zgh46840
    @zgh46840 Месяц назад

    I learned this method in school. Going forward I’m using a calculator.

  • @holyshit922
    @holyshit922 Месяц назад

    Question for viewers
    Can you derive such method for cube roots ?
    If you really understand why this method works
    you will be able to derive method for cube root yourself
    I was taught this method in high school once we were solving quadratic equation
    (to determine if discriminant is perfect square or to approximate roots)
    and derived method for cube root myself

    • @johnchristian7788
      @johnchristian7788 Месяц назад

      What country did you go to school that they just told you to find the method yourself? I'm suspecting that instead of multiplying by 2 we should multiply by 3 and use cubes instead of squares in the same method. Not sure if I should group by 3 digits 🤔

    • @holyshit922
      @holyshit922 Месяц назад

      @@johnchristian7788 In Poland
      I derived method for cube root for myself
      and it was not homework
      As soon as I understood why method for square root works I was able to derive method for cube root
      Yes you group 3 digits
      Yes you multiply by three but square of actual approximation not just actual approximation
      Instead of appending last digit of next approximation you append square of last digit of next approximation
      To number created in this way you add triple product of current approximation and last digit of next approximation shifted one position to the left
      (10a+b)^3 = 1000a^3+300a^2b+30ab^2+b^3
      (10a+b)^3 - 1000a^3 = 300a^2b+30ab^2+b^3
      (10a+b)^3 - 1000a^3 = (300a^2 + 30ab + b^2)b
      (10a+b)^3 - 1000a^3 = ((300a^2 + b^2) + 30ab)b

    • @archimedesmaid3602
      @archimedesmaid3602 15 дней назад

      Crystal Clear Maths has a vid on utube where he examines cube roots by the LD method
      But he concludes that it is not practical beyond a few digits. This is not true. I have demonstrated that with pen/paper I can find the CR of any number to 25 digit accuracy on one side of one sheet. No calculators involved, no separate worksheets, no erasing, no savant ability, just plain old addition subtraction, multiplication.

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method. For Cube Roots, it is (a+b)cubed. It is easy.

  • @rickyardo2944
    @rickyardo2944 10 дней назад

    did I missed something? the last digit: 5 shouldn't that be a 4?

  • @Onoelo23gf
    @Onoelo23gf 26 дней назад

    No need to multiply the upper no by 2. Just add the upper no to the divisor, i.e., 4+4=8. Next time, add 8 to 88 and get 96. Either way.

  • @DLV42
    @DLV42 13 дней назад

    I grew up learning how to do square roots manually . Kids today do not learn how to do sq. rts. manually. They press the magic button on the calculator.

  • @user-ne8lj5zt3n
    @user-ne8lj5zt3n 14 дней назад

    learned this in grade school 1959

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  14 дней назад

      Unfortunately, children aren't taught this approach in grade school today and they should be!

  • @c.m.p2943
    @c.m.p2943 Месяц назад

    I learned this method long long time ago when there were no electronic calculators ,am now 70. y/o ,but instead of multipying by 2 we multiply by 20.Now a day they don't do this method any more.

    • @archimedesmaid3602
      @archimedesmaid3602 16 дней назад

      Yes. I have always simply multiplied the currently completed root by 20, (20a). then estimate how many times that divided into the current remainder .
      That is your tentative next digit (b). Add the b to the 20a figure and multiply by b.
      (20a + b)b
      Subtract from current remainder, bring down the next group of two, for your next current remainder
      This simple method can be remembered forever, because you know why you are doing what you are doing
      It is never taught on utube, because it doesn't appear as sexy. But in our father's time, my method was used, because I eventually saw it in a very old encyclopedia

  • @Tabu11211
    @Tabu11211 4 месяца назад

    They didn't teach this in school where I was. :(

  • @telescope497
    @telescope497 17 дней назад

    My head exploded....

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  16 дней назад

      If there's anything we can do to help to put it back together, please let us know🤯

  • @shelonnikgrumantov5061
    @shelonnikgrumantov5061 9 дней назад

    What I don’t get is that 9х8 is 72, which is less than 76, obviously, why then you use 8?

  • @user-iv3in2ou3p
    @user-iv3in2ou3p 18 дней назад

    Very nice indeed. Maybe a smaller number would have made it clearer. But hey.

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method. It is very easy. I can show it to you in a few minutes.

  • @JubeiKibagamiFez
    @JubeiKibagamiFez 6 дней назад

    2:10 Really? I was really hoping this was gonna be the universal equation that solves any square root, or cubed root, or etc. I've never understood roots because there is no reverse calculation for it like division is for multiplication.
    I also watched a video a few days ago where I was introduced to n⁰=1 and 0⁰=1. Math is suppose to be about logic, but I feel the more advanced maths are just number manipulation to get a desired answer.... Basically arbitrary like language and to me, arbitration is not based on logic.

  • @gangleweed
    @gangleweed 18 дней назад

    I do root calculations a different way ........try doing the 6 root od 41........and I'm 85.

  • @Knserbrave
    @Knserbrave 7 месяцев назад

    Great algorithm

  • @michaelspinks9822
    @michaelspinks9822 21 день назад +3

    Looks like a neat method, but frankly you lost me and I have a strong background in mathematics. May I suggest you redo this video? Writing out a script with queue cards may help. Citing a published source for this trick would be great. Other commentators suggest it is a reorganized Binomial expansion....I tend to agree, though more background would be nice .

  • @rchas1023
    @rchas1023 19 дней назад

    Step 1: Convert to binary. This avoids any need to guess.
    Step 2: Apply the algorithm for binary numbers. Very fast.
    Step 3: ( Optional ) Convert to base ten.

  • @probro9898
    @probro9898 Месяц назад

    Aren't you glad we now have calculators?

    • @bowlineobama
      @bowlineobama 14 дней назад

      Calculators are great when you have it on hand. What if you don't have one? You mind is the best calculator. This method is based on Binomial Expansion (a+b)squared method.

  • @Turbettma
    @Turbettma Месяц назад +1

    I felt bad for her as she got in over her head right quickly.

  • @patrickgregory2826
    @patrickgregory2826 18 дней назад

    Sqaure root of 20 is 5?

  • @KorraTransPhoenix
    @KorraTransPhoenix День назад

    Right...... 😶

  • @Tabu11211
    @Tabu11211 4 месяца назад

    Are all square roots of non square numbers irrational?

    • @Merione
      @Merione Месяц назад +2

      No. You can convince yourself by looking at the problem from the opposite direction: if you take a rational number and square it, will you always get a square number? If it's an integer, yes (2*2 = 4; 3*3 = 9; etc), but if it's not an integer, then no: 0.5*0.5 = 0.25, so there exist non square numbers with rational square roots.

    • @Tabu11211
      @Tabu11211 Месяц назад +1

      @@Merione thank you for taking my question seriously. I appreciate your response. Just like everything that is explained it seems obvious in hindsight and I probably should have just thought about it harder. That was a very satisfying and simple explanation.

    • @robertveith6383
      @robertveith6383 Месяц назад +2

      All square roots of non-square integers are irrational.

    • @Tabu11211
      @Tabu11211 Месяц назад

      Ah ok, thats probably what I was intuiting.@@robertveith6383

    • @archimedesmaid3602
      @archimedesmaid3602 15 дней назад

      ​@@Merione???????

  • @user-ih4le3zr1e
    @user-ih4le3zr1e Месяц назад

    wheres the decimal point end up?

    • @cbruata5198
      @cbruata5198 Месяц назад

      The decimal will never end since the square root of non perfect square is non terminating as well as non repeating. In otherwords they are irrational numbers.

    • @Matlockization
      @Matlockization 18 дней назад

      It ends up between 8 on the left & 7 on the right -> 48.75

    • @cbruata5198
      @cbruata5198 18 дней назад

      @@Matlockization it is simply a round off or we can say approximation

    • @Matlockization
      @Matlockization 18 дней назад

      @@cbruata5198 Well, it depends on when you multiply the answer by itself how close you get to the original number. In this case, you can round the answer off to two decimal places, but as it stands the answer is not an approximation.

  • @VincentLauria6
    @VincentLauria6 17 дней назад

    How can you not double numbers easier

  • @Matlockization
    @Matlockization 18 дней назад +1

    4:04: Where did you get the 6 ??? Can't stand bad teachers.

    • @Swannerator
      @Swannerator 18 дней назад

      Evidently you never paid attention when multiplication was being taught in school, or paid attention when she was explaining the very step you're complaining about. The 6 comes from the first 8*8 (=64), she put the 4 down and carried the 6 to the tens column for the next step. Pay attention in future, champ. 🤡

  • @user-mm4hq4yj8v
    @user-mm4hq4yj8v 19 дней назад

    😶

  • @silver6054
    @silver6054 19 дней назад

    By "as close as possible" I assume it is, as you say in the first case, as close to but less than.
    And the amazing statement at the end about square roots never repeat. Well, some certainly do, e.g. a square of a rational, such as 2.25, repeats with infinite 0s. So the divisor changing doesn't guarantee non-termination

  • @f1reguy587
    @f1reguy587 5 дней назад

    Why wouldnt you complete the equation? Youve done the mathematics equivalent of tearing the last few pages to a book of literature out of the book.

  • @briseboy
    @briseboy 18 дней назад

    Final top digit , following YOUR rules, is 4 ,NOT 5.
    WHATEVER YOU DO IN MATHEMATICS , YOU MUST EXPLAIN YOUR DEPARTURE FROM YOUR RULE!
    {ESPECIALLY IF YOU REFUSE TO EXPLAIN EITHER YOUR RULE, OR YOUR UNEXPLAINED DEPARTURE.
    YOU CANNOT CALL IT MATHEMATICS WHEN YOU ARBITRARILY MODIFY YOUR RULE WITHOUT EXPLANATION.

    • @Matlockization
      @Matlockization 18 дней назад

      She doesn't explain everything. It would help if she could comment here to answer questions about her work.

    • @Swannerator
      @Swannerator 18 дней назад

      I agree with why you're complaining (although lay off the ALL CAPS next time perhaps, eh?). But I think I have a plausible explanation for this departure from her previously stated rule...
      She added a zero after the original number, so that she had a pair of digits at the end (instead of a single digit) to match the rest of her method. Given that the zero is technically not significant in relation to the original number, the use of 5 (instead of 4, as one would expect from her original rule) kind of acts as a rounding factor for the final answer.
      This is only an explanation I've come up with, after the fact. Interestingly, using 4 (going by her original rule) gives a resulting divisor of 9744, which ends up giving 38976 for the drop-down subtraction, and then an answer of 10044 ... implying a very very scary iteration of the algorithm if there was another pair of digits in the original number!! 😨

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  15 дней назад

      We're happy to answer any questions you have!

  • @oryx3
    @oryx3 6 дней назад

    Or.... use the square root button on your calculator.

  • @paulg444
    @paulg444 16 дней назад

    It's the ×2 that I can't understand

  • @rscott3141
    @rscott3141 9 дней назад

    Ugh! Aside from all the comments thanking the presenter for a trip down nostalgia lane, this is a dreadful use of 7 minutes and 23 seconds. The algorithm is VERY complicated, and there is no explanation of why these particular steps are taken. A guess-and-check method would at least reinforce what a square root is.

  • @tuppyglossop222
    @tuppyglossop222 19 дней назад

    Or you could use logarithm tables…

  • @eswyatt
    @eswyatt 4 месяца назад +3

    This is hideous

    • @robertveith6383
      @robertveith6383 Месяц назад

      It is cumbersome to use.

    • @gnirolnamlerf593
      @gnirolnamlerf593 Месяц назад

      @@robertveith6383 Indeed. However, you would think that the whole point is not the mechanics, which a calculator will do right quickly, but to explain why the calculator and this method come up with (approximately) the same answer. She might also show us what 48.75 x 48.75 equals. It's 2376.5625. She says you could go on and on, but she doesn't say that you would get closer and closer to the target square, 2376.592 if you did.
      It's weird, I know, but this mechanics for the sake of mechanics reminds me of filling out the capital gains page of an IRS form. You know, you've put in the amount you paid for 200 shares of Zockman Birtwistle Corp. stock and the amount you sold it for and subtracted the first number from the amount you sold it for. Then the instructions to me just get silly. Something like:
      Take the total on line 3 and multiply by .15
      Take the total on line 1 and multiply by .35 if you bought the shares more than two years ago. If less than two years ago, multiply by .28. Write this number in on line 4.
      Take the total on line 2 and add it to the number on line 4. Write this number on line 5.
      Subtract line 5 from line 3.
      I expect it to continue with: then sing the 4th verse of The Star Spangled Banner and write the number of words in it on line 6. Count contractions as one word.
      Every time I had to fill out such a form, I had no idea why I was merrily multiplying by, adding to, subtracting from those numbers from the top to the bottom of the page, and somewhere in the middle, I would start giggling because I had no idea WHY I was doing those particular calculations with those particular numbers. It was like being given a set of 10 algebra problems that had no relationship to the real world, just to practice the mechanical steps to the solution. OK, now that I got the solution, what's the point? There seems to be no point. You got seven correct, so you get a 70% score. Oh, now I get it. The point of learning math is to learn math. You don't actually use it for anything. Well, at least tell students that. The idea is to train your brain to think in a variety of ways so that it is functional to its full potential by the time you're 18.
      Well, that's what it seems like in too many math classes. I'm not against getting the right answer. That is, of course, important. I'm not against showing the steps to the teacher, so she knows you didn't come up with a lucky guess. But not often enough do we hear why we would want the right answer in the first place except to please the teacher.
      PS I cannot believe that this teacher cannot subtract 7259 minus 6769 in her head. I'm hoping she's putting on a little act for young students, who might be struggling to remember what you do to subtract 6 from 5 and 7 from 2. But how young a student would be trying to find the square root of 2376.592 and why on earth would they want to?

  • @cliffordbrock9242
    @cliffordbrock9242 18 дней назад

    I will use a calculator..🤬

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  15 дней назад

      But then how will you learn to complete our mental math challenges?

  • @WEBLY12121
    @WEBLY12121 19 дней назад +1

    Yeah you didn’t explain this well and the loss of confidence lost me

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  15 дней назад +1

      Let us know what you think we could've done better to make it more clear!

    • @WEBLY12121
      @WEBLY12121 15 дней назад

      @@SpiritofMathSchools thanks for engaging,
      More assurance in expression and more fluidity in idea into idea
      I’m sure sis is a dope mathematician
      It just didn’t feel like she knew and has to look elsewhere,
      Whoever she is looking to should have done the expo

    • @WEBLY12121
      @WEBLY12121 15 дней назад

      @@SpiritofMathSchools in time sis will get better

    • @SpiritofMathSchools
      @SpiritofMathSchools  14 дней назад +1

      @@WEBLY12121 Thanks for the feedback! We're happy to take these notes down to improve our future content.
      Have you checked out any of our other videos? Have you noticed the same things there?

  • @pauljlund
    @pauljlund 19 дней назад +1

    So what does this work? Doesn't just reinforce to students that maths is confusing and opaque? Waste of a video.

    • @Swannerator
      @Swannerator 18 дней назад

      Not a "waste of a video" for people curious enough about maths. Somehow I doubt that students who already think "that maths is confusing and opaque" are her target audience, champ. Waste of a comment. 🤡

    • @SusanaSoltner
      @SusanaSoltner 18 дней назад

      I learned this algorithm 50 years ago, and I still remember we had to find the root of 5 in a test back then using this " pedestrian" method. It's not bad to know that this method exists and what it is based on.