• agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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          7 months ago

          The neat thing about math is that you can generally find several different paths to the same solution, and go with whichever is most intuitive to you.

          • wia@lemmy.ca
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            7 months ago

            Somewhat long story time.

            Because I moved from a different country to the US they got confused what grade to put me in. And then they really goofed my class assignments. So I ended up literally only taking algebra 1 and geometry in high school. Unlike most that also got algebra 2 and possibly trig.

            This set me up supery poorly for college. But I’m actually really good at math and I love math. So when I got to college, I failed miserably and dropped out after teachers were telling me this was simple stuff I should know from high school trig. How the college even let me get to that point was also insane…

            Anyway years later I went back, they tested me and I needed remedial math classes. Finally this new college was doing it right. I immediately started failing my tests. The teacher actually cared to find out why. I was getting every answer correct, but I was only finishing about 50-60% of the questions. When they looked at my work they noticed I just want using the right formulas in the right places or the common shortcuts and such. At they focused on teaching me that stuff all of a sudden I was actually finishing my tests ahead of class and passing.

            Math is weird.

          • LwL@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Though sadly ime that is what teachers usually completely fail to convey. And then we wonder why so many people hate math.

    • Vent@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      I think you’d need to prove that the average is (100+1)/2 because that’s not an axiom.