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I think a lot of people just need an opportunity to see math demonstrated in a more tangible way.

For example, I learned trig, calculus, and statistics from my science classes, not from my math classes (and that's despite getting perfect A's in all of my math classes). In math class, I was just mindlessly going through the motions and hating every second of it, but science classes actually taught me why it worked and showed me the beauty and cleverness of it all.

I just needed to see the math to grok it.



I think most college math depts have "applied math" majors. I like both sides of math, but I found it incredibly frustrating when I would try to study just the equations for that chapter, only to be tested on a word problem. The whole "trying to trick you" conspiracy turned me off to college in general. If I'm trying to teach someone how to do something, I would show them "A, then, B, and you get C" , then assign a variety of homework of that form, and on the test, say "A, then B, then _____" and they would be correct if they concluded C. But for some reason this method isn't used much in university. If I wanted to teach a student how to start with C and deconstruct into A, B , thats what I would have taught them!


If you study mathematics at a rigorous level then you learn by writing proofs. Then you will rack your brain for hours or even days trying to figure out how to prove some simple things. It is not at all “going through the motions” at that point!




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