as a third year undergrad struggling hard studying Galois Theory and having to drop Group Theory this semester, this video is inspiring and helps me stay motivated
I’m a second year undergrad, and I’m struggling with complex analysis. I’m not sure I can see myself doing well in a class on Galois Theory or Group Theory next year. Mathematical maturity takes time, although I’m sure it grows faster when working as hard you are. Keep it up :)
To me it is silly we have forced our students to learn Galois Theory when it is a pretty much 'relatively' a new field . We should kick back and spend time understanding and doing easier courses. With time it will all become together with harder courses, later. It took a briliant mind of Galois to develop the theory, and we kick out students in the third year to do it? Not a way.
@@streampunksheep It is a special topics class shared between undergrads and grad students. I think the last time it was offered was in 2019 so it is my only chance to take it
The last part hits home where you said a Masters changes you. With a BS , I became a high-school math teacher. For 3 years I kinda half assed things just doing the bare minimum as a job. I felt sour knowing I wasn't being challenged in maths again and only teaching content in high-school. I decided to pursue a masters because I felt uneasy knowing that I dropped all of mathematics while becoming an instructor. This is when my work ethic changed completely . I went back to high-school teaching with a masters and actually cared about how I teach and effort I put in class. Now I teach in college and I love putting my all into my craft.
i feel like people go learn "high" math, and go back and teach it. it's a cycle. what is math actually useful for? what are the practical use cases of learning math in your experience? literally all lecturers I've seen, they got masters and got a job as a teacher. makes no sense
@anuj7008 hmm it's not a luxurious job as a community college instructor. Around 50k at North Carolina is a good estimate. The job is much more laid back than secondary school teaching though. University is really where the pay increase happens based on your title.
Suddenly when going into advanced courses, the perspective on what I love, changed. I too always was the straight A student at math, but now, can’t remember when I last time felt that I am good at the subject. I always thought I love math because of the subject, but it may have been because I was better than others and loved being good at something. Math does have a special place in my heart, the feeling of holding a math book is still special for me. But now, I am less sure than ever that I have the intelligence and dedication to complete a masters, talk about a Phd. This was and is still my dream. But I feel it is far for me like it is far for you to be an astronaut. I still try, but now less impatient, and less motivated, questioning if it is still the right thing for me. Maybe I am just lazy, and I don’t like to work hard. If so, it is something that I have to change in myself.
Some goals are so worthy, it's glorious even to fail. Hope you get your Doctorate soon. Keep sharing your journey here on youtube as it would be very motivating for me. I always wanted to challenge myself by doing mathematics but I always end up procrastinating and crushing my dreams
I am also doing PhD in Maths. Love to see fellow phd students doing something other than TA-ing, assignments or just solving problems from different textbooks. Love your channel. Keep it up mate. You are an inspiration to me, one day I will also have a youtube channel and document my journey. Cheers!
I was a straight A math student in high school and enjoyed it. Then I went on to university and did a maths bachelors, and I struggled with abstract math proofs. Sadly I didn't continue this. I'm currently following a bachelor's degree in Computer Science (close to applied mathematics) and I am absolutely loving it. It motivates me to work even harder whenever I enjoy it. Your channel has been a delight to follow. Never give up on your dreams :)
I'm 73 and have no use for calculus. My coffee will be cold long before I have taken the necessary measurements to compute how long it will take for it to get cold.
This is so pleasing to have these type of math videos, not teaching notions but showing the reality of it which makes it so more human and attractive. I hope you will soon publish a video titled " damn this problem is madly too hard " so that I can feel less alone when I don't find any solution too ! Great journey I hope you the best !
I really love your realistic presentation :))). The grunts.. the pain and despair followed by joy and exaltation.. followed by more pain and despair :))).
Thank you for your video. I can empathize with your PhD struggles, although my field is linguistics. I am on the verge of retirement from a wonderful college teaching career, but have decided to study mathematics as a hobby. One way to keep the cerebral matter working. Math is the most elegant language!
I only recently discovered my love of math, I’ve been self studying. I’ve been working through “Basic Mathematics,” by Serge Lang. Videos like this, about the journey through Mathematics, were a big part of getting the ball rolling for me. Thanks for sharing, I mean it.
I'm also self studying. I feel like mathematics will make me a better software developer. It's a weird experience for me. My knowledge of notations and basic algebra skills are lacking but concepts like recursion, Graph Theory and doing weird stuff with functions come fairly natural. I do feel like it's easier to understand math after some life experience since knowing concrete applications that you can map the abstract concepts onto makes understanding way easier. Let's do our best!
That's one fascinating and inspiring thing about humans: we learn things and we push ourselves even when we don't have to. Not only that, but the fact that you're watching videos about PhD level math, makes me think you're trying to not only learn math, you're also aiming to give your best while learning it. Best wishes to you. 😊
Speaking from my position as a student struggling with chemistry, even I was empowered by your story. I am in college doing Mathematics, physics, software systems development and chemistry. Chemistry being the odd one out which I did like initially and now it has become hell for I struggle at it, your story has given me the slight motivation to do my best regardless of my performance !
I'm so glad I found your channel. You don't see many people talk about starting from a community college. As a hopeful maths student currently studying in community college, this video inspires me. Thank you for sharing your story!
You're not alone!! Just got my associates and am now going after my actuarial math B.S. CC sucks ass but trust me you'll be glad you did it once you're at university
It's becoming an inevitable norm. As a transfer student in university from a community college, the quality of education was actually better in some classes. It all comes down to the instructor. The fact that people think university automatically means better quality of education is hilarious. Some of my worst experiences were with professors and some of my most memorable classes were with overworked part time community college instructors
I can relate to you. I also decided to take PhD Math in 2021. I just finished all my academic requirements this term. I am taking the qualifying exams in three areas which include Algebra, Analysis and any third area. I chose Theory of Differential Equations as my 3rd area. I hope that I could also pass all areas so I can already proceed with my research by next academic year. Your videos are really helpful. Thanks.
Just impressive. Every second of the video inspires me a lot. In this 16-min video I can feel your struggle and your perseverance on your road to Maths PhD. It could be really valuable to a perplexed teen when dealing with problems like whether maths career suit me or not. I believe that it is not talent, but the unyielding mentality facing obstacles on the way of math matters. This video just gives me lots of courage on facing anything blocking my way towards maths. Thanks for everything you’ve shared, and I strongly believe that in the future, I would be a PhD in mathematics now, no matter how hard it could be. Really appreciate all things from this channel and from you, thanks a lot❤
17 year old here, hopefully next year will be starting Uni in the Fall as a full time student pursing a math major. Loved hearing your story and the experience/choices that brought you to do math, it seems very personal to you. I also want to do a PhD in math, just hoping my love for the subject and the moxie I have will be able to carry me through it, no Royal Road to mathematics. Best of luck to you finishing it off!
I started undergrad in August of 2019, and am currently half a semester into my Master's program, still hate school, and unfortunately am still doing it as a means to an end, but i love to hear about your story and how your passion developed, so thanks for these videos brother
I’m a math undergrad taking real analysis this semester as well. We are using introduction to analysis by Edward D. Gaughan. I’m struggling as well a lot. But what you said about the strength of your “spirit” or character resonated well with me. I appreciate your videos struggling grad student.
I have that book. We used it when I was in grad school. Don't be afraid to go to the library and check out other books to help you get a different perspective. Maybe look for _Introductory Analysis The Theory of Calculus_ by J.A. Fridy. There is a critical typo on page 11, but it is a good book.
Listening to you talk about how your masters program changed you, hit me like a brick because I realized for the first time that is what my undergrad did to me. I too have a masters but I found it only mildly challenging compared to my undergrad. I graduated summa cum laude from my undergrad, and I recently watched the video of my graduation ceremony. They had all the summa cum laude grads stand up (out of about a 1000 from all the schools) and there were only a handful of us. I mostly toiled in isolation throughout my undergrad, completely unaware of just how rare what I was accomplishing was. Something inside me though was driving me toward excellence. I couldn't explain it then, and I can't now.
I'm on my master's degree on psychology, I have no idea what brought me here but I enjoy watching videos about the struggles of a math grad student. Life is funny sometimes.
I am 36 years old, have a law degree and have a decent job in my country. But I am not happy with my profession and I am kind of feel empty because I did not continue studying math when I graduated high school despite of my endless love to math. Now I am heavily thinking about changing my major and do some math degree or math related degree. My father was a professor at university and I was good at math, too, maybe because of genetics that I feel living life without math an empty life. When I was in my 20's I was always like I have to do this thing faster, not get behind anyone, but now my prospective about life has been changed, I do not consider that competition like world view the best approach to living. I would dedicate even my 20 years to math education. :)
I failed algebra 1 twice in middle and high school, got an A in Pre Calc recently and am taking my first calculus class this coming tuesday, wish me luck! You gained a new subscriber.
Great video. I haven't seen this honest take on studying maths probably ever. The stack exchange bit resonates and as you say it just becomes more and more rarified.
I was doing mostly mathematics. But I felt math itself wasnt getting me anywhere in life. I felt like a no life playing games all day where its useless like video game skills but im playing math allo day. So now I'm adding robotics to it lol.
Es muy bonito escuchar a otros colegas del área de STEM contar sus experiencias en su especialidad, saludos desde la Facultad de Ciencias de mi universidad 🤍
Thanks for making this. I want to earn a PhD in math. Like you, I went to a community college, transferred, and was majoring in math. Then I switched to economics. I should have stuck with math. Anyway, I did some other things for a few years. Now, I’m taking a 400-level algebra course, and I’ll apply to grad schools later this year. After you mentioned it, I thought and realized that no one in my family has been a doctor of any kind. They have generally all done more practical things, but I’ve always been drawn to ideas and spending time alone thinking.
I’m a transfer student at my university and I still got two years left for my B.S in math. It’s nice to hear your story because it reminds me that finishing my degree isn’t going to happen overnight and hurdles should be expected.
I did my masters and it had a huge impact on me as well. Please make sure to pick up some additional skill like programming because I really have not found any positions that value pure math outside of education. I love education but it really treats its people poorly and after several years I had to leave teaching. I hope your journey is better.
My recommendation for students in maths is to surround yourself with maths (and maybe physics) students. I spent 6 years in university disheartened at my progress for not comparing myself properly to peers of my own field. It made me frustrated and angry looking at students in social sciences getting multiple degrees and taking twice as many subjects a semester in wordy subjects without any substance. I felt like I was falling behind because I had to struggle more than the rest. But in reality, I was just in a boat of similarly struggling unsociable maths majors. It took the life out of me until I broke the ice and realised this.
Wow, sound similar to me transiting from high school math to uni maths. Wish someone told me once you go there your on ur own. but one the plus side i gain excellent work ethic and organizational skills from it.
this is all so candid and relatable. I'm having a lot of trouble in Undergrad and I'm majoring in CompSci. I'm taking all my gen ed classes but I'm motivated by my passion for learning things about everything and the fear of not finding a good job. I already encountered failure in my life and I've been humbled before in many different subjects. I think it was necessary for my mentality to experience that. thank you for showing your journey it's inspirational.
I am going to start my phd in August and that is after 2 years gap (since my masters) because here in India its really competitive out here either you have to qualify one of the three entrance exams or to be at the top of ur masters even after that different institutes take their own entrance and interviews but i have always wanted to be a professor although i dont see the point of having to do research for teaching but having a phd is more or less mandatory for good teaching job but I have never wanted to go the corporate way finance and data science and that city life makes me wanna throw up, the life of professors at my uni was really a motivating factor for me
Well, here is my story: I am currently finishing my degree, I am in the last semester of Civil Engineering and throughout my degree I have really liked mathematics and I have done very well in the mathematics subjects that any engineer takes (differential calculus, integral calculus, differential equations, etc). Lately I have been very motivated to do a master's degree in applied mathematics or quantitative finance (It's funny because I'm about to be a Civil Engineer but I want really do different things with my life and I have a different prospect about what I would like to work in), I would like to be able to do it in mathematics but it scares me since I feel that I do not have the mathematical maturity and the foundations to do a master's degree in mathematics (because I come from an engineering degree), in fact, I am currently taking along two subjects from the master's degree in applied mathematics at my university: Advanced Calculus and Nonlinear Numerical Optimization (I'm not in the masters yet but I'm taking those courses as electives), in Advanced Calculus I think I'm doing very well, I was very afraid since it's a prove everything subject and we see topics like introduction to real analysis, basic topology, complex numbers, ... and I had never seen any subject of this type previously and full focused in writing proofs and that kind of stuff. My idea is to finish and get my Bachelor's degree and then do a master's degree in Applied Mathematics or Quant Finance, because I would like to be part of the front desk of a Hedge Fund or get a decent job related with math in Wall Street because I have becoming very passionate about trading in the recent years and I want to do it right, i.e., from a mathematical perspective and I know that these big companies and hedge funds like to hire people from master's degrees in mathematics or PhD's in math or physics. And I'm not wanting to do a masters because of that, I really want to do the master because I really like math and I enjoy it, as you said: "You choose the mathematics life because you just enjoy the subject; you have to enjoy the subject or else it's just going to eat you alive" and I have felt that while studying for the Advanced Calculus subject because I have spent a lot of hours trying to understand things and adapting to thinking on a different way that I was used to. I'm planning to start admission process in these universities: * Stony Brook University * Baruch College * New York University * Rutgers University Hopefully I get admitted to one of that and start my program in QF Finance/Applied Math. If anyone can give me some advice on which master/university is more appropriate for what I want to do with my life I will really appreciate that! Sorry for the very long comment but I just feel that there are others that could be in the same situation than me.
quant finance is a solid field. Would definetly pick it over applied math, might as well choose pure math at that point. One problem with quant finance is that you will kind of be a one trick pony. You will ONLY have quant fin tasks. While someone with a regular finance background can work on deals with clients which in my eyes seems more appealing. But if you LOVE math you will LOVE quant fin
@@vegardgeiner1045 Thank you for the advice, I really want to go into Quant Finance and get a job on the industry. I really like math and I think I can deal with that.
I'm a 31yo in applied math & marine science (hoping to be a prof soon). Your journey is inspiring! Guessing you already have, but I'd suggest getting into research early. Do prioritize quals! - but also have some thoughts on what topics you find fun. The complete loss of structure after grad courses can be a bit tricky for many; having the first steps planned helps.
Awesome video--interesting path you went through. Math is very tough requiring absolute discipline. People starting at community colleges save a ton of money; state owned are the most affordable. I went through it free due to winning scholarships including books. That is what motivated me to study hard and make As. My Bachelor's was also won by scholarships. I got my Master's which cost me about $23,000; no scholarships, but one can win tuition contests such as by writing papers. I graduated not owing a dime since I worked and went to school at the same time. I'm too old to pursue it any further due to the COST. A doctorate would cost me about $65,000 and at my age I do not want to put myself in debt.
Love your videos! You have a calming voice and you aren’t afraid to just show the math. This video in particular hits me hard because I have always been passionate about proof based math since I was a tween learning induction from some intro to complex analysis book I was never making it through at that age. But I never pursued math as a degree due to other life circumstances, although I did get a minor in math and have a masters in cell biology and biomedical engineering. In the last few months, I’ve really been thinking about trying my best to get into grad school for math. I’ve been making my way through Rudin, and hope to finish a course/book on complex analysis before studying for the math GRE. I just can’t imagine going the rest of my life without understanding all these bewildering results from higher math… If you have any advice for making me as appealing a candidate as possible, I would greatly appreciate it! Keep it up (and subscribed lol)
Find 3 quadratic polynomials in 3 variables [x,y,z] such that the the set of intersection of the polynomials has an infinite number of rational points.
Another great video. Was hoping you’d speak more about the time in between dropping the three classes to where you then felt like you could take on those harder classes; what changed, what did you do different? Def agree that loving the subject is so important, I fell out of love with mine during grad school and I was a rough spot to be in!
Thank you so much for sharing this information. I finished my Master's about 2 years ago, and have always thought about doing a PhD. How do you think Artificial Intelligence will impact mathematical research in the near future? Is it possible for an AI model to discover new abstract mathematical knowledge?
I mean technology is already helping people use machine learning models (as well as plenty of other models) to solve mathematical problems. There’s a whole field called computational mathematics that really drives in the point of using programming and algorithms to solve mathematical problems. That being said, the majority of mathematics requires abstract thinking that just isn’t possible by computers yet.
@@Milkman-007 Thank you so much for the reply. I have been thinking a lot lately about the role of the human mathematician in the near future. I will investigate this field.
I normally suck in math. If I can get through it, anybody can. College Algebra is required for all Bachelor's programs regardless of major. College Algebra is a big game changer since you start using substitutions, conic math such as circles, ellipses, hyperbolas, and parabola which bleeds into pre-calculus. Once a person survives college algebra it will open up a whole new awareness and may grow to like it to the point of changing majors to math. I agree you MUST WORK HARD grad degree level--it costs too much to fail a single class.
As a guy who dropped BA in Economics after spending there two years, and now is probably going to enroll to an undergrad in mathematics, the last part about finance made me laugh too loud. Quants do get nice salary, but I guess passion for math is something more genuine
Thank you for sharing your story. Have you read _Living Proof_ ? I would love to have my Ph.D. in mathematics, that is one of my dreams. God has allowed me to achieve most of my dreams, but so far I haven't achieved the math Ph.D. ... yet. I don't know if it will ever happen, but I have a little hope yet. I was blessed with a master's degree. I can't afford to dedicate my time to a university to do the Ph.D. program.
Thanks for sharing! I always laugh when I hear the amazing dreams people had when they were younger because my dreams were to 1) become a Jedi, 2) be like Indiana Jones, and 3) be rich lol. Now, I’m a broke college student who’s only adventure is trudging through a swamp of PDEs.
have you seen a pure maths phd? 😳 Most of the time there are like 7 people in the whole world who could even understand it without putting in dozens of hours of research. But obviously it kinda doesn't have anything to do with the degree directly and only really depends on the specific area of research/problem, but still... I wouldn't discount pure maths. Physics, Maths, CS and Engineering certainly all lie in the same bucket of potential horribleness at the phd level.
You story sounds almost exactly like mine, except I finished with economics with minor in math… ive thougt about doing ms in math, but never seriously…. Idk maybe one day
Bro you and I have the same path! Lmao I started my undergrad at a CC from 2013-2015 and then transferred to a 4 year completed a BEng at 2018 went for a math master and completed that at 2021 and then applied and got into some Phd program in 2022.
I’m in my second year of undergrad right now and I truly have no clue if I want to get a masters. I’m so terrified of it, and it seems like you were too.
Currently an undergrad student who switched from cell biology + environmental science to just environmental science and mathematics. It was weird to watch this video, as I felt as though there were some parallels between us (wanting to prove to yourself you could do it, environmental science etc). In your opinion, is there any use a mathematics major would have for environmental science?
I’m a freshman and I’m thinking of doing more math because I like it. Edit: though I’m doing terribly, I still have an interest Edit: probably a minor in math
as a third year undergrad struggling hard studying Galois Theory and having to drop Group Theory this semester, this video is inspiring and helps me stay motivated
I’m a second year undergrad, and I’m struggling with complex analysis. I’m not sure I can see myself doing well in a class on Galois Theory or Group Theory next year. Mathematical maturity takes time, although I’m sure it grows faster when working as hard you are. Keep it up :)
@@mincedmeatchops3208 thank you :) Keep it up as well!!!
To me it is silly we have forced our students to learn Galois Theory when it is a pretty much 'relatively' a new field . We should kick back and spend time understanding and doing easier courses. With time it will all become together with harder courses, later. It took a briliant mind of Galois to develop the theory, and we kick out students in the third year to do it? Not a way.
how do you have galois in undergrad?
@@streampunksheep It is a special topics class shared between undergrads and grad students. I think the last time it was offered was in 2019 so it is my only chance to take it
The last part hits home where you said a Masters changes you.
With a BS , I became a high-school math teacher. For 3 years I kinda half assed things just doing the bare minimum as a job. I felt sour knowing I wasn't being challenged in maths again and only teaching content in high-school.
I decided to pursue a masters because I felt uneasy knowing that I dropped all of mathematics while becoming an instructor. This is when my work ethic changed completely .
I went back to high-school teaching with a masters and actually cared about how I teach and effort I put in class. Now I teach in college and I love putting my all into my craft.
i feel like people go learn "high" math, and go back and teach it. it's a cycle. what is math actually useful for? what are the practical use cases of learning math in your experience? literally all lecturers I've seen, they got masters and got a job as a teacher. makes no sense
How much you get paid? Is it enough?
@anuj7008 hmm it's not a luxurious job as a community college instructor. Around 50k at North Carolina is a good estimate. The job is much more laid back than secondary school teaching though. University is really where the pay increase happens based on your title.
@@jawyor-k3t Maths is a game 😅. Its useful in some particular cases. Most of the time, its useless
Suddenly when going into advanced courses, the perspective on what I love, changed. I too always was the straight A student at math, but now, can’t remember when I last time felt that I am good at the subject. I always thought I love math because of the subject, but it may have been because I was better than others and loved being good at something. Math does have a special place in my heart, the feeling of holding a math book is still special for me. But now, I am less sure than ever that I have the intelligence and dedication to complete a masters, talk about a Phd. This was and is still my dream. But I feel it is far for me like it is far for you to be an astronaut. I still try, but now less impatient, and less motivated, questioning if it is still the right thing for me.
Maybe I am just lazy, and I don’t like to work hard. If so, it is something that I have to change in myself.
Some goals are so worthy, it's glorious even to fail.
Hope you get your Doctorate soon.
Keep sharing your journey here on youtube as it would be very motivating for me. I always wanted to challenge myself by doing mathematics but I always end up procrastinating and crushing my dreams
I am also doing PhD in Maths. Love to see fellow phd students doing something other than TA-ing, assignments or just solving problems from different textbooks. Love your channel. Keep it up mate. You are an inspiration to me, one day I will also have a youtube channel and document my journey. Cheers!
Math PhD student studying Representing Theory here. Love this channel! You have a burning passion for mathematics, I can tell! Keep grinding brother 🫡
Representation theory is really at the heart of physics!!
I was a straight A math student in high school and enjoyed it. Then I went on to university and did a maths bachelors, and I struggled with abstract math proofs. Sadly I didn't continue this. I'm currently following a bachelor's degree in Computer Science (close to applied mathematics) and I am absolutely loving it. It motivates me to work even harder whenever I enjoy it. Your channel has been a delight to follow. Never give up on your dreams :)
You are not alone; many people struggle as you have. We don't always know that though. Stay strong. Cheerful Calculations. 🧮
I'm 73 and have no use for calculus. My coffee will be cold long before I have taken the necessary measurements to compute how long it will take for it to get cold.
@@christopherellis2663 what does calculus have to do with thermodynamics
@@joelfalco8735a lot actually
Should’ve pursued physics
Good for you, man. Mathematics is a noble profession.
NAH THEY DONT GET NOBLE PRIZE xd
@@HGCFGHFHJ Abel prize is much better. Noble is builshit who gives a fk about it
Abel profession *
*beautiful field
@@slater2001 very good
This is so pleasing to have these type of math videos, not teaching notions but showing the reality of it which makes it so more human and attractive. I hope you will soon publish a video titled " damn this problem is madly too hard " so that I can feel less alone when I don't find any solution too ! Great journey I hope you the best !
I really love your realistic presentation :))). The grunts.. the pain and despair followed by joy and exaltation.. followed by more pain and despair :))).
Bro you been at it for over 10 YEARS!!! That’s insane!!!
Im not a Math Major ,Electrical Engineer, but the StackExchange part cracked me up haha !
Thank you for your video. I can empathize with your PhD struggles, although my field is linguistics. I am on the verge of retirement from a wonderful college teaching career, but have decided to study mathematics as a hobby. One way to keep the cerebral matter working. Math is the most elegant language!
I only recently discovered my love of math, I’ve been self studying. I’ve been working through “Basic Mathematics,” by Serge Lang. Videos like this, about the journey through Mathematics, were a big part of getting the ball rolling for me. Thanks for sharing, I mean it.
I'm also self studying. I feel like mathematics will make me a better software developer. It's a weird experience for me. My knowledge of notations and basic algebra skills are lacking but concepts like recursion, Graph Theory and doing weird stuff with functions come fairly natural.
I do feel like it's easier to understand math after some life experience since knowing concrete applications that you can map the abstract concepts onto makes understanding way easier.
Let's do our best!
@@BboyKeny Same for me :)
That's one fascinating and inspiring thing about humans: we learn things and we push ourselves even when we don't have to. Not only that, but the fact that you're watching videos about PhD level math, makes me think you're trying to not only learn math, you're also aiming to give your best while learning it. Best wishes to you. 😊
@@BboyKeny What book do you have?
7:20 'Fricking Daytona 500 outside my windows'
That's hilarious
Speaking from my position as a student struggling with chemistry, even I was empowered by your story. I am in college doing Mathematics, physics, software systems development and chemistry. Chemistry being the odd one out which I did like initially and now it has become hell for I struggle at it, your story has given me the slight motivation to do my best regardless of my performance !
I'm so glad I found your channel. You don't see many people talk about starting from a community college. As a hopeful maths student currently studying in community college, this video inspires me. Thank you for sharing your story!
You're not alone!! Just got my associates and am now going after my actuarial math B.S. CC sucks ass but trust me you'll be glad you did it once you're at university
It's becoming an inevitable norm. As a transfer student in university from a community college, the quality of education was actually better in some classes. It all comes down to the instructor. The fact that people think university automatically means better quality of education is hilarious.
Some of my worst experiences were with professors and some of my most memorable classes were with overworked part time community college instructors
@@Trenz0 Very true. My math professors at CC were just as competent as any math professor I've had an university, if not better.
I can relate to you. I also decided to take PhD Math in 2021. I just finished all my academic requirements this term. I am taking the qualifying exams in three areas which include Algebra, Analysis and any third area. I chose Theory of Differential Equations as my 3rd area. I hope that I could also pass all areas so I can already proceed with my research by next academic year. Your videos are really helpful. Thanks.
Just impressive. Every second of the video inspires me a lot.
In this 16-min video I can feel your struggle and your perseverance on your road to Maths PhD. It could be really valuable to a perplexed teen when dealing with problems like whether maths career suit me or not.
I believe that it is not talent, but the unyielding mentality facing obstacles on the way of math matters. This video just gives me lots of courage on facing anything blocking my way towards maths. Thanks for everything you’ve shared, and I strongly believe that in the future, I would be a PhD in mathematics now, no matter how hard it could be.
Really appreciate all things from this channel and from you, thanks a lot❤
Really loving these videos. I'm a physics student but always liked pure math as well. Interesting to hear about how tough it really gets haha
17 year old here, hopefully next year will be starting Uni in the Fall as a full time student pursing a math major. Loved hearing your story and the experience/choices that brought you to do math, it seems very personal to you. I also want to do a PhD in math, just hoping my love for the subject and the moxie I have will be able to carry me through it, no Royal Road to mathematics. Best of luck to you finishing it off!
In the Fall of what? Rome? The Third Reich? 🇦🇺
I started undergrad in August of 2019, and am currently half a semester into my Master's program, still hate school, and unfortunately am still doing it as a means to an end, but i love to hear about your story and how your passion developed, so thanks for these videos brother
You brought it down to earth.
I’m a math undergrad taking real analysis this semester as well. We are using introduction to analysis by Edward D. Gaughan.
I’m struggling as well a lot.
But what you said about the strength of your “spirit” or character resonated well with me.
I appreciate your videos struggling grad student.
I have that book. We used it when I was in grad school. Don't be afraid to go to the library and check out other books to help you get a different perspective. Maybe look for _Introductory Analysis The Theory of Calculus_ by J.A. Fridy. There is a critical typo on page 11, but it is a good book.
Infinate respect for people who put themselves through this, I just could never.
Listening to you talk about how your masters program changed you, hit me like a brick because I realized for the first time that is what my undergrad did to me. I too have a masters but I found it only mildly challenging compared to my undergrad. I graduated summa cum laude from my undergrad, and I recently watched the video of my graduation ceremony. They had all the summa cum laude grads stand up (out of about a 1000 from all the schools) and there were only a handful of us. I mostly toiled in isolation throughout my undergrad, completely unaware of just how rare what I was accomplishing was. Something inside me though was driving me toward excellence. I couldn't explain it then, and I can't now.
I'm on my master's degree on psychology, I have no idea what brought me here but I enjoy watching videos about the struggles of a math grad student. Life is funny sometimes.
I am 36 years old, have a law degree and have a decent job in my country. But I am not happy with my profession and I am kind of feel empty because I did not continue studying math when I graduated high school despite of my endless love to math. Now I am heavily thinking about changing my major and do some math degree or math related degree. My father was a professor at university and I was good at math, too, maybe because of genetics that I feel living life without math an empty life. When I was in my 20's I was always like I have to do this thing faster, not get behind anyone, but now my prospective about life has been changed, I do not consider that competition like world view the best approach to living. I would dedicate even my 20 years to math education. :)
I failed algebra 1 twice in middle and high school, got an A in Pre Calc recently and am taking my first calculus class this coming tuesday, wish me luck! You gained a new subscriber.
These are cool candid videos.
Great video. I haven't seen this honest take on studying maths probably ever. The stack exchange bit resonates and as you say it just becomes more and more rarified.
I was doing mostly mathematics. But I felt math itself wasnt getting me anywhere in life. I felt like a no life playing games all day where its useless like video game skills but im playing math allo day. So now I'm adding robotics to it lol.
Es muy bonito escuchar a otros colegas del área de STEM contar sus experiencias en su especialidad, saludos desde la Facultad de Ciencias de mi universidad 🤍
This channel is so pure.
Thanks for making this. I want to earn a PhD in math. Like you, I went to a community college, transferred, and was majoring in math. Then I switched to economics. I should have stuck with math. Anyway, I did some other things for a few years. Now, I’m taking a 400-level algebra course, and I’ll apply to grad schools later this year.
After you mentioned it, I thought and realized that no one in my family has been a doctor of any kind. They have generally all done more practical things, but I’ve always been drawn to ideas and spending time alone thinking.
I’m a transfer student at my university and I still got two years left for my B.S in math. It’s nice to hear your story because it reminds me that finishing my degree isn’t going to happen overnight and hurdles should be expected.
I did my masters and it had a huge impact on me as well. Please make sure to pick up some additional skill like programming because I really have not found any positions that value pure math outside of education. I love education but it really treats its people poorly and after several years I had to leave teaching. I hope your journey is better.
My recommendation for students in maths is to surround yourself with maths (and maybe physics) students. I spent 6 years in university disheartened at my progress for not comparing myself properly to peers of my own field. It made me frustrated and angry looking at students in social sciences getting multiple degrees and taking twice as many subjects a semester in wordy subjects without any substance. I felt like I was falling behind because I had to struggle more than the rest. But in reality, I was just in a boat of similarly struggling unsociable maths majors. It took the life out of me until I broke the ice and realised this.
How did it end?
Your journey is inspiring for me who wants to do research in mathematics keep up the good work and you can do it !
Just transferred to university from CC myself, pursuing actuarial mathematics. Got really hype when you said you were also a CC transfer haha
I really connect with what you are saying, thank you!
this channel is so helpful , like there is someone else on the opposite side of the world going through the same thing.
4:24 that actually pretty uniquelly defines your professor :D RIP anonymity
A really genuine video, thank you for the story, gotta finish my discrete mathematics homework due tomorrow.
I appreciate you giving me the opportunity to listen to you. I’ve learned a lot from you. Thanks
Man this video is inspiring 👏
Wow, sound similar to me transiting from high school math to uni maths. Wish someone told me once you go there your on ur own. but one the plus side i gain excellent work ethic and organizational skills from it.
4:30 most lenient stem professor.
Legendary dude. Salute......
Hearing other people going to CC is really inspiring for me. Good content man.
thank you sir for telling your journey i am doing master in mathematics
this is all so candid and relatable. I'm having a lot of trouble in Undergrad and I'm majoring in CompSci. I'm taking all my gen ed classes but I'm motivated by my passion for learning things about everything and the fear of not finding a good job. I already encountered failure in my life and I've been humbled before in many different subjects. I think it was necessary for my mentality to experience that. thank you for showing your journey it's inspirational.
You are so cool. I’m still thinking about if I should pursue a phd degree after I finish my master program.
This was great to hear. Very inspiring.
I am going to start my phd in August and that is after 2 years gap (since my masters) because here in India its really competitive out here
either you have to qualify one of the three entrance exams or to be at the top of ur masters even after that different institutes take their own entrance and interviews but i have always wanted to be a professor although i dont see the point of having to do research for teaching but having a phd is more or less mandatory for good teaching job but I have never wanted to go the corporate way finance and data science and that city life makes me wanna throw up, the life of professors at my uni was really a motivating factor for me
Well, here is my story: I am currently finishing my degree, I am in the last semester of Civil Engineering and throughout my degree I have really liked mathematics and I have done very well in the mathematics subjects that any engineer takes (differential calculus, integral calculus, differential equations, etc). Lately I have been very motivated to do a master's degree in applied mathematics or quantitative finance (It's funny because I'm about to be a Civil Engineer but I want really do different things with my life and I have a different prospect about what I would like to work in), I would like to be able to do it in mathematics but it scares me since I feel that I do not have the mathematical maturity and the foundations to do a master's degree in mathematics (because I come from an engineering degree), in fact, I am currently taking along two subjects from the master's degree in applied mathematics at my university: Advanced Calculus and Nonlinear Numerical Optimization (I'm not in the masters yet but I'm taking those courses as electives), in Advanced Calculus I think I'm doing very well, I was very afraid since it's a prove everything subject and we see topics like introduction to real analysis, basic topology, complex numbers, ... and I had never seen any subject of this type previously and full focused in writing proofs and that kind of stuff.
My idea is to finish and get my Bachelor's degree and then do a master's degree in Applied Mathematics or Quant Finance, because I would like to be part of the front desk of a Hedge Fund or get a decent job related with math in Wall Street because I have becoming very passionate about trading in the recent years and I want to do it right, i.e., from a mathematical perspective and I know that these big companies and hedge funds like to hire people from master's degrees in mathematics or PhD's in math or physics. And I'm not wanting to do a masters because of that, I really want to do the master because I really like math and I enjoy it, as you said: "You choose the mathematics life because you just enjoy the subject; you have to enjoy the subject or else it's just going to eat you alive" and I have felt that while studying for the Advanced Calculus subject because I have spent a lot of hours trying to understand things and adapting to thinking on a different way that I was used to.
I'm planning to start admission process in these universities:
* Stony Brook University
* Baruch College
* New York University
* Rutgers University
Hopefully I get admitted to one of that and start my program in QF Finance/Applied Math. If anyone can give me some advice on which master/university is more appropriate for what I want to do with my life I will really appreciate that! Sorry for the very long comment but I just feel that there are others that could be in the same situation than me.
quant finance is a solid field. Would definetly pick it over applied math, might as well choose pure math at that point. One problem with quant finance is that you will kind of be a one trick pony. You will ONLY have quant fin tasks. While someone with a regular finance background can work on deals with clients which in my eyes seems more appealing. But if you LOVE math you will LOVE quant fin
@@vegardgeiner1045 Thank you for the advice, I really want to go into Quant Finance and get a job on the industry. I really like math and I think I can deal with that.
"Struggling Grad Student" for president
Ahh yes, the perfect candidate that could bring everyone together… in their hatred for me lol
I'm a 31yo in applied math & marine science (hoping to be a prof soon). Your journey is inspiring!
Guessing you already have, but I'd suggest getting into research early.
Do prioritize quals! - but also have some thoughts on what topics you find fun.
The complete loss of structure after grad courses can be a bit tricky for many; having the first steps planned helps.
thanks for sharing
Awesome video--interesting path you went through. Math is very tough requiring absolute discipline. People starting at community colleges save a ton of money; state owned are the most affordable. I went through it free due to winning scholarships including books. That is what motivated me to study hard and make As. My Bachelor's was also won by scholarships. I got my Master's which cost me about $23,000; no scholarships, but one can win tuition contests such as by writing papers. I graduated not owing a dime since I worked and went to school at the same time. I'm too old to pursue it any further due to the COST. A doctorate would cost me about $65,000 and at my age I do not want to put myself in debt.
Love your videos! You have a calming voice and you aren’t afraid to just show the math.
This video in particular hits me hard because I have always been passionate about proof based math since I was a tween learning induction from some intro to complex analysis book I was never making it through at that age.
But I never pursued math as a degree due to other life circumstances, although I did get a minor in math and have a masters in cell biology and biomedical engineering. In the last few months, I’ve really been thinking about trying my best to get into grad school for math. I’ve been making my way through Rudin, and hope to finish a course/book on complex analysis before studying for the math GRE.
I just can’t imagine going the rest of my life without understanding all these bewildering results from higher math… If you have any advice for making me as appealing a candidate as possible, I would greatly appreciate it!
Keep it up (and subscribed lol)
Find 3 quadratic polynomials in 3 variables [x,y,z] such that the the set of intersection of the polynomials has an infinite number of rational points.
Another great video. Was hoping you’d speak more about the time in between dropping the three classes to where you then felt like you could take on those harder classes; what changed, what did you do different?
Def agree that loving the subject is so important, I fell out of love with mine during grad school and I was a rough spot to be in!
Love your videos!
I m u only same thing I did and continuing my maths studies ❤🤌
I stay in grade 10 and I study myself math , I will take book the library and I will star to study analysis thanks
Truly an inspiration
Thank you so much for sharing this information. I finished my Master's about 2 years ago, and have always thought about doing a PhD. How do you think Artificial Intelligence will impact mathematical research in the near future? Is it possible for an AI model to discover new abstract mathematical knowledge?
I mean technology is already helping people use machine learning models (as well as plenty of other models) to solve mathematical problems. There’s a whole field called computational mathematics that really drives in the point of using programming and algorithms to solve mathematical problems. That being said, the majority of mathematics requires abstract thinking that just isn’t possible by computers yet.
@@Milkman-007 Thank you so much for the reply. I have been thinking a lot lately about the role of the human mathematician in the near future. I will investigate this field.
I normally suck in math. If I can get through it, anybody can. College Algebra is required for all Bachelor's programs regardless of major. College Algebra is a big game changer since you start using substitutions, conic math such as circles, ellipses, hyperbolas, and parabola which bleeds into pre-calculus. Once a person survives college algebra it will open up a whole new awareness and may grow to like it to the point of changing majors to math. I agree you MUST WORK HARD grad degree level--it costs too much to fail a single class.
I agree that you just have to "enjoy the subject."
What do you plan on doing after your PhD? Stay in academia or go into industry?
Either a professor or some job in finance
As a guy who dropped BA in Economics after spending there two years, and now is probably going to enroll to an undergrad in mathematics, the last part about finance made me laugh too loud. Quants do get nice salary, but I guess passion for math is something more genuine
As someone in finance, the last statement gave me a good laugh. Nonetheless good luck and keep uploading, amazing content!
Thank you for sharing your story. Have you read _Living Proof_ ? I would love to have my Ph.D. in mathematics, that is one of my dreams. God has allowed me to achieve most of my dreams, but so far I haven't achieved the math Ph.D. ... yet. I don't know if it will ever happen, but I have a little hope yet. I was blessed with a master's degree. I can't afford to dedicate my time to a university to do the Ph.D. program.
i saw all those real analysis books, awesome, i also have a lot of real analysis books here, my favorite topic
Thanks for sharing! I always laugh when I hear the amazing dreams people had when they were younger because my dreams were to 1) become a Jedi, 2) be like Indiana Jones, and 3) be rich lol. Now, I’m a broke college student who’s only adventure is trudging through a swamp of PDEs.
what you said about stack exchange is so hilariously true. math has to have some of the most uptight crowd of people lol
I had the exact same ballpen when I was a Ph.D. student.
bro this is so inspiring, thank u for this video
The old "hardest" PhD debate...Haha. I wouldn't be so quick to ignore the difficulty in earning a PhD in electrical and computer engineering.
have you seen a pure maths phd? 😳
Most of the time there are like 7 people in the whole world who could even understand it without putting in dozens of hours of research.
But obviously it kinda doesn't have anything to do with the degree directly and only really depends on the specific area of research/problem, but still... I wouldn't discount pure maths.
Physics, Maths, CS and Engineering certainly all lie in the same bucket of potential horribleness at the phd level.
You story sounds almost exactly like mine, except I finished with economics with minor in math… ive thougt about doing ms in math, but never seriously…. Idk maybe one day
11:48 What responsibility? I don't understand, maybe because I'm a science undergrad and if you fail or don't study at this stage nobody cares.
I'm cheering for you!!!
I’m really starting to like this channel 🎉
Bro you and I have the same path! Lmao I started my undergrad at a CC from 2013-2015 and then transferred to a 4 year completed a BEng at 2018 went for a math master and completed that at 2021 and then applied and got into some Phd program in 2022.
4:30 what a chad.
I’m in my second year of undergrad right now and I truly have no clue if I want to get a masters. I’m so terrified of it, and it seems like you were too.
I find this video strangely motivating.
Currently an undergrad student who switched from cell biology + environmental science to just environmental science and mathematics. It was weird to watch this video, as I felt as though there were some parallels between us (wanting to prove to yourself you could do it, environmental science etc). In your opinion, is there any use a mathematics major would have for environmental science?
Is there some way to reach out to you? Do you have an email?
I am in a confused position whether to chase math phd...
I like your voice n the way you talk
I’m a freshman and I’m thinking of doing more math because I like it.
Edit: though I’m doing terribly, I still have an interest
Edit: probably a minor in math
That last comment about finance made me laugh. Nice story man.
It's beautiful
"Truth is the offspring of silence and unbroken meditation." Sir Isaac Newton
Nice video!
The logic associated with Math is the core fundamental to any STEM degree
nice video man
as a kid, I wanted to be an economist
Now I'm an engineer
whats the difference?
Huge
Never let a poor professor ever deter you from a dream. For every two bad ones there’s a good one.