This Will Make You Better at Math Tests, But You Probably are Not Doing It

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 27 вер 2024
  • In this video I talk about something that will help you do better on math tests, immediately. This is something that people don't really talk about and something I always focused on. I had a friend who didn't have this and he ended up focusing on this and ended up doing awesome. What do you think? Do you focus on this one thing? Leave any comments or questions below.
    Useful Math Supplies amzn.to/3Y5TGcv
    My Recording Gear amzn.to/3BFvcxp
    (these are my affiliate links)
    *********Math, Physics, and Computer Science Books*********
    Epic Math Book List amzn.to/3F98vT1
    Pre-algebra, Algebra, and Geometry amzn.to/3FdbwSn
    College Algebra, Precalculus, and Trigonometry amzn.to/3UKjvfb
    Probability and Statistics amzn.to/3FaaxCq
    Discrete Mathematics amzn.to/3P6jPE4
    Proof Writing amzn.to/3XXukxo
    Calculus amzn.to/3iEH3F3
    Differential Equations Books amzn.to/3Fac5wi
    Partial Differential Equations Books amzn.to/3uyk1SV
    Linear Algebra amzn.to/3VHiN3G
    Abstract Algebra Books amzn.to/3FzLZEr
    Real Analysis/Advanced Calculus amzn.to/3VIO4Ua
    Complex Analysis amzn.to/3P6kbuo
    Number Theory amzn.to/3UEm3vw
    Graph Theory amzn.to/3BfRd5m
    Topology amzn.to/3BiAGhe
    Graduate Level Books amzn.to/3uv1eIg
    Computer Science amzn.to/3Hh8kaU
    Physics amzn.to/3BhPCMp
    These are my affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
    If you enjoyed this video please consider liking, sharing, and subscribing.
    Udemy Courses Via My Website: mathsorcerer.com
    My FaceBook Page: / themathsorcerer
    There are several ways that you can help support my channel:)
    Consider becoming a member of the channel: / @themathsorcerer
    My GoFundMe Page: www.gofundme.c...
    My Patreon Page: / themathsorcerer
    Donate via PayPal: paypal.com/don...
    ***********Udemy Courses(Please Use These Links If You Sign Up!)************
    Abstract Algebra Course
    www.udemy.com/...
    Advanced Calculus Course
    www.udemy.com/...
    Calculus 1 Course
    www.udemy.com/...
    Calculus 2 Course
    www.udemy.com/...
    Calculus 3 Course
    www.udemy.com/...
    Calculus Integration Insanity
    www.udemy.com/...
    Differential Equations Course
    www.udemy.com/...
    College Algebra Course
    www.udemy.com/...
    How to Write Proofs with Sets Course
    www.udemy.com/...
    How to Write Proofs with Functions Course
    www.udemy.com/...
    Statistics with StatCrunch Course
    www.udemy.com/...
    Math Graduate Programs, Applying, Advice, Motivation
    www.udemy.com/...
    Daily Devotionals for Motivation with The Math Sorcerer
    www.udemy.com/...
    Thank you:)

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,9 тис.

  • @ryanang3771
    @ryanang3771 3 роки тому +10400

    My theory has always been: we don't practice to learn, we practice for familiarlity AND speed.

    • @kawosdhdos
      @kawosdhdos 3 роки тому +70

      @@Contra.Mundum. no thats stupid.

    • @GymnopedieTornado
      @GymnopedieTornado 3 роки тому +93

      Reminds me of one of those great Bruce Lee quotes: “We rarely rise to the occasion, but we always fall back on our training.”

    • @JDMathematicsAndDataScience
      @JDMathematicsAndDataScience 3 роки тому +95

      I agree with you. High repetition and familiarity comes first, and then understanding follows. That is generally my experience. But the more I study, the more I can understand initially.

    • @kawosdhdos
      @kawosdhdos 3 роки тому +6

      @@Contra.Mundum. Oh its a joke. sorry

    • @cek0792
      @cek0792 3 роки тому +5

      @@kawosdhdos It is still partially true though

  • @Christian-en6lk
    @Christian-en6lk 2 роки тому +1371

    “The key is speed”
    Me: I already tried that
    “And I don’t mean drugs”
    Me: oh never mind

  • @jamaalbuki7769
    @jamaalbuki7769 3 роки тому +10703

    Your totally right, without speed I would never have been able to study real analysis. I’m so glad I had a really good dealer during university.

    • @darthmath1071
      @darthmath1071 3 роки тому +174

      lmao

    • @played7946
      @played7946 3 роки тому +96

      facking hell breh🤣🤣😭

    • @bal4844
      @bal4844 3 роки тому +13

      @@pinklady7184 I don’t think you get the joke lol

    • @_-iictdii-_4961
      @_-iictdii-_4961 2 роки тому +5

      Good one. LOL

    • @Theapewhoescaped
      @Theapewhoescaped 2 роки тому +2

      speed means (focus) as well? ? feels like it?

  • @chinter
    @chinter 2 роки тому +583

    I'd definitely counter this with a navy seal saying: "Slow is smooth, smooth is fast." Performance arts that require a lot of technical skill and perfection like playing the piano require a ton of slow practice before picking up speed. The goal should really not be speed in its own end, but smoothness and flow. When you get that flow, you use less energy while going fast, which is critical in long tests

    • @wiredvibe1678
      @wiredvibe1678 2 роки тому +2

      Maybe you just need slow practice to build up enough confidence to try going fast? Maybe going fast from the beginning is the best way to improve quickly.

    • @chinter
      @chinter 2 роки тому +27

      @@wiredvibe1678 as an experienced math tutor, I know going fast too soon is only going to create systematic misconceptions that will haunt them for years to come

    • @wiredvibe1678
      @wiredvibe1678 2 роки тому +2

      @@chinter you can avoid that with software that evaluates your answers immediately, like kahn academy. You won't be repeating mistakes in the name of speed then.

    • @acuriousmind6217
      @acuriousmind6217 Рік тому +1

      perfectly put

    • @Parcha64
      @Parcha64 Рік тому +4

      @@wiredvibe1678 I see what you mean for some applications, but specifically for music the slow pace is part of the learning process. Even virtuoso musicians slow their tempo to "feel" soumething out better. Arranging pitches on a scale of time is a particular kind of thinking and it certainly benefits from gradual learning.

  • @pisulolol
    @pisulolol 3 роки тому +11553

    me, a procastinator: *saves this video to watch later*

  • @RuyVuusen
    @RuyVuusen 2 роки тому +103

    Remember: speed is important but hastiness only leads to mistakes. You should improve your base operational pace and not your rush speed. Ideally, you should also learn to adjust your speed according to the time constraints and problem difficulty, without going overboard on either side. Regardless of your speed, you should be able to think clear and without shortcuts (doesn't mean using shortcuts-mentally or otherwise-is bad, just that you should at the very least be able to clearly grasp what you are cutting short so you don't end up jumping over necessary steps).

  • @oneoveronethirtyseven9161
    @oneoveronethirtyseven9161 2 роки тому +4244

    As a math instructor myself, this video just deflates me. The fact that your advice is correct just goes to show how little most math courses succeed in actually teaching mathematics. There should be absolutely no situation where a student who understands the concepts fails an exam because they are not fast enough. Often times instructors focus so much on timed exams that students come to the conclusion math is about following mysterious rules and algorithms as quickly as you can. True understanding of what's going on under the hood becomes secondary.

    • @limsiryuean5040
      @limsiryuean5040 2 роки тому +76

      Asian mathematics in a nutshell

    • @magicmarie8403
      @magicmarie8403 2 роки тому +10

      @@limsiryuean5040 isn’t Asian math repetition?

    • @mango-strawberry
      @mango-strawberry 2 роки тому +6

      @@magicmarie8403 i don't think so.

    • @fluffurbia3501
      @fluffurbia3501 2 роки тому +125

      I am really heartened to read your words. I agree very strongly that no student with a good conceptual understanding should be penalised for being slow. Timed tests of rote-learned procedures do not assess real aptitude for maths but merely how good students are at being proto-computers - and they will never be as fast and accurate as real computers anyway.
      In essence maths is a creative and exploratory field and should be recognised as such in how it is taught and how student progress is monitored.

    • @superdude292
      @superdude292 2 роки тому +33

      The best display of aptitude is in applying previously learned principles to new problems that you haven’t practiced. This shows true understanding and is what students fear the most. Otherwise it is just that; mysterious theories and steps that only apply to problems on homework assignments

  • @AM-cw3tf
    @AM-cw3tf 2 роки тому +175

    Watch this 2x the speed It’s quite terrifying, SPEED INDEED.

  • @molluskweddin
    @molluskweddin 3 роки тому +4214

    Speed ruined math for me. Timed tests in elementary school frustrated me and caused me to just quit trying to understand math. I barely passed (and often failed) math for the rest of my school career. I recently went back to college and I need two math credits, so I’m back to teaching myself math all over again from multiplication forward. Maybe I’ll get faster eventually, but for now I need to take my time with problems so that I’ll actually understand them.

    • @elescobars
      @elescobars 2 роки тому +368

      It's easy to say work on speed when you're already fast at math. For most of us, it's a crawl. Timed tests do nothing but stress you out and push you to make more mistakes because of the pressure of running out of time. I'm taking my last math credit now after barely passing the previous subjects and it's been hell. My teacher has speed and doesn't stop to help those of us lagging behind. I can learn more from UA-cam where I can actually take the time to comprehend. At this point, I genuinely don't believe I can enjoy Math anymore.

    • @pierrekjh7761
      @pierrekjh7761 2 роки тому +64

      Your problem with speed... speed against.
      Not speed for.
      Speed against train is fear.
      Fear is place you have no will to be.
      Speed for a good meal... mmff mfff mhhh. Speed for flavour.
      Speed is not a goal.
      Speed is an experience.
      You don't do it for the clock.
      You do it for yourself.
      Speed helps you to focus on your flow. Not on the clock's flow.
      As an Asperger I can tell the difference because someone else's clock is my fear, my own flow is my power.
      Overthinking your time is pretending you are better than your brain. But you can't compete or discipline your brain. Your brain is an animal. ASK and SEE. Let your brain go to the speed. Let it go to the meal. Don't stop every bite with every doubt or every requirement.
      Math is a game.
      If you don't play it, you make it something serious that challenges you into a punitive way.
      Math is a friend making jokes fast enough so that you understand it to late on some level so that your brain is laughing.
      Makes the joke so slow and explained in every implication it holds and you won't laugh but will get bored.
      Speed is a shot in your brain.
      All problems are not to be solved.
      But some problems have to push somewhere in you the spark of seeing problems under new lights.
      The more lights, the more shadows.
      The speed gives more in a shorter amount of time.
      Give speed to give more things to your focus to gather in the same amount of space as time is a dimension you can spot as being a space or a room where you store images and ideas.
      Let put it together in this storage. Time is nothing else.

    • @luxraider5384
      @luxraider5384 2 роки тому +17

      @@elescobars if you can t deal with stress try to deal with it

    • @elescobars
      @elescobars 2 роки тому +99

      @@luxraider5384 exactly LMAO like thanks a lot it had never crossed my mind

    • @sleepy-ashz8289
      @sleepy-ashz8289 2 роки тому +14

      @@elescobars this comment is everything 🤣

  • @TechPonder
    @TechPonder 2 роки тому +36

    I know he's a genius by how wide his eyes are opened

  • @The_D0C70R
    @The_D0C70R 2 роки тому +2470

    Speed makes me hate math.
    When I'm given adequate time to work through the problem, I often find myself actually enjoying the process.
    Trying to speed up just stresses me out and ruins any semblance of joy I get from mathematics. Timed tests SUCK.

    • @giziemcbarns
      @giziemcbarns 2 роки тому +62

      Just wait until you find out all numbers are the same. Wake up sheeple

    • @1nf3ct3dTT
      @1nf3ct3dTT 2 роки тому +26

      They only suck because you are not fast enough. When you can do the problem in your sleep you will finish in time easily and then it the time is not the limiting factor anymore and so its more fun again

    • @paulgeorge9228
      @paulgeorge9228 2 роки тому +38

      @@giziemcbarns we live in a simulation yes

    • @giziemcbarns
      @giziemcbarns 2 роки тому +2

      @@paulgeorge9228 pandemic p

    • @purrr9153
      @purrr9153 2 роки тому +1

      @@giziemcbarns lmaodjdjfjakjdd

  • @tekperson
    @tekperson Рік тому +817

    I graduated college almost 40 years ago. I was one of the slow but good folks. I realized fairly quickly that the test results didn't represent my actual knowledge of the material well. So, I gave up worrying about the test score (other than pass/fail) and focused on understanding the material. My grades were okay, and I was able to get a great job. Turns out, when you are an engineer in the workplace, folks care about what you know and how well you can apply that knowledge to new problems. You aren't given an insanely short time window to solve a problem in the real world. My youngest is in college right now. He is also one of those kids whose tests are poor indicators of understanding. He just had an internship this summer and was surprised to find out he was a star in the workplace. And his workplace really didn't care if he had a 4.0; what they cared about is that you could actually apply his knowledge and was continuing to learn. If students fail tests because they aren't fast enough, maybe the problem isn't the student.

    • @rubber89
      @rubber89 Рік тому +2

      What kinda engineer are you ?

    • @woodlandcritterpunch
      @woodlandcritterpunch Рік тому +26

      This is such a relief to read because I'm also the "slow" type at math and have worried if that'd somehow affect my overall competency if/when I get my electrical engineering degree. Thank you.

    • @short-circut2262
      @short-circut2262 Рік тому +6

      As someone in chemistry, I’ve asked the question about grades to lots of employers. Out of maybe a dozen or so only 1 actual said the grades do matter. One of them even told me she doesn’t go for people who are getting 90’s

    • @call_me_mado5987
      @call_me_mado5987 Рік тому +11

      Man i wish schools would just stop being so obsessed with scores and stuff, i am a student and i am kind of sad that people in my class only fixate on getting a good score, a year later though they don't remember crap, i will admit i also have done this but with stuff like math,physics,chemistry,computer science i always try to keep to increase my knowledge.
      Like i see people who are mad because they got 90/100 instead of 100/100. Like mate, it won't have any impact if you got 90/100 or 100/100 either way, it's a tiny percentage of your final score anyway.

    • @datboi1861
      @datboi1861 Рік тому +8

      @@call_me_mado5987 Same. That "scores matter" mindset is really fucking me up now in my 3rd year. Now I'm struggling to relearn basics and concepts I should've been familiar with since my 1st year.

  • @fluffurbia3501
    @fluffurbia3501 3 роки тому +2545

    Brian Greene - the theoretical physicist - has said that he lets his students take as long as they want in tests - and he asks very challenging questions to test depth of understanding and perseverance.
    Coincidentally, I came across a mathematician saying the following yesterday:
    ‘It’s good to be quick but it’s more important to be deep.’
    So, yes, when it comes to conventional timed tests covering basic material, it clearly helps to be speedy. But there are excellent mathematicians working in research who are s-l-o-w and reflective - and who actually weren't that great at doing exams against the clock.

    • @BlastinRope
      @BlastinRope 3 роки тому +63

      In college my calculus physics classes are supet lenient when it comes to time, but my math classes are all speed run exams.

    • @ETBrooD
      @ETBrooD 3 роки тому +103

      Speed is really overvalued, and it's actually why a lot of smart people start to fail in school and then simply lose interest. It's a damn shame that speed is so overvalued...
      The message of this video is true though. I'm just not happy about it.

    • @fluffurbia3501
      @fluffurbia3501 3 роки тому +54

      If anyone is interested to know more about my earlier comment, Brian Greene talks about his untimed test policy in conversation with Roger Penrose in a UA-cam video. I won’t attempt to link but it’s in an exchange during the World Science Festival at around the 32 minute mark. Sir Roger is a famously slow mathematician. When he was young, he was judged negatively for it but he persevered and became a productive, innovative physicist/mathematician, although still a bit slow, he has claimed.
      Personally, I get quite nervous if I consciously try to speed up. I would rather think of speeding up as a by-product of lots of mindful practice rather than an end in itself.
      It’s so unfortunate that some people are put off pursuing mathematics, not because of an inability to grasp the concepts involved but just because they are not the fastest at calculating or rearranging algebraic expressions and they receive negative feedback from teachers because of it.

    • @ETBrooD
      @ETBrooD 3 роки тому +43

      ​@@fluffurbia3501 Well said. Also, speed is not conducive to innovation. Someone who's slow may be seeing things that other people don't.

    • @fluffurbia3501
      @fluffurbia3501 2 роки тому +33

      @@ETBrooD Absolutely. And many mathematicians realise this and have commented on it.
      e.g. 'the most profound contributions to mathematics are often made by tortoises rather than hares': Timothy Gowers (Fields Medallist)
      I just wish the methods of assessment in maths could be changed to reflect this truth.

  • @klekaelly
    @klekaelly Рік тому +20

    I am a software developer and happen to be taking Calculus again. I absolutely agree with what you said. In software, it takes me hours to learn how to do something, but once I know it, I can do it fast. With math it is the same way, it's going to be dead slow at first but after lots of time you start to benefit.

  • @chandalir
    @chandalir 3 роки тому +669

    This makes so much sense. I just fail a arithmetic because I was going slow and was running out of time. So I rush the test and failed. I was wondering how I failed it was so simple. But I was moving slow and the teacher walk in told me I hold only 20 mins left I got scared because I had a lot questions and started rushing and fail. I have a retake this week. Thanks this made so much sense. I definitely practice this.

    • @TheMathSorcerer
      @TheMathSorcerer  3 роки тому +38

      You got this!

    • @narwhalestorm9881
      @narwhalestorm9881 2 роки тому +2

      How did it go?

    • @chaysegomes2541
      @chaysegomes2541 2 роки тому +3

      great luck!!

    • @juicycosmetics
      @juicycosmetics 2 роки тому +3

      @@chaysegomes2541 luck isn’t real! Prayer works though.

    • @edwardelric4387
      @edwardelric4387 2 роки тому +21

      @@juicycosmetics Why isn't luck real? You mean lotteries are won by praying? If that would be so, the most religious people would always win the lottery.
      But if you mean that you shouldn't depend on luck while taking a math test, I completely agree. You should depend on your knowledge of the topic, not on a probability of a certain action taking place...

  • @-carlrobertmagahin3526
    @-carlrobertmagahin3526 2 роки тому +523

    *Plot twist:* this is actually Isaac Newton but he is already been reincarnated.

  • @Sunset.Rising
    @Sunset.Rising 2 роки тому +5

    I'm extremely slow doing math in ALL my math classes. Great, advice. Thank you!

  • @Stolid
    @Stolid 3 роки тому +1119

    Hey, I truly agree with what you said. I really want to thank you, because I've managed to turn things around in my life since you released the "How to Learn Math from Start to Finish" video. Heck, I even went up to the nationals in my country's Math Olympiad selections (didn't make it past that, now I'm out of school and the chance is gone, but I've learnt a lot). And I'm extremely indebted to you and Mr.Grant from 3Blue1Brown for making me understand the joys and beauty of math. Thank you, again, very sincerely, Mr. Sorcerer.

    • @zaydmohammed6805
      @zaydmohammed6805 3 роки тому +18

      Thanks for sharing this is very inspiring. I hope i get to make it that far aswell

    • @Stolid
      @Stolid 3 роки тому +11

      @@zaydmohammed6805 My best wishes, hope you do : )

    • @ireallylikehuskies9472
      @ireallylikehuskies9472 3 роки тому +4

      wow! good for you and hope it all goes well for you in the future as well!!

    • @Stolid
      @Stolid 3 роки тому

      @@ireallylikehuskies9472 Thank you

    • @Stolid
      @Stolid 3 роки тому

      @@Kekoa552 Yessir, you very much can. Best of luck to you

  • @imnobody1086
    @imnobody1086 Рік тому +6

    Me speeding this video up to 1.75🧠

  • @raneemzaki2745
    @raneemzaki2745 Рік тому +2

    you’re amazing i’m grateful i’m able to watch you

  • @bunglebob
    @bunglebob 2 роки тому +147

    Yessir, my dad taught me that speed was the most important element of math ever since I took pre-algebra courses in 8th grade. I was like the guy you were describing: smart but slow. After learning how to solve equations faster, I saw myself getting better too (although I make a lot of silly mistakes, I catch onto them more quickly now and fix it.) appreciate my dad for that, and appreciate that others do this too. I really thought it was just me and my dad that did this.

    • @مياسة-غ8غ
      @مياسة-غ8غ 2 роки тому

      Hello, if I can ask about how you learned that? Is it the same thing the video mentions?

    • @bunglebob
      @bunglebob 2 роки тому +5

      @@مياسة-غ8غ I can’t really remember what the video said and I’m too lazy to watch it again, but what my dad and I did was take the state test for mathematics (switched to algebra and calculus later on) and try to do around 35 questions in an two hours, then lessen the time until I could do it in 45mins. My dad would also make many questions (equations, formulas, graphs, etc.) and give me seven minutes to solve as many as I can, and we would stop until I could answer them all correctly within seven minutes. Might not be the best or easiest way, but that’s how we did it

    • @txuravity3190
      @txuravity3190 2 роки тому

      I like ur pfp

    • @mariapoo9497
      @mariapoo9497 2 роки тому +3

      Tbh completely disagree, most important element of passing in a math class but in terms of math hell no. Math isn’t about being fast, it’s about discovery, analysis and abstract thinking to solve problems and learn new things.

  • @marcovalentinoalvarado3290
    @marcovalentinoalvarado3290 2 роки тому +2

    For the love of God. I'm subscribed. This is not just motivational, also useful!

  • @rohithnarra9026
    @rohithnarra9026 3 роки тому +477

    I completely second this even for physics as a physics student. This is how I study for electrodynamics exams by studying theory and practicing the shit out of the book problems focusing on accuracy and speed. For those who struggle with speed, give boxing and MMA a try. Trust me the sense of urgency will be generated within you and that translates to all parts of your life

    • @nadavshemesh1231
      @nadavshemesh1231 3 роки тому +15

      what do you do when you run out of time? seek the answer or move on and try again later? any tips on improving speed? :)

    • @cek0792
      @cek0792 3 роки тому +6

      Sim-Racing or Motorsports also works as well. Because, literally every millisecond counts in racing. Strategy Games especially real time ones like Total War or Men Of War helps as well

    • @rohithnarra9026
      @rohithnarra9026 3 роки тому +9

      @@nadavshemesh1231 If it’s just a study session, I finish the problem and make sure I understood the underlying theory behind it first. Then I work another problem which is similar in terms of the mathematics. A classic example is solving for electric potentials by solving laplaces or poissons equation for charge distribution in space. This pde can be time consuming to solve but the more familiarity you gain with it speed goes up too

    • @nadavshemesh1231
      @nadavshemesh1231 2 роки тому

      @@rohithnarra9026 Fantastic, thanks! specifics sure help me understand how to approach it

    • @nadavshemesh1231
      @nadavshemesh1231 2 роки тому +1

      @@cek0792 That's very interesting.. I'm definately gonna try this! i did watch some speed runners play games since it demonstrates the accuracy and skill needed to perfect runs and gave me some insight and motivation into optimization

  • @alextgordon
    @alextgordon 2 роки тому +4

    This is sage advice not just for math tests but for any kind of mental activity. As a programmer I see many parallels to my job. Everybody has a finite amount of mental energy available each day. If you can work faster and more efficiently, then more of your work will be done when you are fresh, and so your work will tend to be of a higher quality than if you had to go deep into your reserves. So working faster is beneficial even if you had unlimited time and no arbitrary exam time limit. Working more efficiently also allows you to think more deeply because you are able to explore more of the potential solution space.

  • @jacksonschumacher175
    @jacksonschumacher175 3 роки тому +300

    A strategy that I do thats related to speed is to try and figure out the problem before the teachers explains it. So while I'm listening and learning from them I am constantly desperately trying to out run them and if I beat them(which in high school i generally did) I can sit back and see what I did wrong and how I needed to correct it. This works great if you're understanding the material right away but at higher level math that is a rare occurrence.

    • @squishypanda
      @squishypanda 3 роки тому +7

      i do the exact same thing!

    • @alaeboubekri1453
      @alaeboubekri1453 3 роки тому +9

      Hey there, how exactly can someone - who is kinda slow at thinking in general - work on his maths speed ?
      I'm trying to help myself and some friends so of you have any advice please leave it here

    • @jacksonschumacher175
      @jacksonschumacher175 2 роки тому +12

      @@alaeboubekri1453 If you are interested in my personal strategy start small. If you know that a teacher will add something from one side to another then do it before they do it, not during or after. Then if you feel pretty good about the concept or you want to challenge yourself, just try to solve the problem while the teacher is talking about it. I would recommend doing this on scratch paper so when you do inevitably make a mistake its not on your notes. And most importantly while you try to race with the teacher it will become easier to see where you are getting lost because you start to fall behind and lose. That is when you ask specifically about that step. Asking questions is so important and it is something that a lot of people struggle with(including myself). Whenever I ask I always feel like I am dumb for not understanding, but I know for a fact that the more you ask questions the more you will truly become better at understanding the math.

    • @luxraider5384
      @luxraider5384 2 роки тому +5

      @@alaeboubekri1453 you re not slow, you re just no used to it

    • @mango-strawberry
      @mango-strawberry 2 роки тому +5

      @@alaeboubekri1453 My strategy is to start with simpler problems first and finish them within a stipulated time frame and I increase the level once I feel comfortable with easier problems.

  • @caliqm2199
    @caliqm2199 Рік тому +1

    Thank you,James May without the accent.
    This will surely help me in my mathematical endeavors.

  • @Timgracias
    @Timgracias 3 роки тому +116

    It's even worse when teachers compensate for poor passing rates in their tests by teaching the problems slower the next time because they think the students won't get it. The real problem you mentioned is *SPEED*.

    • @impulsezr4770
      @impulsezr4770 2 роки тому +6

      My math teacher goes so fast I never learn anything and never understand the material

    • @Timgracias
      @Timgracias 2 роки тому +2

      @@impulsezr4770 Haha. That's just as bad.
      I guess you gotta understand the stuff first before you can get good at it.

  • @cianbrady1557
    @cianbrady1557 Рік тому +2

    I didn’t realise I do this but I do usually I try skip unnecessary lines or try get in to a pattern or rhythm so I can just blaze through the tests

  • @draxgaming8901
    @draxgaming8901 3 роки тому +61

    so THIS is why my teacher in 6th grade made us do speed drills (we had 10 math problems and 60 seconds to do them) this makes a lot of sense lol

    • @mrsugar7528
      @mrsugar7528 2 роки тому +2

      10 maths problems in 60 seconds
      5 maths problems in ? Think fast u have 3 seconds

  • @anarak5132
    @anarak5132 2 роки тому +1

    Wow. Thank you for pointing this out! Whenever I slow down when doing a problem, my brain just forgets how to do it. Speed and efficiency is key!

  • @vincentdreemurr
    @vincentdreemurr Рік тому +4

    it's really the problem with how math is taught. instead of making sure you understand it, teachers just rush through and expect you to understand

  • @the_allucinator
    @the_allucinator 2 роки тому +49

    I need more tutorials on speed. This is what I sorely lack.

  • @toma3447
    @toma3447 Рік тому

    That chill guy you described sounds exactly like me. I’ve been considering requesting testing in a test center with extra time. That’s another option also.

  • @DejaKirk0331
    @DejaKirk0331 3 роки тому +100

    I didn’t realize to look at this a method. I actually panic about time. It is better to think of it as a resourceful tool.

  • @matthewl6607
    @matthewl6607 Рік тому +1

    This would’ve been great to get in my recommended BEFORE my finals 😭. Will do next quarter and will do better.

  • @alexwood3459
    @alexwood3459 3 роки тому +28

    This is definitely true for me- I am dyslexic and I really struggle with speed. I am a maths teacher now and I'm faster but still not as fast as some of the kids I teach. This video motivates me to work on it tbh- especially as I'm hoping to go back to uni soon.

  • @impocop2609
    @impocop2609 Рік тому +1

    Thanks for the advice. It’s hard for me to concentrate with speed but so far everyone has told me that I should calm down because of all the speed. I actually just bought my first speed and i real like it.

  • @SkilledApple
    @SkilledApple 3 роки тому +29

    I needed to hear this today, I’ve been stressing because I keep running out of time on tests for my calc exams. I might just time how long it takes me to finish different problem types, then just keep trying to beat my own best time until it’s like 30% faster than my base speed at least.

  • @JeromeProductions
    @JeromeProductions Рік тому

    much appreciated... math has always been my weakspot throughout the years and its never made me feel like I belong with the other kids

  • @agni961
    @agni961 3 роки тому +14

    you are so right!This is really important for tests as speed gives you enough time to find the right way to approach a problem especially if it's a very complex one....great job math sorcerer!!

  • @diego1552
    @diego1552 Рік тому +1

    I’ve never related so much to a video. My fear is literally the same to run out of time. I also always make sure to have enough time after I do a test to go over it again. Great advice

  • @obilisk1
    @obilisk1 3 роки тому +22

    I've never heard of anyone else doing this, but I've also been preaching similar things to students that I've tutored. I remember how drastically my test results changed when I got to the point where I could work the test a second time to check my own work against itself. The experience also taught me that if I made some sort of random mistake in computations, that I wasn't likely to make that exact mistake twice. I also was able to effectively grade my own test before I submitted it, meaning that I was maximizing the benefits of taking an exam every time.

  • @GornubiusFlux
    @GornubiusFlux 2 роки тому +5

    I'm finishing my Master's and looking to get back into math afterward for the next stage, taking it right from the beginning of late high school math because it's been so long. I feel that coming across this video right before that may be a blessing in disguise, as I was always a slow problem solver when it came to math. Thank you.

  • @dhickey5919
    @dhickey5919 3 роки тому +13

    Just so folks realize he's not the only one, I started college with Intermediate Algebra as well. I'm now taking Calculus 2 and scouting around for universities with masters programs in math and computer science. You can do it.

  • @stefansimons7920
    @stefansimons7920 Рік тому +2

    I teach Honors Algebra 1 at the high school freshman level (students are around 14 years old), and it is awesome to see my favorite UA-cam mathematics instructor preaching exactly what I tell my students.
    Algebra 1 is such a comprehensive subject for students, with so much material to cover. Speed and practice are the two things encourage my students to improve upon starting at day 1.

  • @shrew4592
    @shrew4592 2 роки тому +11

    oh wow i just realised this is what my highschool teachers have been pushing when I was reaching my final exams, where in preparation phase we would all set time limits on certain math question types and would just try to finish as fast as possible.

  • @josephmahoney9594
    @josephmahoney9594 3 роки тому +49

    I would agree that speed is important for success during exams. I’ve experienced myself the luxury of being able to go back and re work that one problem you were anxious about. But what about those exams where you think you have an idea of what to prepare for but then you get to the exam and it just seems leagues ahead of what you’ve been studying

    • @luxraider5384
      @luxraider5384 2 роки тому +5

      it means you re studying the wrong stuff

  • @ratgod6714
    @ratgod6714 2 роки тому +8

    I think I accidently discovered this, cause I used to struggle with finishing my tests, so I practiced speed, and I must say, my grades have improved quite a lot over the past 2 years

  • @somapaul4224
    @somapaul4224 3 роки тому +15

    My teacher told me that solving a tough maths problem multiple ways by different methods increase depth of thinking. But by increasing speed can we get efficient alternative ways to solve problems.

  • @chewieforlife
    @chewieforlife 2 роки тому +5

    This is totally right! I have a friend that is INCREDIBLE in maths, he even told me a story one time that he finished early in one test and a few days later he said he got somewhere in the lines of 95-100% and I of course was just like “wow”😳 but after watching this, speed is the truth and that’s how my friend is probably so good at it! I’m definitely not good but NOW I’m going try SPEED! :)

  • @pauljarski7590
    @pauljarski7590 3 роки тому +11

    I enjoy these videos so much, and following your proofs has helped me grow. I’m studying in France where math is super abstract and proof-heavy. Speed is definitely important, but here I’ve also had to train for accuracy and conciseness because we have very limited space for our answers and everything has to be done in pen. I haven’t yet found the optimal strategy to meet these challenges, but I’m getting better: when I come back to America and take a math class it feels really really easy by comparison. Anyway, thank you so much for your fabulous channel!

    • @lajungleqc7487
      @lajungleqc7487 2 роки тому

      Haha, je suis étudiant à Montréal et tous les meilleurs étudiants de ma classe de math et de chimie sont français ou africains. Vous avez un système d'éducation demandant, mais ça paye, au final.

  • @seb3596
    @seb3596 Рік тому +3

    I am in high school and this is a technique I have been using. I normally finish my paper in about 1/3 of the allocated time, which allows me to literally rewrite my paper as he described and then compare my answers. Helps me pick up mistakes and has helped my achieve a 90%+ for mathematics through high school

    • @RootsOf7
      @RootsOf7 Рік тому

      Do you have any techniques? I recently changed teachers, and now I realized how chill my old teacher is because I can't finish my test on time anymore
      I had only 2 question/test before so I have a bad habit on over focusing on small problems.

  • @21ruevictorhugo
    @21ruevictorhugo 3 роки тому +6

    That’s a great idea. I’m also an artist and one of the best ways to learn to paint well is to work quickly. For me, it seems to make my brain pay attention, to throw away unimportant, distracting thoughts and concentrate on what’s really there. Im guessing it would be the same with math. You won’t have time to worry about how smart you are, or about how hard the math is, or any of that. All you’ll have time to think about is the math itself. It’s intense but it really does concentrate the mind.

  • @randommeep
    @randommeep 2 роки тому +1

    man that's what I've been doing in math class, and it really does work. always practice, practice, practice!! you will get it!

  • @robertcao8455
    @robertcao8455 3 роки тому +8

    When I was a kid I really struggled on the "5 minute" math quizzes in elementary school, even though it still really basic multiplication tables and division. I just could not for the life of me finish on time, I was getting the answers correct but I just couldn't get them all done. My Mom sat down with me for hours and simply cut the time down by 2 minutes, and as I result I became able to do thing these basic things so much faster. Although I didn't do this later on in higher level math classes, I realized that because I already had a strong foundation and SPEED in these most basic things, every exam became so much easier, because instead of wasting time triple or double checking basic calculations I could instead focus on the methods I used and making sure everything else was correct.

  • @videolab257
    @videolab257 7 місяців тому

    Doing exactly the opposite of what he recommends is actually helped me. I was always trying to take the test fast but the aswers were wrong so I had to do a ton errasing. When I started taking tests slowly and mindfully I ended up having a ton of time left to take the test!

  • @alissa2222
    @alissa2222 2 роки тому +4

    Totally agree!! I'm currently in my senior year of high school. I'm enrolled in advanced functions at the moment, and will be enrolled in calculus and vectors in February! My teacher said the same things you did. She always encourages us to work on our efficiency and speed. It matters not whether you can solve a problem, rather if you can solve a problem fast.
    I feel that I'm pretty good at math, but often times I make ridiculously stupid mistakes. Wondering if you can make a video on how to avoid silly mistakes. I feel like I always rush and blank during tests, but excel when completing my homework.

  • @biblicalgreekjagdmanmethod3863

    This reminds me of what a brain scientist named John Eccles said in a book he wrote with Karl Popper called The Self and its Brain. It was that if a golf player tries to consciously think of what he is doing during his golf swing, his performance of the swing will suffer. The concept is that what makes athletic performance good is that the conscious mind is largely suppressed and that lower brain centers like the cerebellum are more active. There is every reason to assume that the performance of mental tasks involves the same subcortical structures that athletic performance does. So, if someone is solving a math problem slowly, this means that there is more excitation of the cerebral cortex and less excitation of the lower brain centers required for excellence, because high activity in one area of the brain can inhibit activity in another area.

  • @Censorededs
    @Censorededs 3 роки тому +5

    When I first took Calculus, I took an honors Calc 1 & 2 course: we proved everything in calc 1, did calc 2, then proved everything in Calc 2. We had 25 questions on our test, with 75 minutes. And they weren't easy questions, about half were proving theorems, like product rule, chain rule, etc. or computational problems.
    The professor had the following attitude: you need to be able to do the basic things quickly if you want to move onto the next level. To this day it's something I teach my students now, that if you want to be performing at a high level, you need to do things fast. Even if that requires memorizing definitions, how to apply theorems, etc. - you just have to be quick!

    • @BlastinRope
      @BlastinRope 3 роки тому

      Imo calc proofs are easier than some of the more ridiculous integrals, wish my calc 2 exams were all proofs

    • @Censorededs
      @Censorededs 3 роки тому

      @@BlastinRope Don't get me wrong we had our fair share of difficult integrals. We just had a mix of both ~ in fact we did harder integrals with less time than the regular sections. Lots of fun was had

  • @NaM-LaTeM
    @NaM-LaTeM 2 роки тому

    I agree 100% Build the knowledge in the equations, then build the speed.

  • @mahlizam412
    @mahlizam412 3 роки тому +5

    I saw this after I finished my first midterm of the semester, I’m definitely implementing this from now on

  • @acdude5266
    @acdude5266 2 роки тому

    I got into a bad habit of being overly deliberate and explicit, even on homeworks. Even a couple of my professors mentioned that I need to cut back on detail.
    It works for papers and homework, though it takes more time, if you have time available. But, it is antagonistic to test and exam success.
    It is a very hard habit to break and confounded by the anxiety of the quietness of the room, pressure of the exam, and incompleteness of preparation due to spending too much time on k < n sections.

  • @Polyglot713
    @Polyglot713 2 роки тому +96

    So you’ve told us the “what”, but I didn’t hear the “how”. Can you share some tips/advice on how we should practice speed? As a related aside, does the “how” vary depending on math problem type?

    • @brent2004
      @brent2004 2 роки тому +12

      Just do practice problems and try to finish them fast

    • @DrakeRing
      @DrakeRing 2 роки тому +13

      This method assumes you have drilled what was taught in class (or from wherever you are learning like a book) and know and remember each and every word, formula and concept. Then just do some solved problems first. Then go with the timed tests.

    • @nayjer2576
      @nayjer2576 2 роки тому

      @@brent2004 😶‍🌫

    • @wiredvibe1678
      @wiredvibe1678 2 роки тому +2

      Time yourself. Try to do better next time

    • @LarryShirley-o1q
      @LarryShirley-o1q Рік тому

      I agree on the speed for standardized tests, but also on deep, difficult problems, it takes some ruminating in a cooker, to get that ANA moment! LWS

  • @adameury60
    @adameury60 Рік тому +21

    Working on speed seems easily doable for courses like college algebra, pre-calc, calculus, etc as these problems are mostly mechanical once you understand the various techniques. Speed during timed tests in graduate school was always a challenge in courses like Real Analysis and Topology since it wasn't always obvious how to even get started. Being a slow-thinker and prone to test anxiety certainly didn't help either. I eventually got through those courses, but my confidence was definitely lower and I ended up calling it quits after getting my masters.

  • @Primitive_Code
    @Primitive_Code 3 роки тому +16

    wow! what a video. It actually gave me chills when you said speed because that is my biggest problem. I just spent 5 hours creating 5 pages of notes and algorithms for my linear algebra class. Also, in just about any math class, timed exams take bulk of grades. Heck, even our own lives are timed. That's how important time is.

  • @lchor
    @lchor Рік тому

    My math teacher actually talked about this! She's also my sister's teacher, who is 2 years younger than me, and has already begun working on speed with them.

  • @ylevision7088
    @ylevision7088 Рік тому

    My personal focus has also always been on speed. Thanks for backing up my theory.

  • @mj47_dreamer
    @mj47_dreamer Рік тому +1

    Sirrrr, you don't know how helpful your videos are! High school is tough with these competitive exams and pressure to get into good University let alone the peer pressure. Your videos aren't just great for strategising but they're so comforting. They remind me of why i took the subject in the first place! And brings back all the he zeal and curiosity.❤
    Love from India!

  • @Ddos2212
    @Ddos2212 3 роки тому +4

    YES speed is my biggest struggle. I failed 8 exams in my first year of computer science because I couldn't keep up. I repeated the year and managed to pass all my exams when I turned up the pace. But I still feel like I am slow. Please can you make a detailed video on how you would go about improving speed? I assume you get faster by doing a lot of problems?

    • @johnross8452
      @johnross8452 3 роки тому

      Another reason speed is important is it gives you increased time to work on the harder problems.
      It’s not as genius of a tip as you’d think. Here’s what I would do
      1.) study normally to the point that you understand/know the material
      2.) then focus on mastering the material by doing each problem quicker . Eg let’s say time yourself and work on a problem and can do it in 3 minutes comfortably. Set a goal of doing it in 2:30.
      Doing the problems can make you a lot faster and is the most suggested way, but I’ll offer an alternative… flashcards!
      Write problem on one side
      Steps to solve it on the other
      And practice visualizing the problem by only looking at the problem side until you can do it in your head

  • @Metril241
    @Metril241 Рік тому +1

    Bro this actually helped me get A's, i thank you so much for this

  • @satyamparija7614
    @satyamparija7614 3 роки тому +5

    Thank you for advice, I have my maths test tomorrow:)

  • @douglasVieira89
    @douglasVieira89 2 роки тому

    A particular discipline in my course used to reprove almost 70% of the class. But a little change in the exam change it this situation. The instructor begins to shift blank pages to a few lines, indicating how shortly the answer can be given without all the excessive details which the students commonly filled the blank page.

  • @xesonik2857
    @xesonik2857 2 роки тому +3

    In teaching, they call this fluency.
    The more fluent and reflexive your math thinking is, the less time you spend on everything, and you can pump exams out extremely fast. This goes for everything, including writing dx on integrals or statements of domain.
    In high school I almost always finished my exams within 1/3 of the allotted time if there were no significant amounts of sketching or diagram construction. It transferred to uni for subjects I was good at, one capstone midsemester exam I was able to complete in 5 minutes out of the 50 available, purely because I had physically done every proof on the exam and variants on it multiple times.
    Kids that get ahead in school due to speed and reflexive thinking will stay ahead because they are constantly feeding more context into their brain by completing more examples from workbooks, cementing the reflexes.
    This is my take anyway.

  • @camdenmustachia1399
    @camdenmustachia1399 2 роки тому +2

    You’re absolutely right on this I learned over time of doing my homework quickly and correctly that when it came time for the test I was super ready and got it perfectly!

  • @heart_360
    @heart_360 3 роки тому +4

    Great video, as always! One of the things that make me better, not only in math, was study a little every day, write down what i understand and in the next day make excercices about it. It's unbeliveable how doing little by little puts you so further ahead.
    I was horrible in chemistry in my high school, the worst in class, so i did this technic and almost got all the chemistry questions right on the entrance exam.

  • @idontwho8658
    @idontwho8658 2 роки тому

    Yeah exactly especially between excellent student speed makes the difference and it is also the key to get better at math from a personal experience

  • @KaninTuzi
    @KaninTuzi 3 роки тому +28

    Speed will make you better at chess, go, playing a music instrument etc. It's really a matter of improving your pattern recognition.

  • @danishsamir8807
    @danishsamir8807 2 роки тому +1

    2:39 Easier said than done when you got hundreds of different problems to practise and tests are taken as frequently though we all are robots. I don't write slow but I think slow because the school doesn't give me enough time to practise all of those problems and to store all of their solutions in my long term memory

  • @quentinv7691
    @quentinv7691 2 роки тому +6

    Damn, it's been an honor to be thought math by isaac newton himself.

  • @hydroxideblue9367
    @hydroxideblue9367 2 роки тому +2

    One of my tactics is to have a plan of attack for every problem. Categorize every problem such that I know what I need when I identify a certain type of problem. As soon as I face it, I turn on the jets and get going.

  • @izam42
    @izam42 2 роки тому +6

    Fused Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos would look like this

  • @yasak6476
    @yasak6476 2 роки тому

    wow! this is exactly what i needed! i would always and i mean always struggle with math tests! i mean i would work hard and revise much harder than all my classmates. i would do all kinds of exercices but i'm really slow at the exam and so i never get to finish it and get that A! OMG! this is the DEAL! i will math sorcerer work on my speed from now on!

  • @thomasgulliver4522
    @thomasgulliver4522 2 роки тому +5

    I'm waiting for the tip... Everyone knows that you have to be fast to do well in TIMED tests

  • @Bombaclatrasta
    @Bombaclatrasta Рік тому +2

    His right eye is watching right into my soul

  • @kyal
    @kyal 2 роки тому +3

    I would have these individual revision sheets that would take me around 30 mins to do, and I would do them over and over to beat my personal best. Then I combined them together and did all 4 in one go and ended up doing all of them in around 40 mins (with full working and everything). My hands were tired, but it was really good practice.

  • @nihonmaksudur7662
    @nihonmaksudur7662 2 роки тому +1

    Speed creates kind of intuition for Math .

  • @blinded6502
    @blinded6502 Рік тому +1

    I had worst scores in math class, because I tried to actually understand and solve stuff, instead of fully relying on intuition or just looking up answers on the internet in secret

  • @mitraboodram3765
    @mitraboodram3765 Рік тому +4

    Me watching the video at 2× speed. "I'm way ahead of you bro" lol

  • @2000-v9x
    @2000-v9x 2 роки тому

    thank you for giving me the perfect advice without even knowing what my issue was

  • @ai-bino
    @ai-bino 2 роки тому +13

    I used to be good at math… at least that’s what I say to myself in my current situation, barely getting by in math in college. I'm sitting with an F in Cal C and at this point in the middle of the semester, if I don’t improve soon I’ll be doomed to fail. I’ll try to work on speed because, thinking back to it, when I was "good at math" I was fast at math. Thank you for helping me realize this.

  • @Monique-ur7mf
    @Monique-ur7mf Рік тому

    I noticed this habit while taking tests, I try to finish the problems as quick as possible and move on to the next. Now I know that this a great alternative for taking test! Thank you

  • @rafiqamar9606
    @rafiqamar9606 2 роки тому +4

    Why Japanese caption 😤

  • @kinanali2668
    @kinanali2668 2 роки тому

    man , this was useful ... you know sometimes i struggle with math.. but hearing advices from someone work in this field is encouraging to get back to the problem and try a different way ...
    thinking fast does make you clever ... and that's what we want.

  • @iyousshhhh
    @iyousshhhh 2 роки тому +4

    Is it just me or he really does look like Newton?

  • @neys2310
    @neys2310 Рік тому

    thanks math sorcerer or what ever ur name is, this piece of advice was very helpful for my last exam! ihope u get more recognition

  • @zackcarl7861
    @zackcarl7861 Рік тому +2

    Thinking and solving problems fast is very important , it's must be fast skip steps , very important ,i observed that in those kids good at maths in my school, though i was smart and could understand and do well in physics and maths and physical chemistry the students who were ahead of me they could process derivations faster they could solve numericals fast , and i can solve those same numericals too i knew the way how i should approach the solution too when i read it but there was something in me where i was conscious of each step i do and with my friend who along with understanding had an advantage of speed be it fast calculations , be it's faster application of formulas or be it faster writing and making mind maps that whole thing made difference
    And now while i am a CS engineer, those friends of mine who were good with speed they are still doing more math intensive subjects

  • @Phantom-eg4gl
    @Phantom-eg4gl Рік тому +3

    Sir you look like modern day Isac Newton

  • @yagan_dawn2008
    @yagan_dawn2008 4 місяці тому

    I am an engineering student,and the worst thing that happens to me all the time is that during a math test,i always feel like i don’t have enough time and i rush.When i see that something doesn’t work out,i switch to the next problem,and the stress of running out of time,makes my brain not be able to think as efficiently as when i solve the same tasks at home.This causes me to not be able to solve some of the easiest exercises that i will solve almost immediately after i leave the exam.That caused me to fail some math exams,even though i have understood the subject.I really believe that the grading system doesn’t work for everybody,and there should be put less accent on theory than on practice,especially when you will become an engineer

  • @marathon8123
    @marathon8123 2 роки тому

    This is very interesting. Usually videos like these give expected answers, which sucks because I don't learn anything. This caught me off guard, and it really made sense. Great video

  • @Sophia-sp7eb
    @Sophia-sp7eb Рік тому

    I really knew this but couldn’t think of a solution.thanks