One Man's Mission to Unveil Math's Beauty

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  • Опубліковано 12 вер 2022
  • "Students haven't been taught that math is discovery," says Richard Rusczyk, founder of Art of Problem Solving. "Math is a creative discipline-you're creating castles in the sky." Rusczyk has a vision for bringing “joyous, beautiful math” - and problem-solving - to classrooms everywhere.
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  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 184

  • @QuantaScienceChannel
    @QuantaScienceChannel  Рік тому +41

    Read Erica Klarreich's written interview with Richard Rusczyk at Quanta Magazine: www.quantamagazine.org/richard-rusczyk-is-a-math-evangelist-who-preaches-problem-solving-20220913/
    You can also explore our other education coverage here: www.quantamagazine.org/tag/education

    • @leif1075
      @leif1075 Рік тому

      Who wrote the MUSIC in this video. I love it. Thanks for sharing. Hope yiu can tell me.

  • @theeviljames
    @theeviljames Рік тому +280

    Absoutely agree that pre-uni maths, at least when I was educated, lacked all of the fascination of "real" maths. A pair of comp-sci lectures, proving Dijkstra's algorithm, really opened my eyes; I started teaching myself the parts not covered in my degree soon after.
    Thanks, David Weir (Sussex Uni)

    • @InTrancedState
      @InTrancedState Рік тому +2

      I think there's a level of mathematical understanding and ability you need to get to until you truly behold and appreciate the beauty of maths

  • @stevenjames5874
    @stevenjames5874 Рік тому +192

    I almost failed geometry in 9th grade. Now I'm majoring in math!

    • @scrumptious9673
      @scrumptious9673 Рік тому +11

      💪👏🎉

    • @ganiti_314
      @ganiti_314 Рік тому +3

      same! lol

    • @demetriusdavis95
      @demetriusdavis95 Рік тому

      I’ve always been horrible at math but I got an A in geometry sophomore year. Pretty easy versus algebra 3/4

    • @FunoyingSounds
      @FunoyingSounds Рік тому +2

      wholesome 💯

    • @davecurry8305
      @davecurry8305 Рік тому +3

      Just about all of my math teachers were atrocious, especially the woman who taught plane geometry. The only exception was a young woman who taught calculus at tech school. I actually understood what was being taught.

  • @kam8556
    @kam8556 Рік тому +139

    I love this, especially the focus on coming back and trying again when you get something wrong. I believe that one of the most important traits we can encourage for success in a discipline like science, maths, engineering, philosophy, etc. is perseverance. So often, the stories behind some of the most incredible discoveries in history are stories of 'almost defeat' - had they given up, a golden nugget of knowledge would not have been uncovered.

    • @rfk223
      @rfk223 Рік тому +3

      The 3 Ps of success are passion, persistence, and perseverance!

    • @kam8556
      @kam8556 Рік тому +1

      @@optimusctts Would you be willing to explain what this is?

    • @alanguages
      @alanguages 6 місяців тому

      How about Desire, Drive and Determination?@@rfk223

  • @themore-you-know
    @themore-you-know Рік тому +169

    A whole class in early high school should be focused on just:
    - exploring what can be done with math. No formula nor exam. Just pure exploration, supported with "what types of math could be/were used to achieve X".

    • @neelg7736
      @neelg7736 Рік тому +1

      Or even CS but just the needs for it.

    • @insising
      @insising Рік тому +5

      I cannot imagine the number of mathematical prodigies that could've been, if only math was taught properly

    • @nitesan2814
      @nitesan2814 Рік тому +1

      Math history maybe

    • @themore-you-know
      @themore-you-know Рік тому

      @@nitesan2814, history doesn't relate to young people. And its not applicable.
      After listening to a Survivalist documentary and hearing the guy's wish to see some survivalist concepts taught in school, I was left thinking:
      - we should have a "The Human Condition" class, that starts from "Man vs Nature" surviving in the woods mixed with the basic math working against you, gradually working up to "Nature Engineered for Man" that gradually goes through the history of infrastructure and civic institutions built to save us from that dreaded nature, and the math that was required to get us where we are... and the ongoing threats to our infrastructure.
      That way, it's everything Physical + Math/Science + History + Social Policies/Sciences.
      And a lot more engaging, when you understand that the equation before you is what keeps you away from a freezing death somewhere in the woods and snow, thanks to electric grids. Frost which you experienced by going out in a survivalist experience. Among other scenarios.

    • @katielarsen2630
      @katielarsen2630 Рік тому +3

      Seriously, that should at least be the first semester so that students are motivated to learn more math

  • @ZyroZoro
    @ZyroZoro Рік тому +28

    I was in the math club in high school, and we had a copy of the original "Art of Problem Solving" book, and I absolutely loved it. It's my one of my most favorite books of all time. It goes through, step-by-step, how and why something is true instead of blindly showing you formulas and algorithms to memorize.

  • @NaSquirrel
    @NaSquirrel Рік тому +9

    almost had it when he said uncomfortable is learning. actually had a dear friend and tutor for my son teach me something profound, at least to me it has been.
    You can't learn without failing. it's the only thing that is required and universal. Today we are taught failure is horrible when actually it's quite the opposite. giving up is horrible. Which is what we do so we don't fail again.

  • @madi112233
    @madi112233 Рік тому +17

    This is so true, math is a tool for the advanced Problem solving. A tool that is so elegant and beautiful that when applied properly can blow other people's mind away

  • @joseville
    @joseville Рік тому +26

    This is such a powerful lesson! Being uncomfortable is where learning happens and struggling is fine.
    As someone who used to derive most of my value from being intelligent, it was really uncomfortable when I struggled with an intellectual exercise to. I would feel frustrated and bad about myself. Changing that mindset to a mindset that it's ok to struggle was such a relieve!

    • @leif1075
      @leif1075 Рік тому +1

      How do you not get discouraged with that though and make it still enjoyable most or all of the time?

    • @ashaide
      @ashaide Рік тому

      That was such a revelation for me, too.
      I'm currently taking a kind of retooling, and it's frustrating to feel uncomfortable with the process since I've rarely felt that in all my decades of learning.
      Good to know that the feeling isn't bad. That it's NECESSARY. That it says, "you're going in the right direction."

  • @alexanderfreeman
    @alexanderfreeman Рік тому +8

    My goodness! When I listen to Richard Rusczyk, it's as if I'm hearing my own thoughts out loud! I had this exact same revelation about math soon after graduating from college!

  • @JustinZaf
    @JustinZaf Рік тому +5

    It feels so wonderful to know that Richard, like many others great visionaries, were not a Math Prodigy but he made his way through all the hurdles he faced and imo, so far the teachers i have seen on UA-cam he is the an unparalled Maths teacher when it comes to teach students the "Art of problem solving" ! Really a delight to see Quanta interviewing him.

  • @DiwasTimilsina
    @DiwasTimilsina Рік тому +3

    We need more people like him. I had the same exact realization when I got to college. Thank you for all the work you are doing!

  • @danielwang5366
    @danielwang5366 Рік тому +2

    As a recent high school graduate, and now a freshman in college, I can strongly agree with this video. It took me a long time until I really appreciated the beauty of science and math, but I found so many of my peers unenthusiastic about such subjects. Great work, I know this will positively impact the lives of many students.

  • @isbestlizard
    @isbestlizard Рік тому +15

    Maths is great, youtubers like 3b1b and mathologer always demonstrate really cool proofs and problems and how the castles are built :D

  • @SolaceEasy
    @SolaceEasy Рік тому +7

    You may say he's a dreamer.
    But he's not the only one.

  • @crackyflipside
    @crackyflipside Рік тому +14

    When I started thinking of mathematics as developing methods for solving abstract number puzzles, and how the classic learning process of geometry provides a spark into how these abstract puzzle solving methods apply to other situations, I learned to appreciate how developing a mathematical mindset can improve your approach to problem solving in the rest of your life.

  • @dontwannabefound
    @dontwannabefound Рік тому +2

    Richard helped me so much when I was young - my only regret is I wasn't competent enough to take what he was giving so freely. All the best to your efforts Richard.

  • @SoloSart
    @SoloSart Рік тому +4

    I liked this system so much! When I was young, doing chemistry, I always thought that creativity is an essential part to problem-solving and advanced research in general. Thanks for that!

  • @hullinstruments
    @hullinstruments Рік тому

    THANK YOU SO MUCH for leaving the last 20 seconds or so of the video blank and quiet. I find that a lot of very impactful pieces like this... Always end with an add read or call to action.
    Which totally ruins the thought process.
    I have no doubt you could have gained subscribers and more attention if you had a call to action at the end of this video. So I really do appreciate that conscious effort.

  • @TheBeautyofMath
    @TheBeautyofMath Рік тому +38

    Absolutely amazing video. Everything resonated fully with my thoughts and experiences. Eternally grateful for this vision brought to fruition. Combined with other efforts(MAA, etc.) This company has generationally affected Mathematics.
    I just stopped by a school locally myself to reach out to the Math Department and see how I can help grow this view of teaching Problem Solving via the vehicle of Mathematics. Especially how to "solve problems they have never been seen before."
    Thank you so much for sharing this video and to Richard for the creation of his vision.

    • @zejugames5045
      @zejugames5045 Рік тому +1

      Great to hear you visited your local math dept! Curious how the convo went!!

    • @TheBeautyofMath
      @TheBeautyofMath Рік тому +1

      @@zejugames5045 It went reasonably well. I scheduled an appointment to meet with the Elementary School Math Department head later this week to explore options at how I can help grow interest within the Elementary. Currently the city I live in apparently has no Local Competitions for Elementary Schools, without going into what city I am in, my goal is to angle for cultivating interest in developing a citywide Elementary Competition similar to what Orange County, CA had when I lived there called Math Field Day. Possibly identify and cultivate encourage leadership within each of the Elementary Schools on my side of town to start it just locally, and then expand across the city in subsequent years. I also might try to work with the Middle Schools to see if they are currently doing anything similar, and if not, trying to start the same ball rolling there. Eventually I will post about it if it generates a positive outcome.

  • @emarekica
    @emarekica Рік тому +2

    World needs more of this man's mentality.

  • @VSN1001
    @VSN1001 Рік тому +2

    AOPS is literally my favourite math website! And EVERYTHING that he said resonates with me!

  • @lodgechant
    @lodgechant Рік тому

    How FABULOUS!!! When I was at school in Cape Town in the 80s, maths was indeed taught as though it was largely arithmetical. It was only through the philosophy of Deleuze and Guattari that I became interested in maths as a way of thinking. How I wish I'd had a teacher like Richard! x

  • @christsciple
    @christsciple Рік тому +3

    This is so simply and yet brilliant! I was homeschooled my whole life until I went off to college. My parents didn't believe it was important to have an education beyond the 8th grade. I knew better and did everything I could to teach myself. After I failed my first two whole years of engineering school I realized I was well behind everyone not because I was dumb, but because I was missing the proper prerequisites i.e. high school.
    I had to learn how to learn - how to take notes, how to read a text book, how to think logically through problems and it was incredibly difficult to do.
    Later, I found it frustrating to do something just to do it, as opposed to understanding why we solve a problem the way we do. That is where the real fulfillment for me comes from.
    After I "learned how to learn" I fell in love with it. Ended up spending 10 years in college learning everything I could regardless of whether I was interested in the subject or not. Spread across three different universities I obtained multiple degrees, advanced through every undergrad math, physics, and statistics courses offered, as well as a handful of graduate level courses.
    Throughout the process I learned so much more about people and life beyond the classroom. We all want to learn but many of us don't have the opportunity or that opportunity is crushed because of a bad teacher; sometimes it's one bad experience that ends up ruining the entire adventure.
    Richard here, has really tapped into something - teaching problem solving i.e. how to think and approach problems. Using visual cues and I'm sure other methods, those students will have tools they can use in life, not just in the classroom.
    In my mid thirties, and still obsessed with learning, specifically areas of math. The critical thinking skills I learned from some truly wonderful professors and other folks has helped me in so many ways.
    Great work Richard!

    • @leif1075
      @leif1075 Рік тому

      Do you have a PhD or masters in math or something else if I may ask?

    • @christsciple
      @christsciple Рік тому

      @@leif1075 No doctorates or masters, I'm not disciplined or motivated enough for one! I have four bachelor degrees: structural engineering, accounting, economics, and social science.
      And now I work in various fields ranging from healthcare, to blockchain/crypto startups, and investment banking as a software engineer and data architect, kinda funny how life turns out sometimes you know?!

  • @koenth2359
    @koenth2359 Рік тому +1

    Wow, this is what school math needs, almost anywhere in the world! I see children, even the very most talented, getting frustrated in the current system and this has been getting worse and worse in the past decades. Is there a way I could be part of this initiative?

  • @justarandomdood
    @justarandomdood Рік тому +7

    It's so amazing that you got the author of AOPS, I was absolutely *hooked* once I heard him say that 🤣
    I learned a lot from AOPS books when I did math competitions in middle and high school, and I learned how to teach the younger kids while I was in the clubs and again later when I worked as a math tutor for a while, it was really rewarding to be able to come up with a different way of tutoring different kids and still having them learn everything they needed to, definitely easier in a 1-on-1 setting that I had vs a classroom setting like how teachers have to work in haha

  • @edmund6392
    @edmund6392 Рік тому

    More from Richard please, he is amazing and we are an AoPS family. My math obsessed 9 year old daughter says you are her hero!

  • @lizardy2867
    @lizardy2867 Рік тому +7

    Generalized behavior and problem solving should have been the baseline of every kindergarten class, at least now people hate school and want to change it.

  • @hullinstruments
    @hullinstruments Рік тому

    The most important thing is learning how to figure out what questions to ask.
    Learning how to solve a problem is so much more important than the solution. All of my friends who went to really expensive private schools... That's what they learned there. Sometimes a problem is so newer complex you don't even know what questions to ask to begin the process. Teaching people to teach themselves. And that big first step is learning that it's a process... And what steps to take in what order.
    And super complex stuff... We might not even know what questions to ask. But if you recognize that then you have a starting point and the rest is history. The journey truly is 95% of the satisfaction. And once you reach a goal and answer... You'll just want to do it all over again. It gives people something to hold onto, helps them figure out how to solve issues... And in such a difficult world that is priceless. Truly the best gift

  • @anshanshtiwari8898
    @anshanshtiwari8898 Рік тому +8

    I agree. Math is art. Math at schools is like looking at a particle of sand on a beach

  • @Undef1Gned
    @Undef1Gned Рік тому +2

    I’m in my mid twenties now. I’m not great at math but I see the beauty of it! I really want to learn and get better at maths. I really don’t know how to approach learning it this late

    • @karthikesh37
      @karthikesh37 Рік тому

      Someone who is in a similar situation as you; as a mere beginner advice, I would suggest to get started with any International Math Olympiad problems. I personally follow the book by Engel. It's challenging, fun and greatly rewarding as whole, when viewed interms of learning process.

  • @mikebauer6917
    @mikebauer6917 Рік тому +2

    I agree. Also, need experience of applying math to messy, complicated real world problems.
    I used to put a question on the first test for a class for STEM majors where the “correct” answer was something like “I need more information/data to answer this question”. This is a very real and common situation for their future professional lives, but many (most) students were angry at this ‘trick’ question.

  • @BlueSoulTiger
    @BlueSoulTiger Рік тому

    I was nodding my head in agreement with Richard Rusczyk from the get-go. Immediate upvote

  • @olbluelips
    @olbluelips Рік тому

    Math really is beautiful and also fun! It's interactive. You can ask "what if I do x" and then try to formulate a rule for whatever x means in your case. Sometimes that means logical deduction/algebraic proofs, and sometimes you go off a hunch or a nice pattern and you find something surprising

  • @Mad_mathematician224
    @Mad_mathematician224 Рік тому +1

    Nice vedio.... Thanks

  • @rohitkumarGIS
    @rohitkumarGIS Рік тому +1

    I had the same issue with maths, no one ever teaches how to visualise in number. So I left maths and physics. But after long i returned back just to correct what is wrong in math and help develop everyone visualise in mathematical terms which will definitely support physics and other related fields.
    To do this I wrote a paper conceptual "correction in dealing with negative number and circle". It shows how to geometrically visualise in maths. It also has some very important derivation and achievements like
    Why value of pi is not constant
    Why our calculation of negative number is incorrect, like -2 * -2 = 4 is incorrect.
    I was thinking and developing content in same pattern, so considering your good cause thought to share some ideas for betterment of future students.
    Video is also available on UA-cam, you need to just type the name of topic.

  • @grandadmiralthrawn9688
    @grandadmiralthrawn9688 Рік тому

    As a person who does aspire to be a competetive coder ,I can realte with that
    When i was learning polar coordinates back in school and the 3d geometry i used desmos graphing calculator and i was feeling that there is a supreme harmony in mathematics .Fibonacci sequence,Value of Pi and euler's equations thrilled me in maths.
    Maths is art overall.Yes we can say that .Most people don't see that beauty.

  • @StratosFair
    @StratosFair Рік тому +1

    This guy explained so well what is the essence of maths. I want to show this to all the people who say that "maths is boring, it's just remembering formulas"

    • @shanetroy111
      @shanetroy111 Рік тому

      @Stratos Fair. Showing a video of someone saying how creative math is not likely to convince someone anti-math anything. They have to see actual examples that they grasp well enough. Or see themselves through learning or being taught the correct way to discover the wonder personally. Someone who’s already sold on math may be impressed by this video but i believe very few if any who have opposite view will as video shows nothing truly of the subject especially in the way discussed in video.

    • @StratosFair
      @StratosFair Рік тому

      @@shanetroy111 yes, thinking about it again, I think that you have a point. I think this would be more suited for people who are "neutral" and see math as abstract manipulation of numbers and equations that they don't understand

    • @salemsaberhagan
      @salemsaberhagan Рік тому

      @@shanetroy111 i mean, he does have an educational institution to run. Won't be getting anywhere with that if he started giving the goods away for free.

  • @SuperYoonHo
    @SuperYoonHo Рік тому +1

    Thank you sir

  • @calicoesblue4703
    @calicoesblue4703 Рік тому

    Great Video & Informative.

  • @davidokeefe1898
    @davidokeefe1898 Рік тому

    In the background, there is a roundish mathematical construction of mathematical rectangles. Does it have a name? Where can i get one. Thanks.

  • @idkmax5977
    @idkmax5977 Рік тому +1

    This type of people is actual need of Modern society.👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👏👏👏👏👏

  • @DamonPlantaseed
    @DamonPlantaseed Рік тому

    I wish I met him as a kid. I didn’t realize how beautiful math was until my 30’s

  • @sptuuri
    @sptuuri Рік тому +1

    You got it dead on!!! You could start algebra and graphs to a 4yo, then tangents & calculus soon after......children's minds are an open book which can absorb incredible amounts of ideas. They are after all, learning about the world at an astounding rate.

  • @robertschlesinger1342
    @robertschlesinger1342 Рік тому +1

    Interesting and worthwhile video.

  • @leoarzeno
    @leoarzeno Рік тому

    Amazing!

  • @katto4586
    @katto4586 Рік тому

    I love the thumbnail - such a cool 3d shape. Where can you purchase it ?

  • @DavidVonR
    @DavidVonR Рік тому +2

    Math is a creative, visual and intuitive subject. The only problem is that the school system reduces it to exams and drill problems.

  • @j121212100
    @j121212100 Рік тому

    i agree with that. I didn't learn Calculus until my freshman year in college. I was always decent at Math scoring perfect scores on all my New York math regents but not a guru at it and it was boring. Calulus was amazing. Derivation of limits and derivatives was eye opening.

  • @valor36az
    @valor36az Рік тому

    Incredibly passionate, your students are luck Mr Moore

  • @OhCampo
    @OhCampo Рік тому +1

    Unfortunately this is the case with me, I’ve only gotten into a good depth of mathematics currently in university and since I believe I started so late I generally don’t have any real interest in math. Maybe if a system of math was more focused in my earlier education I may have progressed and gained an interest in math.

  • @monaluthra4769
    @monaluthra4769 10 місяців тому +1

    Love The founder of AOPS!

  • @WanderTheNomad
    @WanderTheNomad Рік тому

    I did think that there's probably large swaths of the population whose potential isn't being revealed. I'm glad that they're trying to reach out.

  • @chiehhsu9585
    @chiehhsu9585 11 місяців тому

    completely agree. I'm a physics student in my Master's, and I didn't realize how beautiful functions were until I took calculus right before college, and I switched from wanting to major in political science to wanting to major in physics

  • @dawsontate2989
    @dawsontate2989 Рік тому

    Such a great opinion on what mathematics really is

  • @tomasprochazka1437
    @tomasprochazka1437 Рік тому

    This guy is amazing and what he is saying is so true.

  • @prashnobody4051
    @prashnobody4051 Рік тому +1

    Is it also for highschoolers

  • @modman4842
    @modman4842 Рік тому

    I’m currently learning discrete math and it feels almost fundamental and I’m wondering why we aren’t thought it earlier

  • @troymiles1164
    @troymiles1164 Рік тому

    I love this !

  • @user-rf1yf6jb1h
    @user-rf1yf6jb1h Рік тому

    What a devotion. Thank you sir!

  • @niloufarm14
    @niloufarm14 Рік тому

    Haha… i also used to tell my friends “if you don’t like math this means u haven’t grasped the beauty of it” 😌😅
    I‘ve loved math since 11/12 years old! I’ve been always the top student until first year of bachelor that we also had math! I sometimes wonder what would’ve happened had I pursued math in university instead of engineering :/

  • @geekoutnerd7882
    @geekoutnerd7882 Рік тому

    Y’all should do a video on Living Proof. Maybe do an interview with Dr. Heinrich!

  • @jonatasjcgrendering8436
    @jonatasjcgrendering8436 Рік тому

    "If you are comfort, you are not learning anything!"

  • @1.4142
    @1.4142 Рік тому

    I need to learn that origami though

  • @xw591
    @xw591 7 місяців тому

    "Were training kids to compete with computers" yes exactly

  • @GB-ob5zx
    @GB-ob5zx Рік тому

    You sir are talking about engineering method🙂

  • @aryavijaykumar4700
    @aryavijaykumar4700 Рік тому

    Thank you all very much

  • @jugchats
    @jugchats Рік тому +1

    This guy gets it. He is a genius

  • @VacuumFluctuation
    @VacuumFluctuation Рік тому

    I have been saying the same all since My early teaching days.. Doing math & Teaching math is so completely different because Solving Math often is devoid of Why are we solving it that way & not someways differently. Hence We are doing it all wrong. Sending a completely wrong vibes about Mathematical Sciences. Learning by default nature of animals is a natural behavior. We all Learn. Till the process is too uncomfortable.

  • @docwertham
    @docwertham Рік тому

    If we had ten divisions of teachers like Richard Rusczyk, our problems here in America would be solved very quickly. You have to have teachers who are moral... and at the same time who are able to utilize their primordial instincts to think with feeling... with passion... with judgment... WITH judgment! Because it's critical thinking that saves us.

  • @star_ms
    @star_ms Рік тому

    Indeed, indeed.

  • @BillyMcBride
    @BillyMcBride Рік тому

    We can think of memory (both of numbers and of notes) as a pool. Maybe one day our textbooks will say that music is the opposite of math. We are all students. Our knowledge is a looking into a system. Consciousness is beauty as the delivery system. And, we might start understanding that music too is a victorious fight against the problematic.
    Thank you for the video. :)

  • @Smartas599
    @Smartas599 2 місяці тому

    i want to be efficient like him

  • @revooshnoj4078
    @revooshnoj4078 Рік тому

    I love AoPS!

  • @crazyfly5505
    @crazyfly5505 Рік тому

    Ha, I went to Aggressively Average High too!

  • @mikeplatts567
    @mikeplatts567 Рік тому

    If I wasn’t bored of math and could make more victories instead of majority of defeates then id try again

  • @anisurfer84
    @anisurfer84 Рік тому +2

    Great effort. But, I watched through it all and still didn't see any examples or description of the techniques they are using. Started to feel like a marketing video.

    • @victoire614
      @victoire614 Рік тому +1

      It was totally a marketing video. And I wonder what they charge there. My guess is no poor parents are able to afford it by the looks of the new facilities, and probably like most for-profit private tutoring centers, they only widen the gap between rich and poor students in Math. Let me know when this country decides to actually invest in public education please.

  • @RS-jh2kl
    @RS-jh2kl Рік тому

    🥇

  • @benjamin7853
    @benjamin7853 Рік тому

    This is awesome. He is a saint

    • @victoire614
      @victoire614 Рік тому

      I'd reserve that judgement until seeing what the prices are at this academy of his... All sorts of for-profit private tutoring centers have popped up all over the US. They pay their tutors a crappy rate compared to what they charge the rich parents. In the end these places only grow the divide between Math preparation in rich and poor students, because no poor parents are bringing their kids here. What really needs to happen is for public education to be reformed and better funded so that the teaching profession attracts more good people.

  • @potatoboy6094
    @potatoboy6094 Рік тому

    I always thought it was weird that math; this skill that historically people spent WEEKS on a single problem, trying to understand something and internalize a rule set to solve, is taught back to back within a couple of days

  • @SUCCESSPASS
    @SUCCESSPASS Рік тому

    👏

  • @andrewchen861
    @andrewchen861 Рік тому

    AoPS is cool! :)

  • @pajaiy5755
    @pajaiy5755 10 місяців тому

    damn, this was AoPS?

  • @brunodosreis
    @brunodosreis Рік тому

    Mathematics is an art form.

  • @Epoch11
    @Epoch11 11 місяців тому

    If you have the money you can find teachers like this, if you have the money you can live in school districts where the schools are excellent in the teachers are good. If you have the money you can access resources such as this sort of educational framework that the gentleman was discussing. We are not a nation built on ideas values and human interactions. We are built on Capital in the system designed to concentrate that wealth in the fewest possible hands. We are definitely not as evil as the Soviet Union was, but it doesn't mean we're good.

    • @jimpim6454
      @jimpim6454 5 місяців тому

      The books are free you can find them on the internet all you need to do is learn how to speak English. The videos are free on UA-cam for everyone to watch.

  • @GARDENER43
    @GARDENER43 Рік тому +1

    Why i get a feeling that Riemann hypothesis even if it were proven to be true then it rather stil useless in terms of finding gigantic primes because we must first find a formula to find all the non triviial zeros... lol

  • @michaelweber6824
    @michaelweber6824 Рік тому

    Agreed. Unfortunately, your video also doesn't provide a single gripping example on how cool mathematics supposedly is.

  • @santabanter
    @santabanter Рік тому

    Richard is the man!

  • @chromerims
    @chromerims Рік тому

    peculiar

  • @shadbakht
    @shadbakht Рік тому +15

    Ironically, this video itself takes forever to get to the part where it shows the beautiful parts of path.

    • @sweetbluealien
      @sweetbluealien Рік тому +1

      "You can't build without foundations"😉

    • @kanaprates1012
      @kanaprates1012 Рік тому +3

      What you saying mate?? The video is interesting from beginning to end

    • @xw591
      @xw591 7 місяців тому

      The video isn't about the unveiling, it's about his mission

  • @JakeFace0
    @JakeFace0 Рік тому

    Imagine learning math for 14 years and never once being shown a fractal. It's actually really sad.

  • @fall_of_math
    @fall_of_math Рік тому

    No one of my teachers never give me high five(

  • @ApatheticPerson
    @ApatheticPerson 28 днів тому

    Damn man I didn't know you were such a chad

  • @daviddarcy-ewing6185
    @daviddarcy-ewing6185 Рік тому

    Switched off, because of the intrusive background music.

  • @ashaide
    @ashaide Рік тому

    "They haven't been taught that Math is discovery".
    Sigh. This is something I wish I learned early on.
    I wish math education from the get-go taught us this.
    The language of reality and the universe.

  • @RikyPerdana
    @RikyPerdana Рік тому

    Mathematics is the Dark Soul of science. It will F you, til you love it.

  • @ashishanand1990
    @ashishanand1990 Рік тому +2

    Meanwhile, I am comfortable because I am not learning anything 😂

  • @Chris-yc5rx
    @Chris-yc5rx Рік тому

    Fun fact: At the math training camp he had jokingly said "I hate math"

  • @xquadsw2448
    @xquadsw2448 Рік тому

    I failed this year idk if i am gonna continiung math

  • @chrissun9068
    @chrissun9068 Рік тому

    LETSS GOO