Drew this for my math teacher! He was super thrilled when he saw it. Toriel has her way on some people.
writing the notes my crush gave me from like a week ago 🤩 im like p sure she did something wrong in the notes but idk bc she's pretty and im bad at math so i don't know how to do anything anyway
2+4=6, 8+8=16 so 7+8=15, 1+6=7, so therefore 27+48=75
I love "how do you do math?" questions. Here's how my brain does it:
How about you guys?
I learned something… disturbing… today:
In 1860-something this guy named Charles Lutwidge Dodgson wrote a book about determinants. According to my professor, for years it was the book on determinants. Now here’s my problem: Dodgson was his real name. But the name you probably know him by? Lewis Carroll.
The dude that wrote Alice in Wonderland also wrote a book about determinants.
Maybe that’s why they’re so freaking weird.
dealing with problems regarding math and chemistry class by making them into a silly ocs (this doesn't fix anything, but at least is fun)
pluto does not approve of math, because pluto did not want to be found
leave pluto alone 2k16
Fibonacci you crazy bastard….
As seen in the solar system (by no ridiculous coincidence), Earth orbits the Sun 8 times in the same period that Venus orbits the Sun 13 times! Drawing a line between Earth & Venus every week results in a spectacular FIVE side symmetry!!
Lets bring up those Fibonacci numbers again: 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34..
So if we imagine planets with Fibonacci orbits, do they create Fibonacci symmetries?!
You bet!! Depicted here is a:
2 sided symmetry (5 orbits x 3 orbits)
3 sided symmetry (8 orbits x 5 orbits)
5 sided symmetry (13 orbits x 8 orbits) - like Earth & Venus
8 sided symmetry (21 orbits x 13 orbits)
I wonder if relationships like this exist somewhere in the universe….
Read the Book | Follow | Hi-Res -2- -3- -5- -8-
I’m in my fourth year of engineering school and I didn’t get here without lots of outside help bc assigned math textbooks are lame and confusing and professors/teachers are more worried about feeling superior to bunch of groggy teenagers than actually teaching.
I have personally used all of these websites without receiving any security warnings from Bitdefender TrafficLight or AdGuard AdBlocker. They are all either completely free or have a free version that isn’t shit.
Wolfram Demonstrations (animated graphics)
Khan Academy (arithmetic through differential equations)
She Loves Math (arithmetic through differential equations)
math24 (calculus & differential equations)
Paul’s Online Math Notes (algebra through differential equations)
MIT OpenCourseWare (calculus through graduate-level mathmatics)
OpenStax Math (precalculus, trigonometry, & calculus)
Wolfram Alpha Examples
Desmos (online calculators)
GeoGebra (online calculators)
SparkNotes Math Study Guides (pre-algebra through calculus)
eMathHelp (calculators, but more specific)
Software for your TI calculator
ticalc (programs for your TI calculator)
Wikibooks Math Department (all the math)
Andy’s Cheat Sheets (calculus)
Cheatography (find free cheat sheets)
Open Access Math Textbooks
Engineer4Free (Calc, DiffyQ, & Linear Algebra tutorials)
Flammable Maths on YouTube (general high school/college level problems and derivations)
3Blue1Brown on Youtube (very, very good for understanding spacial concepts in calculus and beyond)
Vihart on Youtube (explaining math with doodles)
Bonus: Stay hydrated, take vitamin c, study next to a window during the day if possible, and remember not to let people base your worth on your aptitude for math.
17.9.15 // Last-minute studying at my local starbucks in preparation for tomorrow’s math exam. Feeling pretty confident with how I structured my notes, so I hope tomorrow won’t be too awful. Wish me luck!
I haven’t taken math in about three semesters so please excuse me if my notes are a little rough/messy because I don’t really remember how to take notes for math 😭😭
😄LET'S JUST CALL HIM MATH or THE HANDSOME ONE 💗
This young lady earned the first place at her school’s #sciencefair #familywork #education #freedom #science #math #stem #theyarethefuture #2018
I always get asked about studyblr’s who study different subjects, so I’m going to be making a list/page on my blog dedicated to studyblrs categorised into different subjects so it’s easier for you guys to find people who study similar subjects!
Reblog and Tag your Subject
Tag Your Level of Study - High School, Undergrad etc.
You can tag multiple subjects for multiple categories
Follow my blog! (You don’t have to but it would be nice)
Message me if you have any questions or concerns!
Y'all,
I took a class on conlanging this semester, and today was the last day, so the prof presented snippits from conlangs.
My snippit was that really sad quote I made in an earlier post, and I had to explain how the Sêi (the Time God) works and how she exists at all times kinda deal.
But tone of my classmates made a language with classifiers from set theory and discrete math.
Snippits from his conlang included phrases like "for all boys they are smarter than him" and "there exists a boy such that he is smarter than him."
I failed to ask him about what possessed him to do this, but I may get back here after that.
Sean, why are you in my sister's math homework?!
And why are you selling tickets for a school play when you're a fully grown man?!
Btw the answer is 59 👍
@therealjacksepticeye
Love is like being lost, then finding yourself at your destination anyway. Love is like forgetting the formula on a math test, but still getting the the answer right. Love is life forgetting your wallet and finding the exact change you need on the ground.
Love is an innocent mistake, that ends up better than you could ever have hoped.
He has been my math teacher since 8th grade! He has such good humor (in my opinion at least).
Example #1: 9th grade, we had a test and told ud that he wrote an example on the board but actually he just wrote the word "example" on the board.
Example #2: This was today.
He wrote the date like that!!!😂😂😂
(Pictures are not mine)
Well, let me tell you, we all have this love-hate relationship with this subject, right? The worst part is that when you don't know what the heck is going on, so, as a girl who studied maths (2 Volumes/textbooks) on her own during the year she was homeschooled, here are some tips and tricks that I did to get an A+ in my math finals!
Get your syllabus together
In the beginning I had no damn idea what was going on and it was just confusing. I had to do the first thing I did was taken my index/table of contents and mark the chapters which i knew very well and the ones I had no clue about. And then i arranged them with the marking scheme, like which one carries the most marks etc etc and study accordingly.
Complete lessons/chapters that you already know
When you finish off the things you already know then that's gonna give you the confidence you need even if you know only 1-2 chapters, learn it throughout and make sure that you'll get the answer no matter how twisted the sum is. If you're doubtful about the whole textbook like any normal person.... Start with the easy ones. (I know there are literally really no "easy" chapters, spare me)
Harder chapters need hard work
Most chapters like Trigonometry proofs, Geometry proofs, Algebra, Graphs, Mensuration and Calculus etc need more than minimum effort but here's a trick, what is the common thing in this? Yes, they're all formulae and theorem based which goes to my next point. These chapters are completely based on how much you've understood your basics.
Formulae and theorem cheatsheets
Make a list of all formulae and the theorem used in the book, write them chapter wise and no printouts or digital notes. Take a paper and write it down, no excuses. It helps you while you're practicing, revising and in the last minute review, it helped me damn much. Remember, maths is a sport. The basic formulae must come to you like reflexes.
YouTube is your best friend.
For every single chapter, go and watch the basics and how a sum is done step by step. A recommendation for this is Organic Chemistry Tutor who literally is one of the reasons i passed. He has videos from basic geometry, trigonometry, statistics to calculus. Search for your own YouTubers and be clear with concepts.
Math is fully memorization
Memorize formulae and theorems with the back of your hand, you should be able to recall them within seconds. Be thorough.
Memorize basic math values (if calculator isn't allowed)
Do this if you have a majority of chapters like Statistics, Mensuration, Profit/loss calculation etc, where large numbers are concerned. Memorize the first 10 square, cube, decimal and multiplication values. It may be dry but there are literally songs available for these things, I'm serious, i learnt the first 10 cube roots by listening to Senorita xD Search for rhymes and they'll definitely be many!!
Work it out!!!!!!
Can't stress this enough, atleast 30-40 mins is the minimum for maths. I'm serious, work out each sum, don't ever think it's a waste, you'll see the results. Practice makes perfect. Work out every single sum, from examples to exercise ones cause let's be honest, our examiners love to take problems from every nook and cranny of the book.
Whiteboard method
So, I made this up and it actually works, if you have a whiteboard or anything else, once you completed a chapter, take a random page and whatever sums you have on those two pages, you need to complete within a given time limit. It helps you to identify your weak points and where the hell you're losing both time and effort and not to mention that it gives you confidence boost up.
Hope this helps :))