I'm Good at Math but I Make Silly Mistakes

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  • čas přidán 21. 10. 2020
  • I'm Good at Math but I Make Silly Mistakes. This happens to most people. Does it happen to you? How to you deal with it? Do you have any strategies for this? Please leave any comments or questions in the comment section below.
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Komentáře • 263

  • @Abhimerc
    @Abhimerc Před rokem +325

    silly mistakes really weigh heavy on you, sometimes you get so frustrated that you're in tears and start doubting your abilities

    • @puppylove33806
      @puppylove33806 Před 8 měsíci +24

      Totally get that, I had my first calc exam and got a 70%. I was so disappointed bc I had a study schedule in place, studied for hours and it felt awful seeing the score. When I looked back on the answer key I realized most of the points were due to silly mistakes. Id argue that’s a worse feeling than not knowing the material because all that work, and I knew the concepts, only to fail in the last push. Hopefully I can fix those next time around

    • @S_BHARATH_007
      @S_BHARATH_007 Před 6 měsíci

      You are true bro🎉

    • @AradhyaJain-nv8ks
      @AradhyaJain-nv8ks Před 5 měsíci +9

      and the worst part is that the kids who were worse than you start doing good and the teacher just keeps praising them and discouraging us

    • @Hello-jz8yf
      @Hello-jz8yf Před 5 měsíci +1

      So real 🥲

    • @TheReemzuhair
      @TheReemzuhair Před 4 měsíci +1

      I aced every test so far yet today I made two silly mistakes and cried for an hour 😢

  • @Djentstructer
    @Djentstructer Před 3 lety +321

    Seriously, math sorcerer's doin some serious sorcery here. Where does he pull these super relatable topics out of? Just amazes me everytime!

  • @austinhardison4945
    @austinhardison4945 Před 3 lety +230

    “Sometimes it just takes time” so true, sometimes we’re just not mentally equipped to handle the problem in the moment, but through hours of experience and gaining wisdom, we eventually hit that next level. Patience is key for development

  • @carljones9640
    @carljones9640 Před 3 lety +145

    Something I noticed in myself is that I would most often make these mistakes when I was too confident in the math. I would be able to see where the solution was going to come from, and I would be so focused on getting to the solution that I would stop paying attention to what I was writing. Numbers from steps further down that I was visualizing would creep out onto the paper, or I'd stop paying attention to the signs, or I would apply a theorem only partially and leave too much out so the proof wasn't obvious anymore.
    I also noticed that the more I felt pressured to finish in a certain amount of time, the more likely I would be to have this sort of math ADHD where my mind would be chasing solutions and not paying attention to the process of getting to them.
    If you want my reaching explanation, I think a lot of mathematics "maturity" comes from having spent enough time slowly perusing a textbook and painstakingly working out solutions by hand while being forced to ignore everything else that you, indirectly, teach your mind to focus on single task. It's a sort of therapy for attention disorders or deficits. You refine that focus over the years of reading and mistakes and agony to the point that it becomes scalpel-sharp and then, without realizing it, you're suddenly "good" at mathematics.

    • @TheMathSorcerer
      @TheMathSorcerer  Před 3 lety +4

      Ya that makes a lot of sense, we hyperfocus hard on math when working through it so yeah, makes Sense I agree. Good comment thank you!!

    • @mr.k8660
      @mr.k8660 Před 2 lety +2

      I can relate so much to that you're saying

    • @itz_masterinstinct3404
      @itz_masterinstinct3404 Před rokem +5

      Bruh I thought I was alone I thought about this but you put my thoughts into words 😂

    • @federalbureauofinvestigati5549
      @federalbureauofinvestigati5549 Před rokem +1

      Literally the exact same with me

    • @euphoricjihyo8533
      @euphoricjihyo8533 Před 10 měsíci

      I relate to this so much

  • @skeptic3045
    @skeptic3045 Před 3 lety +37

    It's amazing that you as a Math teacher struggled with matrices..I love linear algebra but when it comes to the computations I feel like a 8 year old (although they might be able to correctly calculate 3-4, which I have learnt I'm not reliably able to do)..So now I use a calculator to manually do the calculations...

    • @TheMathSorcerer
      @TheMathSorcerer  Před 3 lety +5

      oh yeah man everyone has to learn somewhere/sometime! Nobody is born knowing how to add 2 + 2:)

  • @defunct1373
    @defunct1373 Před 3 lety +85

    I think your definition of mathematical maturity is pretty much on point.

  • @dominicklukas1807
    @dominicklukas1807 Před 2 lety +39

    Another problem is simply being messy and rushing. Writing more slowly and being neat goes a long way. Also half the time I don't check for errors because I can't be bothered. If your writing is neat enough then you will be excited to read over and admire it, to catch those silly mistakes 😄

  • @leeming1317
    @leeming1317 Před 3 lety +61

    What I've learned from Dotson, is that professors actually like to hear when the book tortures you and you can't figure it out.
    Either sadistically to laugh at you for your incompetence, or to helpfully guide you during office hours to an easy approach.
    Hopefully the later and not the former, but the former happens way too often.

    • @rohithnarra9026
      @rohithnarra9026 Před 3 lety

      Ay another andrew dotson fan! I second that as that advice even worked with some of my professors lol

  • @rationalpi6755
    @rationalpi6755 Před 3 lety +16

    I can relate to this so much, I’m in my first year and sometimes I can spend hours on just one single problem. Like you said there is really no shortcut beside practicing more and be patient with the process. One thing I found really useful is to really think about deeply of the mistake you made, and try to repeat the exercise again line by line in your head by always reminding yourself of that error and ask yourself why you didn’t get it right. I personally find that it helps me to be more cautious the next time I run into a similar problem and as a result ending up with less mistakes.

  • @yrjokalevi
    @yrjokalevi Před 10 měsíci +6

    I took a big step in my life at 25 y.o and went to the university of applied sciences, software engineering in January this year and lately I've been struggling a lot with math as the subjects just gets harder and harder. My highest level of education was vocational school which I graduated from in 2016, back then my motivation was so low that I did not give a damn about learning anything but today it's totally the opposite. One year and two months ago I started to learn math so that I could bear with it in the school and oh boy how low my skill level was, I had no idea how fraction numbers work, no idea how to calculate the most basic equations, in geometry, square area was the only calculation I knew, no idea what pi, square root, sin/cos/tan is for etc... 1 year and 2 moths after to this day I'm learning linear algebra!
    I understand the math concepts pretty fast and I think math is fun but I just do all sorts of stupid mistakes and by then my motivation goes down and I throw my laptop out of the window (not really), at that point I just feel like this is not for me, I'm too stupid, I cant, I give up. However this video gave me huge motivation boost and reminded that it just takes time to learn these things :D
    Thank you so much!

  • @benthayermath
    @benthayermath Před 3 lety +23

    I love these motivational videos! Keep 'em coming!
    I remember making a mistake on a homework set in quantum mechanics, and I looked over it for something like 8 hours and couldn't find it. It was a simple series of problems but somehow I was obtaining impossibly difficult algebraic equations. Frustrated almost to the point of crying, I went to the professor and asked him to find my mistake. He spotted it in 30 seconds. I had somehow forgotten to take the alternating sum when expanding a determinant in cofactors, a stupid, silly mistake! And he told me something I'll never forget: "In life, you have to learn to find your own mistakes and fix them. This is what it's like to do research; there may only be a handful of specialists in your subfield capable of spotting your mistakes in the world, and they won't always catch them." It left a big impression on me. That advice has transcended math for me, as I keep telling myself to backpedal if necessary and work on my flaws, so that down the road I can be successful.

  • @mylesanthony8672
    @mylesanthony8672 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Thank you! This will keep me going some more this rainy Friday morning. For me it's Functions that I keep adding or subtracting wrong with. Amazing to know I'm not the only one! And reassuring to remember that picking up new maths isn't nearly as much of a problem.

  • @doublebassrox
    @doublebassrox Před 3 lety +5

    Thank you for these videos, and these points of view, coming from a person who’s failed trig and college algebra 3 times, I feel like I’m inadequate and there’s something seriously wrong with me, but when I see people like you struggled as well in your own ways I feel like I can pick myself up and keep going if I just put more time to it

  • @dojawiththecat
    @dojawiththecat Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for posting this!
    You gave me relief...

  • @marr412
    @marr412 Před rokem +8

    Losing points because of these silly mistakes is the worst. Professors are ruthless here, losing 1/10 of my grade due to a silly mistake is the worst. If I do more, I lose even more...
    Once I was solving a complex integral and a squared z was turned into a 2 in the next step 😭.

    • @abraruralam3534
      @abraruralam3534 Před rokem +3

      In such aweful moments, where I feel like I have failed to represent who I really am, I remember how poor people never even get a CHANCE to prove themselves. I got a chance, they didn't. And I calm myself down. Life is unfair, but it can always be even more unfair. Let's enjoy everything that is well and we mistakenly take for granted.

    • @marr412
      @marr412 Před rokem +1

      @@abraruralam3534 Comparing your situation with worse ones is not a healthy coping mechanism. It's better to accept you have failed. University is free to attend in my country, so yeah. Life is not unfair. If I make a mistake, it is my fault and I can live with that. Sure, there are worse situations, but that doesn't make me feel better lol

  • @bharatigiri7609
    @bharatigiri7609 Před 3 lety +84

    Mistakes are a part of me

  • @ashurbanipalcousin
    @ashurbanipalcousin Před 3 lety +8

    Thanks for another insightful and relatable video! I have gotten so many exams back that I expected 100s on and was ashamed to see my not perfect score because lo-and-behold I put the square root of four as FOUR. I’ve learned to take as much time as possible on exams going over each small computation again after I have gone through it the first time. I have found and fixed many small mistakes because of this tactic.

    • @TheMathSorcerer
      @TheMathSorcerer  Před 3 lety +1

      Ya I sometimes would do the exam multiple times, if you are fast enough it's possible. Sometimes it's not possible though, depends on the class and how ready you are I guess.

  • @srinjenadas3486
    @srinjenadas3486 Před 3 lety +3

    OH MY GOSH how do you make such relatable videos 😭 to be honest when i read the title of making silly mistakes, the first thing what came up to my mind was finding the inverse of a matrix , because that's what i used to struggle the most in my high school years for getting all the computations right.
    Right now I am a math major , and I can confidently sit with a book of proofs and absorb what's written in there. But somewhere I used to feel so dumb as I couldn't always get all the multiplications right back then and spend long hours in it. Now, when I saw your video it motivated me so much.
    Thanks a lotttt. Love from India. ❤️

  • @jonathanhall1278
    @jonathanhall1278 Před 3 lety +18

    You’re the Bob Ross of mathematics. Thank you so much for this video!

  • @jh5560
    @jh5560 Před 3 lety +10

    So glad I came across your channel, your videos have helped me simply not feel like an overrun failure haha. I'm an adult student and have had to relearn math from the ground up (starting with pre-college algebra class) I never took anything beyond algebra in high school. Next semester I will be in Calc 3, watching your videos have helped me with my perspective and I want to keep going further with math. There are students from STEM highschool programs who run circles around me but as you have said it takes "time". Thanks and keep up the great videos!

    • @TheMathSorcerer
      @TheMathSorcerer  Před 3 lety +1

      That's awesome ! It's so cool to see that you came such a long way, I also started in pre algebra. Good stuff💪

    • @arturonavarropovedano2396
      @arturonavarropovedano2396 Před 3 lety +2

      Hey, man, do you have any advice for someone like me? I started university last year (I am 18) and its a complete failiure 🤦. I seem to be too slow to follow the lectures and i have a problem to understand my teachers. I dont know what to do. I thought about learning by myself with books and by paying a tutor for help with the theory and practice. Since you had a slow start It may help me. Thanks

    • @jh5560
      @jh5560 Před 3 lety

      @@arturonavarropovedano2396 The single most important thing is doing problems. Math is a fun but frustrating mistress. You have to struggle to get better. So whatever you do when using books don't look at the answer or look at a problem someone else worked out and then say "ok I got it now..." because you won't have it. A tutor can be incredibly helpful and I would highly recommend getting one (check if your school offers free tutoring). Last bit of advice is to just try and stay positive. Keep working and don't give up you are only 18, by 20 I had failed algebra three times (convinced I could solve problems after seeing solutions...smh).

    • @arturonavarropovedano2396
      @arturonavarropovedano2396 Před 3 lety

      @@jh5560 Thank you for taking the time yo answer. I know the feeling of looking at the solution before working It out. It sometimes happen, I Will approach It the way you say It. You suggested yo see if i can get free tutoring un my school, that is a good idea too. Thanks and keep Up the work👊

  • @JustinGarfield1
    @JustinGarfield1 Před 2 lety +6

    Same here!!!! Last night I was working out just a quadratic equation book and I had problems. The author position the problems in ways I never seen. I got so upset. Lol. I am going to take a stab at it while I am just now learning calculus. So basically I am studying algebra, trig and calculus. I think the best way is to prove the answer is right after we are done. Although frustrating.

  • @hamedhilal7113
    @hamedhilal7113 Před 3 lety +1

    I respect you so much!

  • @user-ht6oj2po8k
    @user-ht6oj2po8k Před 2 měsíci

    You are my inspiration. Thank you.

  • @amy679
    @amy679 Před 3 lety +3

    I would love to see a whole video on the topic of mathematical maturity

  • @tanaveditz9586
    @tanaveditz9586 Před 11 měsíci

    Hey man, awesome video. Im a sophomore in algebra 2 and I am really good at math, but I tend to get a lot of questions wrong and when I look back all the steps in the problem I set up were correct, its just a simple silly flaw at the end of the problem that I didn't add or multiply in the end which gets the whole question wrong. I always type my questions in the calculator after I finished them to check the answers and I always get a different answer and when I go back to double check it would be a simple mistake like adding 5 when I am supposed to be multiplying. It gets me so mad how I'm really good at the tricky word problems and setting up hard equations but I end up getting it wrong just cuz of a silly mistake when im about to get my answer. This video really helps though. I guess I just have to wait and get better.

  • @fatmabatmaz2
    @fatmabatmaz2 Před 2 lety +4

    I am a Year 12 Maths student from the UK and throughout the year my grades flactuated up and down and maths was the subject I was the most stressed for ; this is why I always watched your videos because I loved maths and I always practised but due to stress, anxiety and careless mistakes I didn't get the grades I wanted. For my end of year exam however I got 89% (which is an A* at our school and is the most important grade to determine predictions for universities ) and yes I could have got 92% if I gave my answer to 3 dp instead of 5dp, if i didn't change my sign from + to - midway through my working out , if I had payed attention to small details like exactly which part of the journey we had to draw the velocity/time graph for . At the end of the day I have accepted that i will make those silly mistakes and I can only reduce them by constantly practising and doing timed papers . Even if it's a relatively simple calculation I would write it out so that even a Year 10 student can understand what's going on in my paper. I also felt bad for not doing enough revision like the 2 weeks before the exam but my advice for maths students is that if you have been working hard throughout the year and understood the concepts , don't worry (still do some practise papers!) as I have learned none of your hard work will go to waste , even if you don't see the results instantly :)

  • @geoofficial4779
    @geoofficial4779 Před rokem

    Thanks for this inspiring video.Hope my silly mistakes go away with time and practice.

  • @acentasecond3721
    @acentasecond3721 Před 3 lety +1

    great video, you gave me some inspiration for a future video!

  • @adamhernandez7847
    @adamhernandez7847 Před 3 lety +5

    This is me with Mathematical Induction... I’m a 4th year in college and I’m STILL messing up on the intuition for how to do the algebraic manipulation :(

    • @TheMathSorcerer
      @TheMathSorcerer  Před 3 lety

      Aww!!

    • @TheMathSorcerer
      @TheMathSorcerer  Před 3 lety

      This might help Principle of Mathematical Induction: czcams.com/play/PLO1y6V1SXjjM2Cnx7JPYSbrvyIf9PT3zL.html

  • @Nabil-yh1dz
    @Nabil-yh1dz Před 9 měsíci

    Just did a test today and i'm so mad i can't understand basic linear inequality. Thank you for the message!

  • @TheRogueVigilante
    @TheRogueVigilante Před 4 měsíci

    man literally what i needed to hear...................... thanks..........................................

  • @skeletotg4423
    @skeletotg4423 Před rokem

    i love you man, thanks.

  • @lilicia839
    @lilicia839 Před rokem

    I'm doing it right now. I know how to solve it but because of silly mistakes like misplacing decimal points, my calculations are often wrong. I needed this. I have to keep on practicing.

  • @tauceti8341
    @tauceti8341 Před 3 lety +20

    Lmfao I wish I had a teacher that woud say. I KNOOOOOOOOW I forget to put the tail on a radical too!
    Instead of 2/10 you forgot to put the tail. Punishing you now will make it so you don't do it later.
    That's why I really hope I can bang out a math degree and teach one day. Having struggled, I GET IT!!!
    I need to hit the linear algebra texts again, I remember inverse matrix and having troubles on them.
    Linear Algebra bothered me so much! Not because it was "abstract" or hard, just the long computations, and lack of clear work area to put it in, made making these mistakes so common.
    Then you get super demotivated when you just have an answer and its wrong, but you have no idea where you made it, so you spend like hours redoing the same problem, or trying to follow the monster mess of a work in those cramped matrix spaces to find the algebraic error.

  • @krawny3416
    @krawny3416 Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you sir

  • @prachiagarwal5674
    @prachiagarwal5674 Před 9 měsíci

    Super helpful! Could you please point me to any resources on how to build mathematical maturity?

  • @drunkslav7280
    @drunkslav7280 Před rokem

    I needed this video

  • @0deszuh111
    @0deszuh111 Před rokem

    Currently struggling rn in accounting and this is hella motivating

  • @tomaszorowski9323
    @tomaszorowski9323 Před 5 měsíci

    Thank you bro, i want to go college in maths and i keep doing these "silly mistakes". Im still happy, because im doing good besides it. As u said i will just keep practicing and get good.

  • @thatoneguy9364
    @thatoneguy9364 Před 2 lety +7

    The way he defined mathematical maturity is so accurate. I could relate to his story about matrices. For me it was learning Trigonometry for the first time in college, and I started in pre-Algebra so I had no idea what I was getting into. Trig knocked me down sooo hard, and I barely got a C in the class. Then all of a sudden a few months later at the end of my pre-Calculus class, we had to do a 2 week review of Trig and suddenly my brain just understood it like it was no big deal, and now Trig is one of my favorite math subjects! All this time I thought I had some kind of mental block, and really all it was was just mathematical maturity that I needed to build. Thanks math sorcerer!

    • @fatmabatmaz2
      @fatmabatmaz2 Před 2 lety

      not me self-learning the entire year 1 trig from maths youtubers D: I hope year 2 trig doesn't crush me to powders

  • @RahmetSemir
    @RahmetSemir Před měsícem

    Yeah you are so right thxs I wish u were my teacher

  • @rohithnarra9026
    @rohithnarra9026 Před 3 lety +1

    Math Sorcerer, what I love about you is that you were once an ordinary joe like me but what separated you from most others was passion for the subject. That goes to prove that :
    Genius is one percent inspiration and ninety-nine percent perspiration.
    -Thomas Alva Edison
    I am going to keep pursuing what I am doing with the same dedication and passion and not succumb to insecurity. In fact, please do make a video about combatting insecurity when learning math and why you should not measure your progress based on other students performance.

  • @skyblue4230
    @skyblue4230 Před 3 lety +5

    What I do is as I go through homework problems, I check my answers and mark where I went wrong with a pen. Then when I'm studying for a test I review the mistakes that I made and make a mental effort not to make those mistakes again. I can't be sure but I think it's working for the most part.
    P.S. I have a derivatives test tomorrow and I'm super stressed lol. Hopefully I don't screw this up.

    • @TheMathSorcerer
      @TheMathSorcerer  Před 3 lety

      Good luck!

    • @fatmabatmaz2
      @fatmabatmaz2 Před 2 lety

      see that would work if i didn't already have 2378324723 pages of notes that barely fit into my folder and I just can't be bothered to look through all of them .

  • @TonyDaExpert
    @TonyDaExpert Před 3 lety +4

    Problem for me is a make simple basic elementary school mistakes while I do the harder concepts pretty well (assuming I learned them good enough lol)

    • @TheMathSorcerer
      @TheMathSorcerer  Před 3 lety +2

      I always think that's a good problem to have a guess, better than the other way around!! 👍

  • @21ruevictorhugo
    @21ruevictorhugo Před rokem +1

    I really do think that it takes time for your brain to get good at something, and that it works in the background while we think we’re not thinking about a problem anymore. You’ll be walking down the street and all of a sudden you completely understand a problem that you were stumped by last week. And you might stop in your tracks and say something out loud with a big smile - and people look at you funny.
    As for basic arithmetic I had the same problem after having my brain addled by chemotherapy drugs. I thought I’d never get better, that I’d always make mistakes like 2x3=5 - really stupid! But I got better at it and I can laugh at myself. The only way to get good at something is to just do it. Trust that you’ll get better. You will! Math Sorcerer has been my 'light in the distance', helps me just keep working. I’m so glad I stumbled over his videos. 👍

  • @vijayap1929
    @vijayap1929 Před 3 lety +1

    So inspirational!

  • @sandeepmishra2090
    @sandeepmishra2090 Před měsícem

    thanks for posting this video . its too relatable

  • @ayishiki9
    @ayishiki9 Před 4 měsíci

    First time I ever found a video so relateable to me.

  • @jacksonmorris9234
    @jacksonmorris9234 Před 2 lety

    The inverse matrix example reminds me of fourier series coefficients, I don’t know how I suddenly can’t do basic integration

  • @edwardgaming466
    @edwardgaming466 Před 3 lety +7

    I kept doing careless mistakes smh. But the worst problem is that I always forgot what I learned so I need to go back again to learn it, which consumes a lot of time.😑😞😖

    • @TheMathSorcerer
      @TheMathSorcerer  Před 3 lety +3

      yeah forgetting what you learned before is always an issue for sure

    • @edwardgaming466
      @edwardgaming466 Před 3 lety +1

      @@TheMathSorcerer it is completely discouraging tbh plus it slows down the progress. I think I've already finished the entire calculus course if I don't forget things.

    • @jacobharris5894
      @jacobharris5894 Před 3 lety +2

      edward gaming Yeah I hate that. I’m trying to dive into a book on Bessel functions right now but I think I have to go back and review sequences and series from calc 2 first, so I can learn the Frobenius method.

    • @edwardgaming466
      @edwardgaming466 Před 3 lety +1

      @@jacobharris5894 damn ur way too far man! I hope I can reach that level of maths too.

    • @jacobharris5894
      @jacobharris5894 Před 3 lety +2

      edward gaming I’m sure you can. It just takes time.

  • @shaneyaw4542
    @shaneyaw4542 Před 3 lety +2

    You make a valid point but what if the inverse of a matrix does not exist?
    My linear algebra professor pwned my entire class with with a question to find the inverse of an m x n matrix where m and n are not equal. I think i was the only one that got that one right although it haunted me until i got my exam back.

  • @compphysgeek
    @compphysgeek Před 3 lety +2

    as a student I wouldn't feel too bad if I make silly mistakes as I know that tutors, lecturers, profs also constantly still make mistakes. particularly when writing down solutions to tutorial problems or tests when they are (or at least claim to have been) in a rush when they wrote the solutions.

  • @addy7464
    @addy7464 Před 3 lety

    Fourier series is also annoying like you do the whole thing right and then realize you got a minus sign wrong.... Thanks for the video this gave me some confidence.

  • @Nico-ef7bt
    @Nico-ef7bt Před 3 lety +1

    you are totally right when you say thing takes time especially in maths.But ,the exam board does not understand this though.

    • @TheMathSorcerer
      @TheMathSorcerer  Před 3 lety +1

      Ya they don't they have to go by correctness in order to compare results

    • @Nico-ef7bt
      @Nico-ef7bt Před 3 lety +1

      @@TheMathSorcerer sure thing.Im from mauritius and to be honest its because of you i love maths.Love your motivational videos.

  • @ragu_766
    @ragu_766 Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you so much for this Video… my math Tutor told me i make i make careless mistakes and should See the doctor… I‘m totale Fine, except sometimes i make these careless mistakes that i know how to solve… this Video really cheered me up

  • @SAYANWALA
    @SAYANWALA Před 9 měsíci

    Damn, W teacher! Thing is there is no time start today and work hard.

  • @JaspreetSingh-zp2nm
    @JaspreetSingh-zp2nm Před 3 lety +2

    I am sorry to ask in this video, Do you know any website or manual to solutions of undergraduate algebra by Serge Lang?
    Thank you

    • @TheMathSorcerer
      @TheMathSorcerer  Před 3 lety

      I do not sorry, but maybe someone else knows and they can reply here .

  • @baggu8859
    @baggu8859 Před 3 lety +2

    Sir, you earned my sub.

  • @optimizedpran1247
    @optimizedpran1247 Před 3 lety

    This dude has such a good vibe

  • @roxiethecockapoo1138
    @roxiethecockapoo1138 Před rokem

    It's really hard because I am extremely prone to making dumb mistakes. I've been getting back C's on my quizzes even though I know how to do each problem, except that it was X>0 not X

  • @tnetennba725_3
    @tnetennba725_3 Před 10 měsíci +2

    It took me (I'm dead serious) over 10 hours to finish about 25 calculus problems (with a few short breaks to eat and pee lol). I had to look at the examples on almost every problem after getting it wrong the first time and it was almost always a silly, STUPID mistake, like getting the wrong exponent or just multiplying or adding incorrectly. Granted, I was a bit sleep deprived, but I cried pretty hard several times because of how long it was taking for very simple concepts (solving for the derivative). It was excruciatingly exhausting. I'm at least glad I'm not alone but I want it to stop because I know I can do better... I have a test tomorrow. 😭

  • @Budha3773
    @Budha3773 Před 3 lety +2

    During the pandemic I literally sat down with and finished 1 and started my second book on DG.
    I still make silly mistakes.
    The key is going back and fixing them, now, tonight, or tomorrow. But then, when you’re feeling confident deriving the answers to similar problems without reference to the solutions.
    This is by no means linear. Rather like exp from [0,1) compared to [1,infinity)
    Except you feel like you’re on [0,1) for most t.
    Once you master it, it’ll be worth infinite other exercises
    😂

  • @oscarpesantes6342
    @oscarpesantes6342 Před rokem +1

    It’s really the harsh timing that gets me in exams because I have to rush and when I re-do the question after the exam I don’t mess up.

    • @08.lalithahasinich51
      @08.lalithahasinich51 Před rokem +1

      Do you have any ideas on how to avoid that ?? I have 3hours to solve questions in my exams and I find it difficult get an answer right in the given time because I tend to make silly mistakes .

  • @jangy36
    @jangy36 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Not just Math, I was the best in Chemistry and Physics but kept making the silliest mistake which costed marks.
    I always get like 98% and never ever got 100 because kept making the silliest mistake on the easiest question.
    Even on the my chemistry exam I got 97% but made mistakes on multiple choices which are the easiest.

  • @zaydabbas1609
    @zaydabbas1609 Před 3 lety +1

    Last night I spent hours trying to find out why the 5x5 matrix I reduced was different, and it was just a negative sign

  • @larrymintz5259
    @larrymintz5259 Před 3 lety

    I feel this way studying topology

  • @justinbishop54
    @justinbishop54 Před 2 lety +1

    Inverting matrices is brutal. It's just testing if you can do a hundred addition problems with zero error. So even if you have a tiny error percent, you get the whole inverse wrong

  • @theimmortalphysicsmaths3962

    Plz make a video on maths exam stress...Because I observe when I solve ques casually it got it and when I do it same in exam I don't able to do it I .....(not explainable)

  • @affanyk9389
    @affanyk9389 Před rokem

    bro felt my heart

  • @robg4472
    @robg4472 Před 3 lety

    You should make a video about those of us that make silly mistakes, are not particularly good , have no business being in a math program but are here anyway :). Matrices by hand are the worst.

  • @Impiloiscam
    @Impiloiscam Před 8 měsíci

    I just learnt to read questions carefully after spending too much time on a problem only to find out they gave me a clue on the question

  • @ethelngullie9264
    @ethelngullie9264 Před 23 dny

    Thank you so much, I had practised maths a lot and i was very good at it, and I was practising for my exam tomorrow, and I made silly mistakes and I got frustrated.Until I saw this video.Thanks a lot and wish me best of luck for my exams😆

  • @senselessnothing
    @senselessnothing Před 3 lety +2

    I never make mistakes in calculations anymore, until I do and I spend hours trying to figure it out, the frequency is lower than it used to be but it still happens once every few months and it's miserable.

    • @senselessnothing
      @senselessnothing Před 3 lety +1

      well I guess the fact that I avoid calculating anything by hand helps

    • @jacobharris5894
      @jacobharris5894 Před 3 lety +2

      I do the opposite. I make mistakes but when I do they are usually really simple, like dropping a number or a negative sign, so I can catch myself before I finish the problem and backtrack. Sometimes the mistake isn’t easy to find so I just start over but that’s has saved me in tests a lot.

    • @TheMathSorcerer
      @TheMathSorcerer  Před 3 lety

      Hahaha

  • @KMMOS1
    @KMMOS1 Před 3 lety +4

    An aspect of mathematical maturity is achieved by regularly detoxifying one's brain. A sober body does this automatically during consecutive sleep cycles at night. Using a bathroom in the morning removes toxins from a body, and a more mature brain ready for mathematics results. Five or six ninety-minute sleep cycles is a good brain usage aide.

  • @prabh6396
    @prabh6396 Před 2 lety

    I’ll literally know how to do the problem but I’ll do a random error even though I’ve practiced do you have any tips

  • @Phymacss
    @Phymacss Před 6 měsíci

    This is me!!! I’m good at math, but I always have to repeat the problem because I always get the signs wrong or even copy the numbers/problems wrong. Really frustrates me….

  • @nicolebruce8025
    @nicolebruce8025 Před 2 lety

    But what if you don't have the time to wait for you to finally get it? What if your grade depends on it?

  • @jameskary5140
    @jameskary5140 Před 3 lety +2

    Been there man

  • @GuadalupeGarcia-ql9rt
    @GuadalupeGarcia-ql9rt Před 3 lety +8

    Where do you teach at

  • @user-ux3jl7bl2p
    @user-ux3jl7bl2p Před 2 měsíci

    i remember once that i exceled in the class understand all concepts then Mr. Exam comes in and then go like 80 percent which hurts a lot for things you are dedicated for, most of the time you got to make a lot more of hardworking than the thing you want to achieve.

  • @lka8735
    @lka8735 Před 4 měsíci

    To my mind, i think the most practical way to avoid silly mistakes is looking back to spot the silly mistakes you proprably slipped up. I used to do that every tests in middle school and because of that every solution i wrote in the exam is perfect the examiner can’t deduct points from me, but now in high school i hardly have enough time to do the problems let alone looking back and checking it. By some unknown reasons, i now always make some mistakes somewhere. For example, yesterday i sat the school’s excellent students exam and i missed 6,5/20 points due to not processing deeply the task. I regret not reviewing the solid geometry solution i wrote. I made mistake of drawing it right at the beginning and spend 1 hour doing it for nothing.

  • @eat_your_cereal
    @eat_your_cereal Před rokem +2

    the 2*3=8 and the "forgot to read the last sentence of the problem" really hurt

  • @Kevin-14
    @Kevin-14 Před 3 lety +2

    My teachers always say that after practicing and doing 1000 exercises you begin to understand it better hahaha
    It's a matter of dedicating the necessary time
    On Monday I had an exam, I was the night before and that same day explaining certain concepts to my classmates, everything was very clear at the time of explaining to others how all this works, later in the exam, I did that problem wrong, I don't know what happened, but at that moment I didn't think correctly and made a silly mistake lmao
    However, my explanation was correct, and my classmates did it well, being able to explain and teach concepts to others, helps a lot in addition to knowing the theory and practice

  • @SaturnLady
    @SaturnLady Před rokem

    but i have a final exam tomorrow what should I do helppp

  • @sapientum8
    @sapientum8 Před 3 lety +1

    Often, when you trace your attempt at a solution of an unsolvable problem, there is a place where a plus sign mysteriously turns to minus, or the other way around, for no apparent reason.
    And sometimes, this is already part of the misprinted problem in the book...

  • @WolfKin85
    @WolfKin85 Před 2 lety

    I just came here after fucking up simplistic quiz questions on Khan Academy by providing incorrect +/- signs and incorrectly re-writing my correct solution from paper to the computer. As a 35-year old man I nearly had panic attack and cried because of that. Just as back when I was in school, failing another test due to exactly the same type of mistakes. Its a amazing way to teach oneself low self-confidence. Sigh. Thank You for hearing me, I feel slightly better now. I'll go back to the quiz to enjoy another self-inflicted mental breakdown.

  • @shreyas-mq4yd
    @shreyas-mq4yd Před 7 měsíci +2

    But what if I don't have time

  • @johubify
    @johubify Před 3 lety +10

    I have made the silliest of the silly mistakes, and that's why I never get that 100 in Math
    I sometimes dont 9 marks of silly mistakes, sometimes 12, sometimes 7, and they're like..addition errors, misunderstanding my handwriting 😂, and the greatest of the greatest...Rat Puppet's special silly mistakes.
    Rat Puppet's special silly mistake include doing things like skipping 1, or 2, and even 3 questions accidentally because you're in such a hurry to finish.
    Silly mistakes are a really vital part in my math life😂 I'm glad you made this video, very less people have a video on this topic.
    And yes, Matrices were always a killer for me, it had super easy problems, but at the calculation part, I did LOTS of silly mistakes!

    • @TheMathSorcerer
      @TheMathSorcerer  Před 3 lety +1

      Oh wow skipping problems hehe , I think I did that a few times,not a good feeling lol

    • @johubify
      @johubify Před 3 lety +1

      @@TheMathSorcerer it's a terrible feeling!
      And I've skipped easy problems 😭😂

    • @johubify
      @johubify Před 3 lety +3

      @@TheMathSorcerer When I'm solving problems alone, at home, I barely make any silly mistakes.
      I guess it's just the pressurising enviornment of the examination... I'm not able to perform well under pressure

    • @TheMathSorcerer
      @TheMathSorcerer  Před 3 lety

      Ya you get better at that, at testing taking. With practice you get better.

    • @TheMathSorcerer
      @TheMathSorcerer  Před 3 lety

      Lol

  • @WarmHugSeeker
    @WarmHugSeeker Před rokem

    Does anybody knows the name of the background music ? 😀

  • @mukeshkhanna305
    @mukeshkhanna305 Před 3 lety

    Sir will u recommend 🤗 me a good geometry book with proof to each and every Theorem s so that I will be able learn Newton's principia ❣️ without much🤯 difficulty

  • @watashiwagakuseides6563

    Mom I found my idol and I love him, thank you so much I'm literally crying 😭😤💗, I gotta stay strong.

  • @simuzz1367
    @simuzz1367 Před 2 lety

    And i've been trying to solve my chemistry numericals for abt more than 4 hrs now (it's 4:25am rn lol)...when am i gonna get better at this😬😬😬

  • @moonwolf8470
    @moonwolf8470 Před 2 měsíci

    Watching this, when I have made two silly mistakes in my final math exam.

  • @0enzogamer0
    @0enzogamer0 Před 3 lety +2

    im studying for a calculus exam i have about a month from now, this kind o videos are very helpful, thanks man

  • @heferh4320
    @heferh4320 Před rokem +1

    I Made a silly mistake today, I had two equations with two variables and I didn't Solve it because I was afraid of operate and get to nowhere (geometry problem)

  • @MD-bc2oz
    @MD-bc2oz Před 4 měsíci

    Man tomorrow is maths exam and here I thought you would give a short trick

  • @Spidermanlover216
    @Spidermanlover216 Před 7 měsíci

    I feel like I am so confident and ready on a lot of tests but then I still end up doing something wrong seemingly no matter what bro

  • @bigabzboss
    @bigabzboss Před 3 lety +1

    Was it a pure math degree or applied math/stat?

    • @TheMathSorcerer
      @TheMathSorcerer  Před 3 lety

      Pure math focuses on more proofs , more analysis, algebra, topology. The other seems to be more statistics .

  • @zachh6868
    @zachh6868 Před 3 měsíci

    For me it's the opposite. The more time I've spent doing the basics, the more likely I am to forget them or mess them up. So I'll spend hours correcting stupid little errors while getting the new stuff correct.

  • @Kana-fe5ib
    @Kana-fe5ib Před 5 měsíci

    The fact that i looked up this video, exactly while finding inverse of matrices... 💀