Thứ Ba, 30 tháng 1, 2018

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hey guys welcome to Angels and Acid where we learn things maths and science

and today's topic is the importance of showing full working out

whenever you're doing a maths problem, chemistry problem, or a physics problem,

or any sort of mathematical thing you've got to do

whether it's for school or if you're doing this in real life for...

you know; everyday stuff.

And I know, I know is such a drag to do all this extra sort of working on paper, and writing and scribbling

it slows you down and you might think that it's much better if you take some

shortcuts here so you can get more practice done within the hour you can

get through your exam faster

and you might think that's better,

but you're kind of shooting yourself in the foot

because you are ... there are a lot of consequences to doing things by cutting corners

and I'm hoping that I can convince you in this video

about 4 reasons why you should do things in full working out

I'm also gonna then talk about at the end of this video about how sometimes

especially this is the first time you're doing high school mathematics

sometimes the ways you did things in primary school

it might have been okay for the kinds of maths work that you did then

but I I'm having to bring you some bad news is that you

you may need to adopt a new way of setting out because the primary school way may not be able to scale

as you go through grade 7, grade 8, grade 9, grade 10, and 11 mathematics

as the problems require more work ...

the way you do it at primary school is probably not going to work so

I'll show you what I would like my year 7's to start off with and then I'm

also going to show you what I don't want to see and I'm also going to show you

what things look like when you're sort of much further up the road in mathematics

Alright so my 4 reasons why you should do things in full working on the page

1. Is that you can check yourself much more effectively

especially if you've done a problem that requires in multiple steps it's so much

easier than trying to do it all in your head several times over

2nd: Other people can check your work and that's SUPER important for multiple reasons but I'll get to them later.

Next is that your teacher or whoever's grading your exam or assignment

they can actually see you're working and thinking and like

'Oh yes they can they can do multiplication they can do division they

can do the the things in the right order they're applying the rule because I can

see it on the page.' If they don't see anything on the page besides the final

result they can't tick all the boxes which means you don't get the full

grades last one is that as you get older the math problems that you do tend to

require a few more steps and also the the the problems that you do are much

more important like it can be life and death whether you get the answer right

or not. You kind of want to make sure it's right, and you... you kind

of want other people to be able to tell (that you're right) like to check your work especially if

there's a lot of money involved or people's lives are at stake so let's say,

let's say you're you're an engineer you're gonna build a bridge if you did

the math wrong and your bridge isn't as strong as you said it was, then people

could that thing could break people could die... Argh! Such a mess! Lawsuits

everything. If you're a business owner and you can't calculate how to pay your

employees properly let's say you pay them too much that costs you money let's

say you don't pay them enough that that's gonna make them angry let's say

you are also a business owner and you need to get some supplies in and you did

the math wrong and you didn't get enough your business is screwed if you're an

employee and your boss says I want you to do this and this and this and you did

some calculations and say 'yep this is the answer' and you're wrong... your boss is going to

be mad so you want to make sure that you're able to do maths in such a way

there that is it's it's easy as possible for other people to be able to

collaborate and check your work so that you have the best chances of things not

going wrong. All right so I'm now gonna move on to showing you the kind of

setting out that I'm looking for particularly for my year 7's as you

go to grade 8, and grade 9, and 10, and so on obviously you're not gonna

have to do a lot of this sort of you know rigid structure but for now you

7's we want to go with the whole bells and whistles of structure only

when you get further in life can you sort of take them off

think of it like training wheels when you're riding a bike okay I've got a

problem from the book I set up the question I like to put them in a

different color or I like to sort of section it off, you know sort of signpost

that this is the problem I'm working on, this side here I'm gonna do my working

if I have to do any sort of side calculations and the kinds can sort of

neatly tuck it away from the from the the main line by line solving. Alright

here we go I'm gonna do some rules I'm gonna use

the BOMDAS rule which means have to do division first I'm going to tackle

this bit of the of the problem here first so division so I want to find out

60 divided by 3 which means how many times does 3 fit into 60?

Well 3 fits into 6 twice, 3 fits into 0, zero times, so the answer

is 20 so this new line is 18 divided by 9 plus 20 now I do the BOMDAS rule

again and that means I've to do 18 divided by 9 so that means how many

times does 9 fit into 18 so if you know your 9 times tables that

answer is going to be 2, so now the the problem becomes 2 plus 20 and then I can

just simplify that down to the answer of 22. That's the sort of do you know I step

line by line by line work and I'm looking for you can see I did the

problem in three stages this is what makes the system I'm trying to advocate here

- the thing I'm trying to convince you of - if you do things this way as the

problem requires more steps you just take more lines. Okay, it's nice

and neat yes it feels like you're doing a lot more pointless extra writing but

trust me it saves yo,u especially where things get really hard. Now what I don't

want to see (so I'm going to show you an example what I don't want to see) I don't

want you to give me an exam or an assignment where I have: 'question equals

22'. Really? You could have guessed that. Lucky guess. Zero marks. Well, I don't know

if it's zero marks but if your teacher's looking for: are you applying the rule,

can you multiply, are you doing them the right order... I

lots of these sort of things. There's no evidence on this page right now that you

know what you're doing. No evidence that you did the problem in the right order.

No evidence whether you guessed that luckily or not. You need to convey as much as you

can on paper when you're applying a rule. Write the rule, and then you can keep

going. Try and make it as literal as possible so that there's no question

(for the person who comes to read this) there's no question about: 'what is that???'

'Where is he going with that?' 'Where does that number come from?'. There should be no

question about what you're thinking and what you're doing. Okay

that sets you up for success. Now I'm going to show you (I hope

I don't freak you out too much) I'm now going to show you what it looks like when you get

older. So here's a math problem that I would encounter; I think I did stuff like

this in grade probably grade 12 Maths B... I definitely encountered it again

at University, so I did a chemistry and mathematics degree, so this is the type

of problem that's way into the future. Now I don't want to it overwhelm you

don't worry about the fancy symbols, and the numbers that go in the different

corners, all the letters... don't worry. Okay? Just push it out of your mind. What you

should be focusing on as I do this problem is I want you to take note of

how many steps, how complicated the thing is meaning it requires lots of

little steps to do it. Okay? And each step is not that (if you know what the rules

are) the steps aren't that hard but it does take quite a few steps sometimes

and there's no way you can solve this in your head. And I'm going to show you here we go.

Oh I've done the problem before in advance; not because I don't know how to do the problem,

it's just that I don't want to waste your time on video by going:

(mumbling, thinking)

that's reason why I've got it here just in case if I sort of need to double check.

Alright so the answer is equal to integral of ... (mumble, mumble)

okay there I'm done so here you can see that it actually took me

quite a number of sort of little steps for me to finally come to my answer

and this is why the system that I showed you just previously;

this is what makes it so scalable.

So I did the same sort of presentation as I did in this problem

where I had line by line as I go through lots of steps

when you get to stuff that requires a few more steps-

you just add more lines down below now this looks hard (but) it's not that bad

you'll be taught how to do this in grade 11 or 12

if you choose to take maths to a more advanced level but it's not that bad

So I hope that doesn't freak you out. That's not the point. The point is that it scales.

I hope at the end of this video now that I've convinced you that

you should be doing full working out

and the setting out you use is super important

because it can either get in your way or it can allow you to get

more advanced in maths in years to come.

I think that's it for this video and I will catch you in the next one.

If you liked the video I'd love to hear some feedback

so thumbs up is wonderful, comments down below is great,

if something's confusing you can leave a comment down below

I'll see you guys later. Bye.

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