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- Aug 11, 2020
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You're the polar opposite of me, lol.For me English was always easier because I could mostly sleep through class and still generally absorb everything that was said or just use context clues and common sense to fake my way through to the right answers. Meanwhile math on the other hand requires you to actually pay attention. It's a strict and joyless sort of work that demands your focus and will punish you fiercely for even a small slip up.
Yeah, I've essentially already posted this in this thread 50 times, but for me everything up to and including the majority of algebra ii was just common sense. Calculus was when I really had to start learning formulas and methods.Math can require excessive memorization, the classes always assign too much homework every class day, and math requires fairly mechanistic thinking biology isn't naturally best at.
Meanwhile, English is closer to how organic beings think.
Yeah, I never found school very stimulating and ended up skipping most of my classes about as soon as I realized that the system had no real intention of teaching us anything new. I still remember my algebra teacher trying to explain an equation and he said something at the beginning like "Okay, for this problem the letter B will equal 6 and we need to solve for Y". I looked at him and I said "Alright, but why does B equal 6 in particular?" He couldn't give me an answer for that and it was at that point that I realized that like everyone else there he had no interest in teaching us to learn but rather teaching us to listen. I quickly said I had to go to the library and then told the librarian I was going back to class. No one suspected that I had just walked home.You're the polar opposite of me, lol.
I always struggled in math. Especially fractions and algebra.Calculus was when I really had to start learning formulas and methods.
I'm no mathematician but the math up through high school and ultimately into college for most is so basic. Most people can barely do that so I don't see how they're going to fare beyond that into the more "fun" math.Almost all mathematics in school is learning how to be a human computer for tasks that are almost entirely useless outside of schooling (like applying the rational root theorem to a polynomial, which nobody except autistic people like). Most mathematicians, when asked about public mathematics education, will moan about how narrow and shit it is (see A Mathematician's Lament). Topics in mathematics/mathematics adjacent fields like game theory, probability, and statistics would be infinitely more helpful to almost everybody, but sadly we don't teach those things, and perhaps some of the people who dislike the drudgery of "math" could find themselves better at those subjects. When most people say "math" they really mean equation solving, finding-the-zero, and number juggling, which is a pitifully small subset of mathematics.
English education in the U.S. is terrible also, but unlike mathematics there isn't a way to calculate a right or wrong answer to most questions you can pose in English, so people probably enjoyed that flexibility when it doesn't exist in Algebra. English is a lot more flexible, so the only time you have dumb tests like testing you on what happened to so-and-so in Scene such-and-such in this play is when you have a bad teacher, while in mathematics everyone is forced in teaching in the one bad way.
Algebra is probably the most useful day-to-day math for most people. It's what you do in any spreadsheet. Most of my old friends can't even use spreadsheet software outside of using it as a text file where they manually move data around.I won't harp on it any more than what's been already said, but people aren't going to use anything but the most basic of math in their everyday lives. And that's part of the reason I don't like it too, I mean I'm not going to use algebra to know how much my groceries cost.