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Susan Carriker
United States
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 29 พ.ค. 2012
Teaching and Learning Secondary Mathematics
Create Polygons! Desmos Calculator Training
Learn more at TechKnowMath.com
This is the 4th in a series of Desmos Calculator Training videos.
#iteachmath #edtech #maths
This is the 4th in a series of Desmos Calculator Training videos.
#iteachmath #edtech #maths
มุมมอง: 183
วีดีโอ
Exploring Scatterplots! Desmos Calculator Training
มุมมอง 243หลายเดือนก่อน
Learn more at TechKnowMath.com This is the 3rd in a series of Desmos Calculator Training videos. #iteachmath #edtech #maths
Sliders! Desmos Calculator Training
มุมมอง 1352 หลายเดือนก่อน
Learn more at TechKnowMath.com This is the 2nd in a series of Desmos Calculator Training videos. #iteachmath #edtech #maths
Graphing Functions! Desmos Calculator Training
มุมมอง 3462 หลายเดือนก่อน
Learn the Desmos Calculator! Learn more at TechKnowMath.com This is the 1st in a series of Desmos Calculator Training videos. #iteachmath #edtech #maths
Making Sense of Data! - Algebra 1, Term 6, Lesson 7
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Making Sense of Data! - Algebra 1, Term 6, Lesson 7
Frequency Tables! - Algebra 1, Term 6, Lesson 6
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Frequency Tables! - Algebra 1, Term 6, Lesson 6
Data Everywhere! - Algebra 1, Term 6, Lesson 5
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Data Everywhere! - Algebra 1, Term 6, Lesson 5
Outliers! - Algebra 1, Term 6, Lesson 4
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Outliers! - Algebra 1, Term 6, Lesson 4
Measures of Center and Spread! - Algebra 1, Term 6, Lesson 3
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Measures of Center and Spread! - Algebra 1, Term 6, Lesson 3
Data Distributions! - Algebra 1, Term 6, Lesson 2
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Data Distributions! - Algebra 1, Term 6, Lesson 2
One Variable Stats! - Algebra 1, Term 6, Lesson 1
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One Variable Stats! - Algebra 1, Term 6, Lesson 1
Whiteboard Challenge - Spring Edition! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 14
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Whiteboard Challenge - Spring Edition! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 14
Mixed Review! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 13
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Mixed Review! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 13
Dimensional Analysis! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 12
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Dimensional Analysis! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 12
Quadratics Rewind! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 11
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Quadratics Rewind! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 11
Equations and Models! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 10
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Equations and Models! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 10
Literal Equations! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 9
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Literal Equations! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 9
Rates and Areas! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 8
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Rates and Areas! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 8
Square Roots Rewind! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 7
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Square Roots Rewind! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 7
Rational Exponents! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 6
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Rational Exponents! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 6
Real Numbers! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 5
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Real Numbers! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 5
Thinking Tasks! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 4
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Thinking Tasks! - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 4
Functions Rewind! Algebra 1, Lesson 5.2
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Functions Rewind! Algebra 1, Lesson 5.2
Square Root Functions - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 1
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Square Root Functions - Algebra 1, Term 5, Lesson 1
How Big is the Box? Algebra 1, Term 4, Lesson 14
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How Big is the Box? Algebra 1, Term 4, Lesson 14
Polynomials! Algebra 1, Term 4, Lesson 13
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Polynomials! Algebra 1, Term 4, Lesson 13
Solving Quadratics! Algebra 1, Term 4, Lesson 12
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Solving Quadratics! Algebra 1, Term 4, Lesson 12
amazing!
You are so helpful! one of the only teachers that uses desmos efficiently. thank you so much!
I am so glad you found this helpful 😊
Very well done
You should do the equations for the dude to do the YMCA
Good idea! 💡
Thank you. I will use this lesson at the beginning of Algebra 2 as an intro and for me to pre-assess my students.
Awesome. I hope they enjoy it ☺️
This one was on June DSAT. Thankfully I could answer it.
were you given a graphing calculator for this?
@@wahidislamlinad There is a built-in calculator that can do everything. So yeah.
Glad you had success on this!
This is a free calculator that is embedded in the SAT! Desmos is an amazing tool. 🙂
you’re my savior
glad I could help :)
Really cool! I'd honestly do these for fun.
It is fun! 😊
OK
Solution without using a calculator: If we factor out x on the left side: x( -3 + 21p ) = 84 To get x in terms of p, you have to divide both sides by ( -3 + 21p ), so ( -3 + 21p) ≠ 0 since you can't divide by 0. So if ( -3 + 21p ) = 0, there is no solution for x. Now you can add 3 to both sides: 21p = 3 and divide both sides by 21: p = 3/21 = 1/7 So p ≠ 1/7
Very nice 👍
You're not mathing lol!
😁
B
🙂
I feel like teaching "just type the exact question into the computer" is an innefective method for learning.
You are right. I am not teaching content in these videos, I am "hacking" this test. I totally agree with you. Maybe one day SAT will be a memory and "hacking" will no longer be a strategy
But couldn’t the student as quickly typed in (25*36)^0.5. ?
Absolutely! The strategy given is really only needed when you don't already know a simpler or faster method.
Why i using geogebra?: Calculate y=d^3/dx3(arctan(arccos(arcsin(lnx^3)
This is the Desmos Calculator. These Quick Tips are just offering strategies you may not have seen before. If you know of more efficient ways to solve these problems, then of course, you should do that. I am not suggesting any of these are "better" than some other method.
this helped me so much I was just really struggling to remember what to put in the calculator
I am so glad this was helpful!
....is this the new mathematics??? Same variable (being w) so it straight up combine like terms with PEMDAS/BODMAS (I think BODMAS what taught with the former) so literally 20 - (4+3) which is 20 - 7 so 13 and addd the variable back on it to be 13w
Definitely, you can distribute and combine like terms to get this answer, but the purpose of my quick tips are to give alternative strategies if you are stuck or need another method. All Quick tips involve using the Desmos calculator.
Calculator for a subtraction/addition problem? 20w-(4w+3w)=20w-7w=13w
Most people would not use this method for this item, but this can be quite useful on more challenging items (like higher order polynomials, logarithms, radicals, trig, etc ..)
tysm theses are great videos
Thank you!
@@susancarriker Yes ofc I'm a 9t grade student and my test is tomorrow and I have been struggling with the rate of change and geometry do you think you can make a video going over those topics ?
If you mean finding rate of change (slope), you can practice with this free activity: www.geogebra.org/m/kc7nezdh If you mean average rate of change, I have other video series (like STAAR, LEAP, etc) with examples that include average rate of change problems (Similar, because you are still finding slope between two points, just like the activity). I am doing an ACT Quick Tip video today over slope and parallel lines (so check that one out later this morning!). I don't have any geometry test prep videos yet, and I'm sorry I can't put one together today. But, if you have done the whole GMAS series and are comfortable with your Desmos calculator, you WILL do great! Don't you worry!!
There is no link to be found 👎
Here is the direct link. This is on the Free Resources page at the top of the Geometry resources. Check the link in the first column (click on the title) sites.google.com/view/techknowmath/free-resources
is that allowed?!
If you take the digital ACT, you will have the calculator in this video embedded on your test. (Check in your area to see who is administering the Digital ACT). Yes, you can do everything I am doing in this video. There are many more things you can do, so be sure to watch the other videos in this series
Thank you, I wasn’t able to study and my test is tomorrow, this is very helpful for me!
So glad this helped! You will do great on your test. 🎉. You've got this!
Thank you soooo much 🥲😀
So glad you found this helpful. Be sure to check out the other videos in this series 😊
Used this with my Algebra class today! VERY helpful! Thanks for sharing!
That is great to hear! Thank you! 😊
Hi Susan- This video is extremely blurry and hard to see what you are doing.
Wow, I am sorry you are having trouble. I watched it again on my laptop and my phone and it seems to be working okay. Perhaps it is buffering for you? What type of device are you watching it with?
What a great video, you really explained some difficult terms in an easy to understand way! 10/10 would recommend to others!
Thank you!
Just discovered it. It seems to offer for free what Brilliant charges a fee for.
What is the Truth and How is it Different from the Fact and the Reality? th-cam.com/video/-CvVFApRz9s/w-d-xo.html
Chutiyagardi hai sab Gandmare
i like mathematics
Cambodia invented the first Zero www.huffingtonpost.com/amir-aczel/worlds-first-zero_b_3276709.html
The music at 5:45 reminds me of Rick and Morty
Thx
My Starr is tomorrow I have faith
thank you so much for teaching me that because I always get that one wrong now I can be ready for the math STAAR test
You're welcome
thank you for explaining it really helped now I get it and now I can pass my 5th grade math I'm really struggling can you do a whole review on the star test and go over it I would really love if you would
You're welcome
In mathematics, the Pythagorean theorem, also known as Pythagoras's theorem, is a fundamental relation in Euclidean geometry among the three sides of a right triangle. It states that the square of the hypotenuse (the side opposite the right angle) is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two sides. The theorem can be written as an equation relating the lengths of the sides a, b and c, often called the "Pythagorean equation":[1] a 2 + b 2 = c 2 , {\displaystyle a^{2}+b^{2}=c^{2},} where c represents the length of the hypotenuse and a and b the lengths of the triangle's other two sides. Although it is often argued that knowledge of the theorem predates him,[2] the theorem is named after the ancient Greek mathematician Pythagoras (c. 570 - c. 495 BC) as it is he who, by tradition, is credited with its first recorded proof.[3][4][5] There is some evidence that Babylonian mathematicians understood the formula, although little of it indicates an application within a mathematical framework.[6][7] Mesopotamian, Indian and Chinese mathematicians all discovered the theorem independently and, in some cases, provided proofs for special cases. The theorem has been given numerous proofs - possibly the most for any mathematical theorem. They are very diverse, including both geometric proofs and algebraic proofs, with some dating back thousands of years. The theorem can be generalized in various ways, including higher-dimensional spaces, to spaces that are not Euclidean, to objects that are not right triangles, and indeed, to objects that are not triangles at all, but n-dimensional solids. The Pythagorean theorem has attracted interest outside mathematics as a symbol of mathematical abstruseness, mystique, or intellectual power; popular references in literature, plays, musicals, songs, stamps and cartoons abound.
c
Can you do more for 2016?
I took algebra 1 in 7th grade.... which was 1996, now that I am going back to school for Computer Science at age 32 this video really helped spark what I can remember talking about, but didn't actually know. This is a great resource for me to relearn that which I haven't been tested on in 20 years.
I have a math staar tomorrow😵😵😓😓😓
THX THIS IS REALLY GOOD 👍
Thank you
My math teacher never taught probability the whole year!
The music is stolen from tom n jerry....lol
Actually it’s classical music so it’s in the public domain
So if anything Tom n jerry stole it
I like the style of the video. It's so vintage :)
Yay I found a Texan teacher
Yay someone from Texas
Really cool!
ahhh kv 330