What's so bad about Maths?

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nathan-dts

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Midgeamoo said:
Ok so in a few topics lately I've seen quite a large amount of people saying that they either never understood maths, never tried with maths or thought it was pointless. Let me start by saying if you think at any point my tone is elitist here, then it's not intended and I respect anybody who just doesn't enjoy maths and so didn't bother with it, the same goes for me with English, Biology and Drama.

I'm a very logically minded person, and understand most of the maths that I get taught immediately (I can't stress enough that I'm not bragging here, I'm just stating how I feel about this), and if I don't I can think through it until I come to a better way of thinking about a new concept in maths and understand it's implications and how it relates to the rest of my understanding of Maths.

Now help me out here, it's hard for me to understand exactly WHAT stops people from doing what I have just mentioned, because it's very hard for people to get into other people's mindsets and how they think things through, what blocks you from understanding how Maths works as you are taught it, and what stops you from being interested and what just completely baffles you about it? Is it the teaching? the way in which the syllabuses are made? or do you really just not feel any connection with the subject at all?
And if you do enjoy maths, what do you think other people's problems are with it that you have noticed?

I've thought about a few factors that might affect people's understanding of maths, and please tell me if you think I'm right about these or not:

1) People are forced to think about maths in one way - I think the most important part of maths is understand why it works, and getting it to work in your own head. If it is taught in one way and one way only in the classroom, this might not work in some of the student's heads and they start to think they are "incompatible" with maths, when really they have just been taught it in a manner which is incompatible with their way of thinking. I think that anybody can be good at maths, they just need to think about it in their own unique way which makes sense to them.

2) The teaching is bad/students are taught to pass maths exams, not to understand maths - I think there's way too much emphasis on exams when it comes to maths, and teachers tend to give students set methods to get around problems, rather than having them use their own heads. I think I have very good teachers that are teaching me A level maths currently, especially one who actually goes into depth about how the Maths works, rather than just giving us cookie cutter methods to use, which really does help you get a better understanding of Maths.

3) There's a lack of enthusiasm for Maths, and a lot of ignorance to how interesting/useful Maths really is - A lot of the time I hear people asking "why is this useful?" or "this is pointless" when they are learning new things in maths. Almost all of maths has a use, and Maths and Science are integrated into almost every aspect of our day to day lives, it's just hidden from everybody so only the Maths and Science people behind things like Engineering, Economics and Chemistry have to worry about it, but without Maths, we'd have almost no aspect of our modern lifestyle that we live today.

Also, even if some of Maths IS useless, this doesn't mean its not and interesting thing to learn about, English, Art and Music are just as useful as these "pointless" sections of Maths, yet they're still pursued and enjoyed by many. Maths is a very elegant thing, and the more you understand it the more you realize how astounding it is, it opens your mind to how everything is connected, how everything works together and how complex certain aspects of the world we live in are. I'd go as far as to say this "pointless" maths could be considered an art form.

So, if you don't like maths, or think that you can't do it, am I on to something here? Or is it that you just really despise maths, like I do other subjects.
Also if you do like maths, what do you see as the biggest barrier around Maths that you could see being problematic for other people?
Currently doing A-Level Maths and Further Maths; I love the subject.
 

Ulquiorra4sama

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Personally i just never found the subject to be very interesting which is why, now, in my psychology classes and other classes where we do surveys of some kind it's the data processing i dread the most. It's just basic probability and the formulas are easy enough to remember and apply but it's just way too fucking boring.

I think i just need to see some result of my calculations before i find them to be of any value, not just crunch numbers on a page from a made-up problem.

Also, i've never been one for straight answers like that. In math there is only one solution and only one way to get to the right answer which was what turned me off it at first. I like to be able to explore and question concepts with my thoughts rather than just apply them from memory.
 

ChildishLegacy

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tobi the good boy said:
The formula's confuse me or I get them mixed up
See, there's a lot of people in this thread talking about formulas being a problem, and it's making me wonder how many formulas people in the US are made to learn?

I can understand if you're doing a lot of statistics, there's stuff like regression lines and correlation coefficients that you have to have a lot of formula in your head to do them, and there's a few things about probability you have to remember too.

If you're doing pure maths, there's been almost no formulas for me to learn at A level (pretty much the equivalent of High School level), there's a few different trig identities, trig rules, the quadratic equation, binomial expansion, Taylor/Maclaurin series, the newton raphson method and stuff like errors and approximation and figuring out their speed of convergence... I'm failing to come up with any more 'formulas' you need for A level pure maths, unless they're making you memorize methods/teaching you them as formulas?

nathan-dts said:
Currently doing A-Level Maths and Further Maths; I love the subject.
Same here, I'm hoping for an A* in Further Maths, but I completely freaked out in my FP2 exam and didn't answer things I should have been able to, damn exam stress :(
 

tobi the good boy

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Midgeamoo said:
tobi the good boy said:
The formula's confuse me or I get them mixed up
See, there's a lot of people in this thread talking about formulas being a problem, and it's making me wonder how many formulas people in the US are made to learn?

I can understand if you're doing a lot of statistics, there's stuff like regression lines and correlation coefficients that you have to have a lot of formula in your head to do them, and there's a few things about probability you have to remember too.

If you're doing pure maths, there's been almost no formulas for me to learn at A level (pretty much the equivalent of High School level), there's a few different trig identities, trig rules, the quadratic equation, binomial expansion, Taylor/Maclaurin series, the newton raphson method and stuff like errors and approximation and figuring out their speed of convergence... I'm failing to come up with any more 'formulas' you need for A level pure maths, unless they're making you memorize methods/teaching you them as formulas?
I'm not from the US, but it's likely as you said; Methods being taught as formula's (Or I'm probably using the terms interchangeably when I shouldn't). I want to say my brain just isn't wired that way, but from what I've read in this forum that's not apparently not a valid reason or it's just an excuse. I don't know what else to say.
 

ChildishLegacy

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tobi the good boy said:
I'm not from the US, but it's likely as you said; Methods being taught as formula's (Or I'm probably using the terms interchangeably when I shouldn't). I want to say my brain just isn't wired that way, but from what I've read in this forum that's not apparently not a valid reason or it's just an excuse. I don't know what else to say.
Sorry I shouldn't have assumed just because you called it High School :p

Also, I'm not saying some people wont be naturally good/bad at maths, I'm just saying I reckon most people could be good at maths if they found their own, unique way of thinking about it, one that your brain is 'wired' to understand. And that's neglected in a lot of teaching, where they teach it one way, as if it's the only way.

I'm in no way calling it an 'excuse' either, it's nobody's fault that they haven't had the opportunity to learn anything well in their early stages of education, or if they just dislike it.
 

tobi the good boy

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Midgeamoo said:
tobi the good boy said:
I'm not from the US, but it's likely as you said; Methods being taught as formula's (Or I'm probably using the terms interchangeably when I shouldn't). I want to say my brain just isn't wired that way, but from what I've read in this forum that's not apparently not a valid reason or it's just an excuse. I don't know what else to say.
Sorry I shouldn't have assumed just because you called it High School :p

Also, I'm not saying some people wont be naturally good/bad at maths, I'm just saying I reckon most people could be good at maths if they found their own, unique way of thinking about it, one that your brain is 'wired' to understand. And that's neglected in a lot of teaching, where they teach it one way, as if it's the only way.
I think I'm just one of those people that are just horrendously bad at maths, I've gone through so many tutors and teachers and come out just so empty... I'm sad now.
 

ChildishLegacy

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tobi the good boy said:
Midgeamoo said:
tobi the good boy said:
I'm not from the US, but it's likely as you said; Methods being taught as formula's (Or I'm probably using the terms interchangeably when I shouldn't). I want to say my brain just isn't wired that way, but from what I've read in this forum that's not apparently not a valid reason or it's just an excuse. I don't know what else to say.
Sorry I shouldn't have assumed just because you called it High School :p

Also, I'm not saying some people wont be naturally good/bad at maths, I'm just saying I reckon most people could be good at maths if they found their own, unique way of thinking about it, one that your brain is 'wired' to understand. And that's neglected in a lot of teaching, where they teach it one way, as if it's the only way.
I think I'm just one of those people that are just horrendously bad at maths, I've gone through so many tutors and teachers and come out just so empty... I'm sad now.
I guess it's just not for you then, it's nothing to be sad about :p
I just wanted to know why so many people found it so, but I guess it's harder for people to explain than I thought it would be.
 

Mr Dizazta

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I LOVE MATH! There I said that. It is probably the only subject I can take and fall asleep in and still pull an A in the class. I have done this through Calculus I through III and Differential Equations with Linear Algebra. Somehow I just know the answer and it scares me sometimes. Especially when I took Differential Equations with Linear Algebra when everyone else was missing like 10 points here and there on exams, I MISSED NONE!
 

The Abhorrent

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As an engineering student myself (last semester, whoo hoo!), I certainly don't have any issues with disliking math; however, you're not about to find me excited about either. For the most part, math is something of a "language" to me; something I use so often that it's second nature, so I seldom consider it more than a tool. And for what I do, that's how it should be; I'm definitely good at math, but I use it as a tool for my actual interest:

Design

That's one thing about engineering, you don't really grasp what it means until you finally reach your first design course. Yes, you learn a lot leading up to it; and at the time quite a bit of it seems tangentially useful at best. Math courses in particular weren't that interesting, and the subjects they covered (namely linear algebra and differential equations) had zero use in the courses you were taking at the time; I actually learned more about math from my first fluid mechanics course than those which were purely mathmatical. Even many of the science oriented courses from the first two and a half years were mostly about analysis; interesting to learn about, but not really going anywhere.

But when that first design course hits you, it hits hard; or at least the first structural design course, which bombards you with information at a breakneck pace. A quick review of the stuff you've half-forgotten over the years, be it a specific technique or the mathmatics needed to solve the equations? No time, you'll have to re-learn it as you go. Even though the questions are very open-ended, the key is backing up the decisions you're making; where each thing goes, you have to say why you put it there. But yes, the main thing here isn't that the math serves mostly as the means of communication; you don't so much love it or hate it, you just do it.

---

I've noticed that at least one person has mentioned that quite a bit of the more complicated mathematics behind engineering are taken care of by computer programs, and that's actually quite true; still, there's a reason it's done by hand before you're allowed to use the software to solve your problems.

You have to know what the software's doing and why it's doing it.

While the results are all good, you don't really get a proper feel for it unless you do the calculations yourself. When things go wrong, you know'll what and why they did; and more importantly, you'll know how to fix it. Experience is just as important as technial knowledge, if not even moreso; be sure to get out in the field at some point, you'll be quite surprised at how much you'll learn.
 

Woodsey

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Basically, it's very dry.

The interesting stuff is at the other end of the scale when its all in a cluster-fuck with (and I believe this is the technical term) ridiculous physics shit. Whilst I'd love to be able to properly understand that stuff (without having it broken down for me), I'd rather cut off my own hands then sit through any more Maths classes to get there.
 

ntw3001

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I think the OP is about right; it's the way maths is taught. It's terribly interesting in-depth, but all schools tend to do is have students stick numbers into a series of functions. The way most people learn maths is akin to memorising a bunch of flowcharts, and the only way a student could reasonably be expected to become interested in the subject is if they should happen to independently stumble across some interesting application of maths in some other way (I didn't study maths beyond A-level, but after reading The Man Who Loved Only Numbers I appreciate the subject more).

The problem as regards 'why do I need to know this', I guess, is also due to the method of teaching. Something like, say, English literature doesn't need an excuse; while students may occasionally grumble, it doesn't have anything near the reputation of maths as a subject with no real-world practicality. I think the reason is that literature doesn't frame itself as a 'real-life' subject. If you're reading Hamlet, fine. But maths textbooks often appear to be trying to convince students that they might one day need trigonometry to lean a ladder against a wall. It makes weak efforts to answer the 'why do I need this' question when it ought to abandon it altogether. Leave the emphasis on applying formulas to the science subjects and give maths more of a broad, conceptual focus.

Aside from that, some history on the subject can't fail to make it more interesting. The history of maths has an attention-grabbing cast of characters, but one has to already be interested to know anything about them. But then, I suppose plenty of teachers would love to be making their subject interesting, and already know how. But the exams are about doing sums, so we learn our flowcharts.
 

Spiner909

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I hate mathematics, more than anything else in the universe.
I am incapable of doing homework without swearing at it in rage.
Some sort of psychological problem, I reckon
 

PhunkyPhazon

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Speaking as a student, it's a pain in the ass to learn, especially when your career choice only requires you to know basic elementary-school level Math. It just feels like unnecessary busywork to me. Hell, my college requires a few Math credits for writing majors. What the fuck is the correlation? They don't force science majors to study law.

The usage of Math in the work field is highly specific. Few people need to know how to solve Matrices, or what the square root of X looks like on a graph. Some people will need this sort of information, and by all means they should be required to take these classes. For most people, it's needless busywork that they will forget as soon as school is behind them.

However, the same could be said for history classes, which I personally enjoy. In the end it's a matter of personal taste, as I know people who enjoy learning Math even though they don't need it. It's just not an accessible subject for everyone. The thing is, I love logic-based thinking and classes that make use of it. But Math just has no practical use for me, and I have zero interest in it as a subject.

Off topic: I'm really not looking to offend anyone, but I would just like to say that for whatever reason, the word "maths" really annoys me. I know it's purely cultural, but it just sounds so silly to me. In the US, the word "math" refers to every type of math, so it sounds to me like someone saying "internets". I'm not telling anyone to stop using it, or saying my culture is better then yours. I just wanted to get that off my chest.
 

CrystalShadow

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I dislike maths. I can't explain why.

I do find quite a few uses for it, but I still dislike it.

Even though I'm very good at raw logic, somehow I find the way mathematics is framed very difficult to process.

It's abstract, and usually presented in a way that makes it unrelatable to anything else.

It also feels very arbitrary.
I am very bad at memorising things without context.

And mathematics as it is generally presented is seriously lacking in any context.

Sure, you might get an explanation of what a particular rule is for...

But you never really seem to get any context for why the rules are the way they are, or how that was constructed or anything.

It's basically taught as:

1. This rule exists.
2. You can do this with it.
3. Remember the rule.

Which is something my mind just seems to rebel against. My mind tries to derive why rules are the way they are, yet faced with a mathematical statement there's just nothing to grasp hold of, and the rule just kind of fades out of my mind.

Also, the symbolic representation, while compact, merely reinforces the lack of context.

I studied physics for a while, and you'd typically find something like:

Ke = 1/2mv^2
written down as being meaningful somehow.

That's all well and good, but written like that you really have to concentrate on what exactly you're dealing with.

Contrast this to how I would write the same thing while creating a computer program:

KineticEnergy = 0.5 * mass * velocity^2

Same exact thing, but now the variables have identifiable names that my mind can actually relate to something without having to explicitly memorise what each and every symbol in the formula actually means...

Don't ask why that makes a difference, but it does. The more abstract and context-free the presentation of mathematics, the less able I am to understand or remember it.

I learnt how to deal with vectors quite well from programming graphics algorithms. Yet, presented in an abstract manner, I probably would have no idea what any of it meant, or what it was for.
 

AwkwardTurtle

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Okay, so I know there was a lot of stuff said and unfortunately I don't really have the time or energy to read everything right now...BUT

Since this is a thread about math I had a question that's relative to my current studies. So if you will please humor me my question is:

Why does two plus two equal four, and on a side note, why does twelve multiplied by twelve equal one-hundred forty four?

OH MY BAD EDIT:

OT: From what I gather some people simply don't find math as something enjoyable in their life. :D Many think of it as something that needs to be done rather than something they want to do. So, if one doesn't want to do it, they probably won't do all that well in it and they probably won't enjoy doing it either.
 

Kae

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I was thinking of making this thread myself, but given that I'm not particularly good at Math I decided to pass, yeah it pisses me off to how much people hate Math and keep claiming that Algebra is useless, I mean I can understand if you don't like it but it's not useless, as for my answer I would go with #3 people just seem very apathetic about Math, in general it seems that most people just hate it.
And by not being good at Math I don't mean that I don't understand it, but I'm rather slow at solving the problems and most of the times I need to have an example at my side to be able to solve it, I still find it entertaining though, for some reason I think solving mathematical problems is rather fun, it's like a videogame I guess, you have a problem and you have to solve it, see it's fun it's like a game!
 
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I only have one issue with it.

Calling it "Math[b/]S[/b]" with an S!!!

It just sounds retarded when said in a serious way. Like saying "Internets" with no hint of comedy.

Yes, I know it can be said both ways, blah blah blah. It still bugs me more than "irregardless"

More on topic, I have never really had much trouble with Math. Maybe I just had good teachers or maybe I'm a good student. I can't really say.
 

Syzygy23

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Midgeamoo said:
Hazy992 said:
I can see the use of a lot of it, it just makes my head hurt :(
But where does that confusion come from? Are teachers failing to explain it properly or something? A lot of it comes naturally if you understand the basic principles in depth.
It's frustration mostly. Math just isn't very intuitive or... "user friendly" I guess you could say.

For example:

I remember in high school I was just starting Algebra 1. There was a problem on the board that I was supposed to solve (I can't remember it, but it was something like 5 + 3X = 7 - 10x) I was supposed to find out what X was.

Now, before the problem had been presented, the teacher had explained that when we see X in a problem, it could be any number. I decided X should be 14, because I like the number 14, and the teacher had said X could be any number. Pretty simple, right?

NOPE.

suddenly it turns out there is a WHOLE freaking process involving multiple steps that you HAVE to do in order to make X be the number that is the RIGHT NUMBER. Even a slight miscalculation in ANY of these steps (Which I'm just supposed to always remember off the top of my head) will give you a wrong answer, in which case you have to repeat ALL of the steps AGAIN, which is very time consuming for those of us who cannot visualize problems (e.g. those of us who have to write out the steps so we don't lose track of where we are in any given problem) very well.

Time consuming and TEDIOUS since very often you can complete all the steps and they will APPEAR to logically add up to whatever the RIGHT NUMBER is.

and then it gets worse when the problems get more complex and there are suddenly steps that must be taken for the individual steps to account for extra variables.

And apparently I was just supposed to figure out on my own that I had to do all these steps just to get X to equal, I dunno, let's say... 3.

So then I got the problem wrong, and it made me feel dumb and that math was just making up these arbitrary rules for solving problems on the spot to confuse me and give me that dumb feeling. That demoralized me and I stopped giving a fuck about math, which made no fucking sense, ever.
What can we take away from this experience?

It's the Teacher's fault.
I dunno if you guys have ever heard of a website called Khan Academy (http://www.khanacademy.org/) Check it out, it's great.

But, here I am, 7 years later, watching the algebra lessons on Khan Academy. AND NOW IT MAKES SENSE. I honestly LIKE math now. Outside of a classroom setting where there aren't people watching me solve problems and rendering black and white Success or Failure judgements I'm much more emboldened to examine WHY I get problems wrong and begin ruminating on possible solutions and actually putting real thought into how I can make the solution equal what I want it to equal, or at least equal something logical.

Math is the language the universe is built upon, there is no rational concept that cannot be conveyed through math. Hell, I'm pretty sure even irrational concepts can be explained, eventually, once we evolve our mathematical systems to accommodate for irrational phenomena cause and effects (or vice versa, especially on the quantum level, or so I'm told)

I may still be working through basic algebra, but now that I've finally managed to wash out that bad teacher taste, I finally have a hunger for more.
 

Barciad

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Two things.
One, it is something that requires an natural innate ability to be able to do effectively.
Two, it is an incredibly dry topic.
Now certain skills like art, music and sports also require God-given ability. However, they the advantage of being fun to do, even if you are not very good.
Just for the record, I am a Maths teacher.
 

Muspelheim

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Mathemathics are probably exceptionally interesting if you've got the slightest clue of how it works. Hell, it's an important part of our species' development. And I'm sure some even find it -fun- to do math. Which is splendid, because we need those people.

My main irritance with math is that I feel as if I'm considered a second-class citizen for not understanding it. As if it's a huge handicap in my life, et cetera.

I just don't like math. Or rather, I don't like doing math. Math is great, but it doesn't have to be this monumental part of everyone's life. I'd personally leave it to people who like it and have a clue of what they're doing.