Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Project Mathematics! (stylized as Project MATHEMATICS!), is a series of educational video modules and accompanying workbooks for teachers, developed at the California Institute of Technology to help teach basic principles of mathematics to high school students. [1] In 2017, the entire series of videos was made available on YouTube.
Films where mathematics is central to the plot: 21 (2008) – A group of current and former MIT students, mostly mathematicians, and an algebra professor devise a card counting scheme for success at Las Vegas Strip blackjack tables. The Bank (2001) – A mathematician discovers a formula to predict fluctuations in the stock market.
In an anatomy course incorporating YouTube, 98% of students watched the assigned videos and 92% stated that they were helpful in teaching anatomical concepts. [12] A 2013 study focused on clinical skills education from YouTube found that the 100 most accessible videos across a variety of topics ( venipuncture , wound care, pain assessment, CPR ...
Pages in category "Mathematics education television series" The following 26 pages are in this category, out of 26 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Jo Boaler (born 1964 [1]) is a British education author and Nomellini–Olivier Professor of mathematics education at the Stanford Graduate School of Education. [2] Boaler is involved in promoting reform mathematics [3] [4] and equitable mathematics classrooms.
Complete College America, a national non-profit working on remedial education reform, [46] reports that among remedial students at two-year colleges 62% complete their remedial course and 23% complete associated college-level courses in that subject within two years (for example, complete math remediation and the college-level math requirements ...
As a special education teacher, he taught students with autism, agenesis of the corpus callosum and traumatic brain injury. [2] With permission from his students’ parents, in the classroom Ulmer "began to film interviews with his students and post them on social media," [3] which attracted an online presence. After 12 months, Special Books by ...
Hart's career as a mathematics popularizer began in 2010 with a video series about "doodling in math class". After these recreational mathematics videos—which introduced topics like fractal dimensions—grew popular, Hart was featured in The New York Times and on National Public Radio, [4] [14] eventually gaining the support of the Khan Academy and making videos for it as its "Resident ...