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Subtract anxiety from your math experience | Michelle Sisto | TEDxIUM

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This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences. Although math and statistics are everywhere - from understanding credit to interpreting political polls to knowing why you get specific ads on your Facebook page - many people cringe at the mere thought of “doing” math. At TEDxIUM, Professor Michelle Sisto shares some ideas to help move our kids, our students and ourselves from math anxiety to math enthusiasm.
Dr. Michelle Sisto, a passionate educator, has spent 20 years sharing the joys of math and statistics with an international mix of undergraduate and graduate students in Monaco, France and Germany. With mathematics degrees from Georgetown University and the University of Nice and a PhD in Finance from EDHEC Business School, her research publications range from asset pricing links with Corporate Social Responsibility and financial regulation to pedagogy and collaborative learning in multicultural settings. Her experience has shown that fear of math crosses all cultures. Michelle firmly believes that small changes in pedagogy and coaching have a big impact on self-confidence and ability, that everyone can “do” statistics and successfully navigate today’s data driven world.
About TEDx, x = independently organized event In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)

Пікірлер: 17
@xavierkreiss8394
@xavierkreiss8394 3 жыл бұрын
Dr Sisto says you don't hear people saying they "can't do" history. I've heard this one many times, and it's disingenuous. Dr Sisto and others know full well that maths calls for a very different kind of reasoning, so the two can't be compared. There is something about maths that's unique and that triggers emotions of depression disgust and incomprehension that no other subject does. So what is it? Before someone finds the answer, large numbers of people like me will continue to say they "can't do maths". Yes, .I'm one of those people.. I'm not proud of it, but neither am I ashamed. Why should I be? A partial reason why so may people loathe maths may be what Cedric Villani, a French mathematician and Fields medallist, once said: "our brain was made to speak languages, it wasn't made to speak maths. it's an activity that goes against nature". (C.Villani / Journal du dimanche 30/11/2013 )
@Psychokitten113
@Psychokitten113 7 жыл бұрын
I love your passion Michelle....
@coverdaleist
@coverdaleist 6 жыл бұрын
Mishelle you are Great !
@SubhamBanik.
@SubhamBanik. Жыл бұрын
a great talk
@aryavijaykumar4700
@aryavijaykumar4700 Жыл бұрын
Thank you all very much
@xavierkreiss8394
@xavierkreiss8394 2 жыл бұрын
I've listened again. I'm in the "physical revulsion" category. I feel numbness in my arms and hands when confronted with a maths problem and I was told this is a mild symptom of phobia. I no longer need to "do" maths but i experience this sometimes when I try to understand a point in maths, out of curiosity. Dr Sisto says you can't avoid maths, but I've done just that. I can do simple numerical calculation, and I can use a calculator. Nothing more. Also: Dr Sisto seems to think it shouldn't be "socially acceptable" not to understand maths or not to be able to "do" maths. I don't see why she says that. Maths is a unique subject, a system of reasoning, and people either "get it" or they don't. Not "socially acceptable"? What does Dr Sisto and others who say the same thing mean? Should we be treated like pariahs or ashamed? By the way, both my parents were very bad, indeed terrible, at maths. But neither of them had an influence on me regarding maths. And my brother had no problems with the subject. For the record: my father was a teacher, he taught English. I am a journalist. My brother, the only one who had a "head" for maths, was an economist. Lastly: Dr Sisto mentions the Khan academy. I've had a look: it addresses people who already have a certain level in maths. A level higher than mine.
@charisharvey82
@charisharvey82 2 жыл бұрын
Actually Khan academy doesn't address people with a certain level. You can start with I believe grade 1 math and they show you the absolute basics and teach you them. Is this what you mean?
@xavierkreiss8394
@xavierkreiss8394 2 жыл бұрын
​@@charisharvey82 Thank you for your answer. I've seen a few pages of the Khan academy that dealt with very basic calculation. That I can already do.But most of the other pages I've seen have been incomprehensible to me.
@Psychokitten113
@Psychokitten113 7 жыл бұрын
its simple I cant do maths, its tortured me throughout high school. so I gave it up...........
@xavierkreiss8394
@xavierkreiss8394 6 жыл бұрын
I agree. And now I've listened again and heard Ms Sisto say it should not be "socially acceptable" to say how you never were good at maths. Well, I say I never was. Does Ms Sisto want to tell me that I'm behaving in a "socially unacceptable" way? This sounds arrogant and insulting. What else, in her book, should be considered "socially unacceptable"? I sometimes use a sort of play on words for people like her. I say "they can't understand that I can't understand".
@tessacyclone6329
@tessacyclone6329 5 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your honesty and for npt pretending like everyone else. Ths funny irony is everyone who was triggered by your commemt os terrified of being the one who cant do maths . And so they have an anxiety too. They were forced to be good at everytjing by their parents , had to be "smart " in their family and if they arw jot they would feel inadequate at least youre comfortable being you. I hear you andf listening can change your mind. I think what people need to be told in schoola md as adults that we are all smart and that talent is a myth , its prcatice and good teachers and encouragement that make any thing learnable. Maths isnt everything in this world .we should learn from curiosity not from force.
@jackdavis8596
@jackdavis8596 5 жыл бұрын
No, it's not simple. I've been tutoring math for years and students learn things they didn't think they could. You just had a bad teacher(s). Your belief has become a self fullfilling prophecy.
@juansantillana8036
@juansantillana8036 4 жыл бұрын
Wow you're quite sensible...
@xavierkreiss8394
@xavierkreiss8394 3 жыл бұрын
@@tessacyclone6329 Thanks. I think I do have certain talents, we all have, so I used mine in my professional life. I'm a retired (French) journalist. Ten years after school, I tried to understand some maths out of sheer intellectual curiosity, thinking there'd be no more pressure, no more bad marks. But I failed in my attempt. In the following years three friends tried to help, with no success. But as you say, maths isn't everything in this world! I remember that when I was a child of 11-12 the maths teacher tried to teach us how to calculate PGCDs and PPCMs (in English: GCDs and LCMs). By that time I was so miserable in maths class that I'd stopped caring. I didn't understand what the teacher was saying and I felt a kind of rage: why was I being forced to attend these classes? I'd never need to calculate LCMs or GCDs. And I'd never need maths. I was right: I never did need those skills, because I chose a career without maths. So I, a kid, was put through the nightmare for nothing. So yes, I'm bad at maths, but I resent people who think it's socially "unacceptable".
@juansantillana8036
@juansantillana8036 4 жыл бұрын
Some people in this comment bar need to change their mindset from fixed to growth.
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