POPULARITY
In this third and final part of this podcast episode, we conclude our conversation with Professors Alf Coles and Nathalie Sinclair about the dogmas they address in their book, I Can't Do Maths! Why children say it and how to make a difference. In this part of the conversation, we put your questions, shared with us on social media, to Alf and Nathalie, and discuss topics including maths anxiety and enjoyment in the UK compared to other nations, how to support and encourage children who struggle with maths and how to respond when children ask, ‘When will I ever need this again?'. A transcript (PDF) of this episode is available to download. Show notes Taking part in the discussion: Professor Alf Coles, University of Bristol Professor Nathalie Sinclair, Simon Fraser University, British Columbia Julia Thomson, Communications Manager, NCETM. Episode chapters 00:06 - Introduction and welcome 00:39 - Is maths anxiety a global issue? 02:31 - When will I ever need this maths? 09:18 - How parents can support their children 12:33 - The importance of learning maths 16:17 - Conclusion and final thoughts Useful links I Can't Do Maths! Why children say it and how to make a difference by Professor Alf Coles and Professor Nathalie Sinclair (Bloomsbury, 2022) Vihart, maths YouTuber recommended by Nathalie Sinclair Maths Games with Bad Drawings by Ben Orlin (Little, Brown, 2022) recommended by Nathalie Sinclair Mathematics for Human Flourishing by Francis Su (Yale University Press, 2021) recommended by Nathalie Sinclair Learning Mathematics for an Environmentally Sustainable Future by Karl Bushnell (Association of Teachers of Maths, 2018), mentioned by Alf Coles NCETM Primary Mastery Professional Development Materials Gattegno's ‘numbers as lengths' as mentioned by Alf Coles, Working with Rods and Why (Association of Teachers of Mathematics, 2017) I Can't Do Maths - Podcast Episode 78 - Part 1 I Can't Do Maths - Podcast Episode 78 - Part 2 Explore previous episodes of the NCETM podcast in our archive.
Részlet
Stone-cold philosophy is blowing up! We have new information on “Bionic speed reading.” Conflicts online and having empathy. Got something weird? Email neshcom@gmail.com, subject line “Weird Things.” Picks: Andrew: Hexaflexagons video from Vihart and Vihart on YouTube Brian: Lamb from Christopher Moore Bryce: Resident Evil Support Weird Things on Patreon Subscribe to the Weird Things […]
Tune in to our lucky 13th episode as the HoCoCast crew interviews the Hexentrics, a local Howard County First Lego League team (1:45). Our podcast team then converses about STEM, school projects and old Disney TV shows (11:45) and recommends a variety of books and media related to the STEM (28.20). Learn more about the Black Eyed Susan contest (33:35) and the new maker space at the Glenwood Branch (34:24). Show Notes: Interview First Lego League Maryland https://marylandfll.org/about-md-fll Conversation Segment Links Hour of Code https://hourofcode.com/us/learn Minecraft https://www.minecraft.net/en-us BTS https://ibighit.com/bts/eng/ Potato Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zUfsDqZ8Uec STEM Book and Media Recommendations Charlie Thorne and the Last Equation https://polaris.hclibrary.org/polaris/search/title.aspx?ctx=1.1033.0.0.3&pos=1&cn=1039549 Dr. Stone https://polaris.hclibrary.org/polaris/search/title.aspx?ctx=1.1033.0.0.3&pos=2&cn=1011144 YouTube, ViHart: https://www.youtube.com/user/Vihart/featured Black Eyed Susan Contest https://www.maslmd.org/black-eyed-susan-book-award Glenwood Branch Maker Space http://hclibrary.org/maker-space/ Transcript of Episode Coming Soon
Valahol, a legközelebbi galaxisban... szerteszét az intergalaktikus sztyeppét hajósok szelték keresztül. Vihart legeltettek, tisztáson pihentek meg, aztán tovább vágtattak. Olykor lóra is szálltak, hogy a tengernyi réten és pusztaságon vágtassanak át... Át, a csillagközi vidékek távoli horizontja felé! Velük volt az ősERŐ, amelyben egy pillanatra sem éreztek zavart, ezért nem ismerték a sötét oldalát sem. S a fényes Flow felkavarta körülöttük kicsiny népüket. Az Alföld nevű kisbolygón vertek ugyanis egy ideje tanyát, zord, de délibábos körülmények között. Azóta itt járják törzsi táncaikat – dorombbal, tilinkóval, dobbal, nádi hegedűvel...
Bemutatkozik a VihARTársulat - Kanapé Argyelán Krisztával 2021. 08. 07. by MannaFM
A Flaszter 2021. február 4-i adása, rendhagyó vendégekkel. Dévényi István ezúttal Lukácsi Katalinnal és Gulyás Balázzsal, a Magyar Hang publicistájával beszélgetett, de tiszteletét tette a szerkesztőségben Szergej, a moszkvai őrkutya és Philip, a golden retriever is. Témáink: – Katalin megmagyarázza – Mit jelent magyarnak lenni – Nem mehetünk az ATV-be – Egy kirúgás margójára
Craz vagyok, a Nyakonöntött Próbagoblin Szolgáltatóház szerkesztője. Eddig írtam többek között űrkalózokról, időutazókról, gerillamamicról, kecskékről, sámánokról, barlangi medvékről, trollról a híd alatt. Ebben a kötetben egyikük se szerepel. Ebben sellőt, macskákat, nappapot, Micimackót, dombitörpét, csillámfaszvámpírt, Babi nénit, Petőfit, guanakót, kicunét, trorkot, kortárs német költőket, szűz lányokat, víziszörnyet, jetit, egy bányász befalazott anyósát, két megkötözött menyétet, törpehörcsögöt, génmódosított kakapót találsz. Na meg lassú-száraz, lassú-nedves, gyors-száraz, gyors-nedves zombikat. --- Szerkesztő: Varga Tamás József alias (Craz) | Cím: 8 novella : Nekem Nyóc | Szerzők: Craz, Kristálysólyom, Vihartáncos | Felolvasó: Ambrus Attila József | Megjelenés: Nyakonöntött Próbagoblin Szolgáltatóház, Miskolc, 2020 | ISBN 978-615-008421-3 | Játékidő: 03:13:51 (194 perc) | Bitráta: 160 kbps / 44 kHz / mono | A felvétel készült: 2018. június 7. | Megjegyzés: (CC BY-NC-ND 2.5 HU) - A hangoskönyv a Creative Commons licenc alatt jelent meg. Az mp3-as formátumban kiadott hangoskönyv változtatás nélkül, szabadon terjeszthető, de kereskedelmi forgalomba nem hozható. Tartalom: 8/0. Impresszum / Fülszöveg 8/1. Craz: Sellő 8/2. Craz: A színes macskák becsapódási pillanatai festménysorozat 8/3. Craz: Jegenye Brúnó, a vámpírvadász 8/4. Craz: A nappap 8/5. Craz: Harmincholdas Pagony 8/6. Craz - Kristálysólyom: A nagy zombifutam 8/7. Craz - Vihartáncos: ZomBerry interjú 8/8. Craz: Jegenye Brúnó, a zombivadász
A Nyakonöntött Próbagoblin Szolgáltatóház különtermének az ajtaján egy tábla lógott. ZomBerry avagy kő-zene-kő' – hirdette a felirat kissé csálén, ugyanis az ajtónak Huk, a barbár támaszkodott és tűnődve figyelte a benti nyüzsgést. – Nocsak, érdekel a zene? – kérdezte a folyosó felől érkező lány a jegenye termetű izmos harcostól. – Á, nem, csak remélem, most is lesz ingyensör! – vigyorgott rá Huk. – Csak várd ki a végét! – mondta Wendolin a barbárnak, majd belépett a terembe, és helyet foglalt a pulpituson a zenekar többi tagja mellett. – Üdvözlünk minden idetévedt lidércet, törpöt, gnómot, embert és embertelent, bohémot és rapszódikust! – köszöntötte a megjelenteket, és mosolyogva végignézett a teremben egybegyűlt vegyes társaságon. --- Szerző: Craz [Varga Tamás József] és Vihartáncos | Megjelenés: Varga Tamás József (szerk.): Craz - 8 novella (Nekem nyóc). Nyakonöntött Próbagoblin Szolgáltatóház, Miskolc, 2020 | Felolvassa: Ambrus Attila József | Az interjú végén hallható ZomBerry koncertfelvétel zenéjét, valamint az Ork és Törp nyelvű szövegét szerezte, és előadja: Ambrus Attila József | A felvétel készült: 2020. május 19.
Show Notes2:32 — We announce the introduction of The Better Show on channel on YouTube.5:11 — Darren shares his pick for most useful YouTube channel: This Old House.9:13 — Ian shares his pick for most useful channel: NutritionFacts.org12:05 — March's pick for most useful is MedLife Crisis.14:59 — Ian shares his coffee addiction with James Hoffman — Coffee.18:09 — March shares a celebration of maker culture with Adam Savage's Tested.20:30 — Darren shares Mr. Puzzle a fun channel where the host finds and solves puzzles in real-time.22:40 — March shares his most esoteric pick with 3Blue1Brown.25:00 — Darren shares a channel from Vihart on math that, among other things, explains the history of hexaflexagons.26:39 — Ian shares a music-related channel from Sam Johnson called Voice Teacher Reacts.Mentions
The boys get as spooky as they can with cellular automata, have a maths conversation about maths conversations and can't get past the fact that Brunnian and Borromean sound too similar. Odds and Evenings Twitter - https://twitter.com/OddsAndEvenings Website - http://www.oddsandevenings.com Topics discussed Zombies and Vampires The Maths of Conversations Brunnian Pumpkin Carving Show Notes Follow Up Maths Jam Annual Gathering Page (https://www.solipsys.co.uk/cgi-bin/MJ_Wiki.py?FrontPage) The Shade (Alex's New Podcast) (https://hacking.finance/read/?c=the-shade) Maths From the Show SIR Model Introduction by Alaric (http://www.alaricstephen.com/main-featured/2016/9/24/modelling-a-pandemic) SIR Model You Can Play With (https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1HxS1GttDPT8eDOhTIfOYckueArSJjGb5VfOr1hgqLno/edit?usp=sharing) Borromean Rings (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borromean_rings) Brunnian Links (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brunnian_link)(more generalised) Pochhammer's Countour (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pochhammer_contour) A Classic Video on Brunnian Links (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=heKK95DAKms&ab_channel=Vihart) (in the form of snakes), by Vi Hart Credits Hosted By Alaric - http://alaricstephen.com Alex - http://twitter.com/speakmouthwords Editing by Alex Following of the brief: bring halloween problems by Alaric Theme music by David Russell - https://youtube.com/DavidRussell323
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: James Shore This week on My Ruby Story, Charles talks to James Shore about his background, how he got into programming, pitfalls that happened along the way, and his Agile story. James Shore is a thought leader in the Agile software development community. He was an early adopter of Agile development and he continues to lead, teach, write, and consult on Agile development processes. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: James Shore’s background: Consultant, practitioner, and coauthor of “The Art of Agile.” How did you get into programming? Began an interest at 15 years old. How did you go from hobbyist to a professional? Modem background. FidoNet Software and technical design to the agile field. Agile field & development Waterfall Rational Rose “UML Distilled” by Martin Fowler “Java Modeling in Color with UML” by Peter Coad WikiWikiWeb A lot of time we don’t look for these solutions unless we go through the pain. This is so true. In many ways the best learning comes through failure. Design standards. JavaScript If you see a different style – and you can’t get past X, Y, Z – that’s a real sign of immaturity. See past the different styles and find what you could “steal.” Intellectual laziness. Human condition is to not feel inferior. Of course, not every idea is good, but try and see what is the root. What do you feel like you’ve contributed to the programming industry? And much more! Links: James Shore’s LinkedIn James Shore’s Website James Shore’s Twitter James Shore’s GitHub James Shore’s Book, “The Art of Agile Development...” FreshBooks FidoNet Waterfall Rational Rose “UML Distilled” by Martin Fowler “Java Modeling in Color with UML” by Peter Coad WikiWikiWeb Digital Ocean, LLC JavaScript CacheFly Sponsor: Digital Ocean, LLC Picks: Charles Ready Player One – Movie NG Conf Interviews James Neil Killick Vihart – Mathematics Videos
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: James Shore This week on My Ruby Story, Charles talks to James Shore about his background, how he got into programming, pitfalls that happened along the way, and his Agile story. James Shore is a thought leader in the Agile software development community. He was an early adopter of Agile development and he continues to lead, teach, write, and consult on Agile development processes. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: James Shore’s background: Consultant, practitioner, and coauthor of “The Art of Agile.” How did you get into programming? Began an interest at 15 years old. How did you go from hobbyist to a professional? Modem background. FidoNet Software and technical design to the agile field. Agile field & development Waterfall Rational Rose “UML Distilled” by Martin Fowler “Java Modeling in Color with UML” by Peter Coad WikiWikiWeb A lot of time we don’t look for these solutions unless we go through the pain. This is so true. In many ways the best learning comes through failure. Design standards. JavaScript If you see a different style – and you can’t get past X, Y, Z – that’s a real sign of immaturity. See past the different styles and find what you could “steal.” Intellectual laziness. Human condition is to not feel inferior. Of course, not every idea is good, but try and see what is the root. What do you feel like you’ve contributed to the programming industry? And much more! Links: James Shore’s LinkedIn James Shore’s Website James Shore’s Twitter James Shore’s GitHub James Shore’s Book, “The Art of Agile Development...” FreshBooks FidoNet Waterfall Rational Rose “UML Distilled” by Martin Fowler “Java Modeling in Color with UML” by Peter Coad WikiWikiWeb Digital Ocean, LLC JavaScript CacheFly Sponsor: Digital Ocean, LLC Picks: Charles Ready Player One – Movie NG Conf Interviews James Neil Killick Vihart – Mathematics Videos
Panel: Charles Max Wood Guest: James Shore This week on My Ruby Story, Charles talks to James Shore about his background, how he got into programming, pitfalls that happened along the way, and his Agile story. James Shore is a thought leader in the Agile software development community. He was an early adopter of Agile development and he continues to lead, teach, write, and consult on Agile development processes. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: James Shore’s background: Consultant, practitioner, and coauthor of “The Art of Agile.” How did you get into programming? Began an interest at 15 years old. How did you go from hobbyist to a professional? Modem background. FidoNet Software and technical design to the agile field. Agile field & development Waterfall Rational Rose “UML Distilled” by Martin Fowler “Java Modeling in Color with UML” by Peter Coad WikiWikiWeb A lot of time we don’t look for these solutions unless we go through the pain. This is so true. In many ways the best learning comes through failure. Design standards. JavaScript If you see a different style – and you can’t get past X, Y, Z – that’s a real sign of immaturity. See past the different styles and find what you could “steal.” Intellectual laziness. Human condition is to not feel inferior. Of course, not every idea is good, but try and see what is the root. What do you feel like you’ve contributed to the programming industry? And much more! Links: James Shore’s LinkedIn James Shore’s Website James Shore’s Twitter James Shore’s GitHub James Shore’s Book, “The Art of Agile Development...” FreshBooks FidoNet Waterfall Rational Rose “UML Distilled” by Martin Fowler “Java Modeling in Color with UML” by Peter Coad WikiWikiWeb Digital Ocean, LLC JavaScript CacheFly Sponsor: Digital Ocean, LLC Picks: Charles Ready Player One – Movie NG Conf Interviews James Neil Killick Vihart – Mathematics Videos
In which Ben and Alex find out where the Midwest is, talk about Net Neutrality, and learn about kilograms of steel and feathers.
Episode Seven October 29, 2015 Creative Costumes with Megan, Kier, Sarah, and Larry Music from "The Cat's Meow" by Larry Heyl Related To Geeks Links: http://relatedtogeeks.com http://relatedtogeeks.com/podcast http://youtube.com/user/relatedtogeeks http://relatedtogeeks.tumblr.com Show Links: 250 Dwarf Galaxies http://www.americanbazaaronline.com/2015/10/23/astronomers-discover-250-dwarf-galaxies-from-earths-early-days/ [caption id="attachment_82" align="alignnone" width="300"] This image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope shows the galaxy cluster MACSJ0717.5+3745. This is one of six being studied by the Hubble Frontier Fields programme, which together have produced the deepest images of gravitational lensing ever made. Due to the huge mass of the cluster it is bending the light of background objects, acting as a magnifying lens. It is one of the most massive galaxy clusters known, and it is also the largest known gravitational lens. Of all of the galaxy clusters known and measured, MACS J0717 lenses the largest area of the sky.[/caption] Reaper Bones Stress Test https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M6aCtVJKwRg Crash Course https://www.youtube.com/user/crashcourse Sci Show https://www.youtube.com/user/scishow AnimalWonders Montana https://www.youtube.com/user/Anmlwndrs The Brain Scoop https://www.youtube.com/user/thebrainscoop Vi Hart https://www.youtube.com/user/Vihart Mini Maker Faire at B&N http://www.barnesandnoble.com/h/makerfaire Reaper https://www.reapermini.com/ Telephone Box https://www.reapermini.com/Miniatures/telephone%20box Angels of Sorrow https://www.reapermini.com/Miniatures/angel/latest/77362 Xena: Warrior Princess http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0112230/ Scary Game Squad https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLFx-KViPXIkFNftmkbEGV3rJSa7bKHngs Avengers: Age of Ultron http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2395427/ My Drunk Kitchen https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL2EC7F45DBD9D9B1A Stampy https://www.youtube.com/user/stampylonghead