@hanzhango

❤I created a Free Math Study Guide that includes my 4-Step Learning Framework + Free Online Resources: https://hanzhango.kit.com/ea3df74901

@TheLucanicLord

What I hear, I forget.  What I see, I remember.  What I do, I understand.

@madmarvdesigns

Good math student = Memorize and copy

Good mathematician = Deeply understanding

@robertgamer3112

It's worth remembering that the math concepts we learn were discovered by very smart people over the course of years, decades, centuries and in some cases millennia. You should not feel dumb for not immediately understanding a math concept.

@Abcdghii

Honestly didn't need the advice but just the reassurance and comfort of knowing I'm not stupid 😭

@butcherboy6488

I LIKE HOLDING MIC WITH FORK 👍👍👍

@b_olson542

I was humiliated in school for being math illiterate. I wish to learn from scratch again teaching myself to help resolve the anxiety and hurt it has caused me. I find this video motivating. Thank you!

@AsusMemopad-us5lk

It was David Hilbert who famously said nobody ever understands math you just get used to it.  He was a top mathematician/ professor in the early twentieth century.

@RihamAhamed950

i learned three things in this whole 15minutes,

1. don't try to solve a problem if you can't think of an approach before starting.
2. Keep yourself familiar with the problem like keep practicing until you automatically solve the problem before thinking of any approach(1st one), as you do basic calculations.
3. if you want to believe and stay confident and motivated you need to first start from the basics. 
-----correct me if i missed anything. Thank You!

@GulsevarAzamova

I don’t want to say that you’re wrong! But in my opinion, I feel satisfied when I truly understand what is happening in a math problem. If people just solve problems by knowing the steps but don’t understand the topic and its purpose, then solving them has no real meaning.🙃

@ilonaksulistya

the worst part is that i would constantly be tempted to look at the answer key which obviously didn't help 💀 good luck in maths, everyone!

@crazytimesman

This is crazy.. I stayed up all night doing math problems, just got done and decided to hop on yt before I go to bed only to see this as my first recommended video. It is 7:41am right now for context lol

@baselinesweb

It’s nice to hear that when times got tough, you chose the right fork in the road.

@blast5558

I have such a genuine love for learning. As someone who graduated from high school with a super low gpa, and had no confidence in math. I can now say I am pursuing a degree in engineering and gaining confidence I have never had before. If you're reading this, DO NOT DOUBT YOURSELF. You are capable of everything you dedicate yourself to. NOTHING is difficult, you are just not used to it.

@kevinkasp

Here’s how my son got good at math: Practice, practice, practice.
I bought him an older edition of his calculus textbook because I could also buy the complete teacher’s solution manual. He didn’t really use it during the first semester. Consequently when second semester began he didn’t have confidence about his first semester knowledge.
So my son proceeded do Calc I all over again by doing every problem in the book.
At first he would get most of them wrong. But by having the step-by-step solution to every problem he soon discovered that some of the concepts had had wrong and that he had a tendency to make the same “mental” errors such as not paying close attention to negative signs.
But the bonus learning thing for him was by seeing the methods professional mathematicians used step-by-step, it taught him how to employ the same patterns of problem solving. In just one semester (although it required two hours every day for the entire semester) he taught himself how to be good at math.
Now people think he’s a kind of math genius. Calc II and III and differential equations were easy for him.

@rob876

The most important lesson I learnt at school is to start trying. Even if you're years behind in a subject, start trying with the material you're receiving now. All the material you missed will start falling into place. I was 3 years behind in French and started trying in my 4th year of French. At the end of 4th year, I passed at O'Level with a B. I carried this lesson with me throughout my University studies.

@brownie_09

My teacher had convinced me that nothing could improve my chronic mathophobia. But thank god youtube had faith in me and recommended this. Thanks Han ❤

@syedanaushabinzakirkhan20p50

This is so relatable. I'm bad at math. But I've managed to get a bachelor's in physics and the technique you're talking about of initially giving up on the hard problems and then walking through its solution really works like a charm! I did that significantly and my math improved quite a lot.

@loreta4665

Oh, your method is what I figured out on my own. I've never been good at math either but I find it fun, it's like a puzzle which I enjoy.

@summertime_magic

This video is so funny to me because I used every tip(+ a lil bit more) in this video to study when I was in my senior year of high school, but somehow I disregarded or forgot about them once I got to university. Now, as I'm self-learning code and math for computer science, I'm looking for ways to study efficiently and stumbled upon this video and as I am listening i realized, wait a minute, this sounds familiar. Damn. Thank you for this—I don't think I would have remembered these tips without your video.