MY

Teaching Philosophy


 

Nature is Math

Regardless of whether you aren't mindful of it, math is the dialect of the regular world.  Whether you're looking through a magnifying instrument at objects that can't be seen by the eye, or you're looking at stars and planets through a telescope, all that you see is represented by scientific law.

That is the reason we attempt to relate lessons to the natural world – how the leaves on a tree or the extents of your body are sorted out by the golden ratio, or how Einstein's relativity equations govern time. You'll start to see that math is surrounding you, fundamental and significant.

 

 

"I'm terrible at Math"

 You may have no trust in your capacity, and you say it to hide any hint of failure. The problem is, the more you say, "I'm terrible at math", the more genuine it becomes.

We know it's not about capacity – anybody can solve a math problem – it's just about self esteem. I'm here to change your attitude towards math. Not only will you improve , you'll be intrigued to the point that you'll wind up having some good times!

 

Seeing it and feeling it

From my experience when someone is trying to memorize a theory it will be far less successful as trying to "see" and understand that theory. It is way easier to remember what YOU can practice.