In order of execution use BODMAS; Brackets, of, division, multiplication, addition, subtraction. ie 12/2 =6 then 6 x3 = 18 and then 18/2 = 9
@bankimmazumdar729 ай бұрын
Right.
@seahunt60559 ай бұрын
Thats what i got.
@roslyndrake67029 ай бұрын
1
@erhardbaehni18329 ай бұрын
@@seahunt6055 2. to that..
@charlemagnesclock9 ай бұрын
The thing I find a little amusing (?) about these many KZbin videos on the order of operations is that in the real world they are somewhat irrelevant. When you are using math to solve a problem in the real world, say engineering for example, the terms are obvious, and they drive the notation and order of operations. When math is a pure abstraction not actually tied to a need to figure something out, the rules and notation are just conventions of the moment.
@anthonydolio811810 ай бұрын
The answer is C = 9. I think you should move left to right. So 12 divided by 2 = 6. Then 6 times 3 = 18. Then 18 divided by 2 = 9. Let's see ...
@davidf489710 ай бұрын
I just wonder what age you guys are. I'm 67 and did exactly L to R as you did and then wondered why this most basic of calculations should be difficult.
@grantsmith50510 ай бұрын
Division and multiplication take precedence over addition and subtraction, but not over each other So just read the sum through
@donnahart82310 ай бұрын
Answer is a.
@davidf489710 ай бұрын
It would be a) but for the lack of parentheses. The answer is 9
@lamarrdonald774310 ай бұрын
C answer is 9
@lisaboston24658 ай бұрын
It’s been 40 years since I graduated from high school. At first I was thinking the answer was (a)….but I stopped and thought about it for a second and realized it was (c). Geez. It’s amazing how much of what you learned gets rusty when you don’t really use it that often anymore. 😂 Enjoyed your video!
@lindael27 ай бұрын
Wait until you are out of school 60 years. I got it right on first try but did not know why.
@Qkat11o3 ай бұрын
I got it in 6 seconds. Very simple.
@oldrrocr13 күн бұрын
want a real treat? Give a cashier at a fast food place payment that is NOT the next dollar higher, ($10 plus 7 cents for a purchase of $8.82) and see how they react.😁
@Kanelle8811 күн бұрын
I was thinking the line was separating the problem from the next one. It took me a moment to figure out why there wasn't an 18. 😅 At least my math was correct both before and after I realized it was a fraction and not a quirk of a work sheet.
@CleoVer-k1vАй бұрын
I was so "Null" in math when I was a student. I was afraid of all this numbers. Up to today, not really my passion. But (Today I am 57 years old) , I am so happy, that I get it.... sometimes, when it is not too tricky. Thank you! Wished, I had this tools in the past in the 80ties.... ❤ Following you from Germany.
@suzanneburns61308 ай бұрын
This is a prime example of how some instructors not teaching the whole of PEMDOS...you made this so much easier! Thank you for being a great instructor! We were not told that the groups of Multiplication and division were to be done left to right in order of the problem. We were told that we were to always do multiplication, then division, addition and subtraction. This made many problems very confusing! Thank you again! ❤
@candygirl75868 ай бұрын
Exactly!
@TosinAmupitan4 ай бұрын
BODMAS. Division comes before multiplication. That's how I was taught
@carolynzaremba54693 ай бұрын
@@TosinAmupitan Not me.
@christinegallegos81693 ай бұрын
1
@saltendo21773 ай бұрын
@@TosinAmupitan BODMAS is the more common non-American way iirc. But BODMAS does the same as PEMDAS. While yes in this problem the division came before the multiplication, division and multiplication switch priority based on which one is first from right to left.
@MKO-USA9 ай бұрын
My pre calculus professor in college told us in the first class "in the absence of brackets you always resolve left to right"...best math advice ever.
@dennisbailey-j4g9 ай бұрын
Exactly what I remember from school L to R .WTF is order of operations .
@robertchiarizia94639 ай бұрын
Order of operations actually
@toby99999 ай бұрын
@@dennisbailey-j4g L to R is only a tiny part of the process... order of operations takes precedence over left to right. It's pretty simple. It's often remembered as BEDMAS or some such similar acronym. Note: Trap for beginners: When there is a multiplication, and a division (the DM part) order is L to R. Similarly, when there is an addition and subtract together (AS), order is L to R. The Reason... Multiplication and division have equal precedence. Addition and subtraction have equal precedence. Order of operations means for instance; multiplication and division must be done before addition and subtraction. It also means that anything inside parentheses must be done first. So, it's not just left to right OR just order of operations. People seem to forget parts of it. Example 6 + 3 * 4 = 18 because multiplication has higher precedence than addition. Example (6 + 3) * 4 = 36 because the 6 + 3 is inside () Example 2 * 3 + 5 * 6 = 6 * 30 = 180 because working left to right, multiplication takes precedence over addition. These are all basic rules taught (or should have been) in elementary school. We were taught this stuff at age 10. Hope this helps.
@MKO-USA9 ай бұрын
@@robertchiarizia9463 - Order of operators account for the use of brackets then upper/lower, etc. In the absence of brackets or indicators L to R is the mathematical order.
@AcapellaAddict4Lyfe9 ай бұрын
Very intuitive, but true. I never needed to be told that to come to that conclusion. Good advice, nontheless.
@brownorpheus110 ай бұрын
Bodmas brackets of division,multiplication,addition and subtraction 12 divided by 2 =6times3=18 divide by 2 = 9
@saehian10 ай бұрын
Bodmas is UK type. BODMAS. B=Bracket O= Objective D= Division M= Multiplication A= Addition S= Subtraction
@aleksa-77-710 ай бұрын
In Canada it's B brackets E exponents D division M multiplication A addition S subtraction DM and AS go left to right.
@roykowalski412510 ай бұрын
I like Brackets. If they are used, there is no confusion about the order
@tedmounsteven62110 ай бұрын
There are no brackets here. Start at the left and move to the right! Need a guidebook?@@roykowalski4125
@sammorlen10510 ай бұрын
A
@leonardslape993526 күн бұрын
I just started a new job as an instructor in aviation technology! Part of this is aviation math, and it covers order of operations. I needed this refresher in the worst way! I subscribed!
@dreamagayeconrad73663 ай бұрын
i have always loved math. i am 70 years old and got it within seconds. I am glad you are doing this because it seems the younger generation doesn't understand math as well. i grew up when there were no calculators and you had to learn on paper and in your head.
@susanballantyne56953 ай бұрын
Same. I’m 71 and clearly we were taught well back then…
@DineshPatel-g1s3 ай бұрын
Yes. I am 93 and learned the only way permanently.
@lindasplace27272 ай бұрын
I’m 69 and thought this was pretty straight forward 🤷♀️
@worldorthoorthopaedicsurge61472 ай бұрын
Agree, at 71, we learnt mental arithmetic at age 11 with huge emphasis on doing mental calculations. Still very good at.
@philipworl9340Ай бұрын
1
@thegreyarea-WPP10 ай бұрын
In the UK we have BODMAS: B - Brackets, O - Order of powers or roots, D - Division, M - Multiplication A - Addition, and S - Subtraction. We didn’t have it in my school life but apparently this is the way it all works now.
@zakelwe10 ай бұрын
Bomdas is a.lso correct though, multiplication and division have no order hence why you need more brackets in this example.
@MS-ig7ku10 ай бұрын
@@zakelwe Yes it should have parentheses for clarity.
@zakelwe10 ай бұрын
@@MS-ig7ku Indeed The youtube person needs to correct their video. You do not have to do the division first. you need to put parenthesis in to tell you WHICH TO DO FIRST. Other wise either answer is equally valid
@MelioraCogito10 ай бұрын
@@zakelwe Division AND multiplication share priority based on their position (order) L ⇾ R in the equation (just as addition & subtraction does).
@MelioraCogito10 ай бұрын
In Canada, the mnemonic is BEDMAS: Brackets; Exponents; Division & Multiplication (in order of appearance); and Addition & Subtraction (in order of appearance).
@adrianbell604110 ай бұрын
It should also be made clear that when division is written as a numerator (on top) and a denominator (underneath) with a horizontal line separating them, then both the numerator & denominator formulae (equations) can be understood to be enclosed in parentheses. Thus the above equation could also be written on a single line as (12 / 2 * 3) / (2).
@doodlegassum695910 ай бұрын
Yes. Obelus, solidus and vinculum. The difference is rarely mentioned but is vital
@adrianbell604110 ай бұрын
@@doodlegassum6959 Interesting. To be clear here, and there could easily be confusion as the two are so similar, I was not referring to a horizontal line that behaves as a vinculum. I was referring to the horizontal line, used above as a division symbol, that certainly has a similarity of effect, but is more contained in its meaning than a vinculum. For clarity of reading by anyone, such as myself, who previously had not knowingly been aware of the terms : % is an obelus; / is a solidus; Vinculum is described as a horizontal bar drawn above & across a (sub-)formula to indicate that part of the overall formula should be calculated first. Thus requiring it be included in the BODMAS acronym as VBODMAS (as it takes higher order-priority even than any form of brackets). Thank you for bringing these to my attention 🙂 As far as I understand, the obelus & solidus are notational & functional equivalents, so are interchangeable. The vinculum is, of course, functionally quite different as it can be used even when division is not involved.
@zakelwe10 ай бұрын
But this still does resolve the problem, you are simply putting the 2 in parenthesis which is not needed. The problem part is 12/2 *3 which still needs one set of parentheses to determine whether that part is 12/(2*3) or (12/2)*3 In general, to any expression of the form a/bc : one needs to insert parentheses to show whether one means (a/b)c or a/(bc).
@staticdaniel832610 ай бұрын
Honestly that was easy
@adrianbell604110 ай бұрын
@@zakelwe I'm sorry to be blunt, but everything you've written is completely wrong. Except maybe the fact that the parentheses around the 2 on its own are unrequired? Required or not, as I wrote earlier, the way it *is* written (below a horizontal division bar) is still equivalent to it being within parentheses.
@aronbaumel27 күн бұрын
THAT’S INCORRECT! First of all, PEMDAS is a convention not a rule, but it doesn’t resolve ambiguities. This is an ambiguous equation. An obelus and a fraction bar are used interchangeably but indicate different things. An obelus should not be used without brackets otherwise it’s not clear whether the intent is 12 --- 2x3 ---- 2 Or 12/2 x 3 ----- 2
@anseal568126 күн бұрын
Actually this problem is very simple, no need to complicate it, do you see any brackets?
@Margaret-u1x2 ай бұрын
12 divided by 2= 6 X 3 equals 18, divided by 2 equals 9
@mikeheydon602810 ай бұрын
Nice, I am an old person and did my math education in the 1960 and 1970's. Our mnemonic in those days was always "BODMAS" which has stuck in my head for eternity. Basically exactly like your "PEDMAS" - B=Brackets O=Of (Exp etc.) D=Division M=multiplication A=Addition and S=Subtraction. BODMAS gave me the correct answer to your quiz as I expected.
@melewis726310 ай бұрын
I agree, that is how i learnt it. BEDMAS. Division then Multiplication. I don't know when this PEMDOS came about.
@malamashru771810 ай бұрын
Same here!!!!!!
@countingfloats10 ай бұрын
Stop presenting these mindless problems. All of them wrong, including your "solution". The correct answer is this : "use proper parenthesis such that it removes all ambiguities. End of story !!!! That teacher was wasting years of your life. Find his or her and enclose them into pairs of parentheses.
@Not_really10 ай бұрын
I, too, was raised on BODMAS and the solution to that problem is quite straightforward, with BODMAS. This newfangled PEMDAS screws things up as it comes with one or two qualifications that you didn't have to deal with when applying BODMAS to the problem!
@fullcircle472310 ай бұрын
@@countingfloats Exactly or you get more than one answer.
@cjscatcat9 ай бұрын
You are absolutely right in that there are not enough problems that demonstrate to students that it is either M or D whichever comes first. Usually there is some other component that makes the order relatively easy to figure out, but in this case, it really needs to be stressed because real life, is never like the textbooks!
@Shay-q8u5 ай бұрын
I learned it as PEMA or Please Excuse My Arithmetic. Example: 5 divided by 4 is the same as 5 times one quarter. and 4 minus 5 is the same as -5 + 4. (Read as negative five)
@WaywardSon5Ай бұрын
The confusion you mention about the handling of multiplication and division (and addition and subtraction, for that matter) when following order of operations really shows one thing: teaching P.E.M.D.A.S. as a "checklist" is a poor teaching method, especially for new learners. The expectation of a checklist is that each item must be completed or eliminated before the next is attempted. To then say "these two items on the checklist are done concurrently from left to right within the problem" stops it from being a checklist. It can be a useful mnenomic device for remembering the elements involved. If you have to make exceptions to make a descriptor work, it's a bad descriptor.
@SuzanAlbright9 ай бұрын
I am 71. I have been terrible in math since I was in first grade! This is a great source of embarrassment to me. I will be using these videos to help me learn or relearn some basic math without the pressure of being in a classroom. Thank you for taking the time to provide this helpful instruction.
@tomtke73519 ай бұрын
and you can backup and repeat if necessary... John is good at explaining
@donsmith94789 ай бұрын
But this ain't really 'basic' math, it's more about what one might expect on a math test like on the SAT.
@Stuart.Branson.9 ай бұрын
MATH is quite irrelevant in real life, so don't sweat it. It's only important when the electric and gas companies are trying to rip you off.
@tomtke73519 ай бұрын
@@Stuart.Branson. opinions vary
@catalhuyuk79 ай бұрын
I thought I was terrible at math but I had a terrific teacher in grade 10, at an adult high school who apparently taught math the way I need learn. After that I was getting perfect grades. It’s often the instructor not the student that makes the difference. Mind you, the student needs to be motivated.
@leonotte729410 ай бұрын
To simplify multiply/division on the same level I would write them as multiplication only, so (12 * 1/2 * 3) / 2 and then the order won't matter and I can remove terms that cancel out. Same for plus-minus, write 2 - 3 + 6 -2 as 2 + -3 + 6 + -2 and order does no longer matter, so I can cancel out -2 against +2 pairs, most useful for lots of terms or larger quantities.
@leonotte729410 ай бұрын
@@karlwithak. It works just fine for the same level. I highly recommended it. But I do wonder why math teachers don't teach this early on. I like the different methods shown on this channel.
@MrPimperanto10 ай бұрын
2+-3+6+-2……. You nuts????? 2+(-3+6)+(-2) you CANT put - and + RIGHT next to each other!!!!!!
@leonotte729410 ай бұрын
@@MrPimperanto You should look at it as 2 + (-3) + 6 + (-2) and then you may order it any way you want. Plus and Minus are on equal level for calculation.
@jakemccoy10 ай бұрын
You are correct, except it's best just to say the order matters. If you introduce exponents, then suddenly the order does matter again in the examples you gave. Thus, it's best just to respect the order for the sake of consistency and accuracy. Getting too creative with this simple process is how people get tripped up.
@isabelpedrosa9819 ай бұрын
Francamente tengo 78 años y esta operación las resolvíamos con 10 años,al menos en España y sin darle tantas vueltas
@Shell00033 ай бұрын
Order of Operations / BODMAS ----BRACKETS OF DIVISION , Multiply , ADD, Subtract
@claudinesutherland67144 күн бұрын
This is the acronym I learned.
@Shell00034 күн бұрын
YES
@anthonysanlucas643711 күн бұрын
Love your channel. Thank you for taking the time to put this information out. We live in California in our schools are absolutely crap(public and private). We pulled our kids out of school, our homeschooling them and I use your channel to refresh my math skills for our lessons.
@brianfitzpatrick737210 ай бұрын
Strictly speaking there is implied parenthesis. The horizontal line is interpreted as a divide operation so the expression is equivalent to (12÷2×3)÷2. This would be obvious if the 2 under the line were replaced with a more complicated expression requiring at least one extra arithmetic operator, say 6-4. Then the original expression could be written as (12÷2×3)÷(6-4). Typing this into a calculator would produce the correct result =9. The original expression could be entered without parenthesis but the example I gave illustrates a more general case where parentheses are implied.
@countingfloats10 ай бұрын
Implied parentheses are a dead end and only might work if there are only a few levels and it is you and your twin are working on the same problems. Otherwise all bets are off. Stop presenting these mindless problems. All of them wrong, including your "solution". The correct answer is this : "use proper parenthesis such that it removes all ambiguities. End of story !!!! That teacher was wasting years of your life. Find his or her and enclose them into pairs of parentheses.
@ritapearl-im3wv10 ай бұрын
@countingfloats My thoughts exactly! Except the end, which made me LOL. I thought it more of a mind puzzle than a math puzzle. Math problems should be clearly expressed.
@eduardopena589310 ай бұрын
You have to be careful with this approach because you can't simply add in parenthesis or brackets where there are none. I was in Advanced Academics since I entered the third grade. In middle school, I was doing supposedly college level work. So my order of operations problems were rarely just this simple. I would see things like: (12 - 2)5 - 5 + (4 + 3)2 - 6 = ? Now, you can't just slip in the parenthesis wherever you like. You will get the complete wrong answer.
@ritapearl-im3wv10 ай бұрын
@eduardopena5893 ABSOLUTELY! I absolutely reject the thought process of the subject video. One might say it is acceptable for less complicated or lower level of problems. No. The lowest levels should introduce and train for the more complicated problems. Thank you for your important voice on this matter. 🌞
@eduardopena589310 ай бұрын
@@ritapearl-im3wv Thank you for the reply. Right, it is a very fundamental thing that you have to get the basics in order first, so that you can build up to the next thing. If you think my example looks complicated, you should see something called matrices. Fortunately for me, as complicated as matrices are, they are very formulaic and logical. There's a process you follow, and so long as you follow it, you'll always be correct. Although I was an ace at them, it was rather unfortunate that I never, ever understood why I needed to learn how to do them or what they would be used for. It was never explained to me. It was like, yeah, I can do them. So what?
@Icarus678310 ай бұрын
When both division and multiplication are involved, the calculation remains linear from left to right regardless of the operator. The last operation to be carried out is reducing the resultant fraction that the operation of the denominators give.
@jakemccoy10 ай бұрын
Yes.
@zakelwe10 ай бұрын
"When both division and multiplication are involved, the calculation remains linear from left to right regardless of the operator." Show me a link that says this is so ? It's actually false. Additions and subtractions have such a rule, not M and D. When you write a diviision over a multplication like this as in the old days 8 -------- 2 * 4 how does the left to right rule work then ? Left to right you do 8/2 first .... How do you do 12/2/3 ? Left to right again ? Is 2 or 8 the answer ? If you write it over more than one line then it is obvious if you use the old convention of smaller division line is done first 12 --- 2 -------- 3 or 12 -------- 2 --- 3 with 12/2/3 you can only get one answer out of the possible two allowed ... hence why left to right is not done on M and D. PS The reason AS has the left to right rule is because of course they are all written on one line ... 4-3+5 etc etc.
@maricarolfurlong79598 ай бұрын
I am also 50+ years from high school, and math was not one of my the courses I liked. My mind is being opened at years old. Thanks!
@pierregaude1528Ай бұрын
The way I learned arithmetic in France would always include parenthesis in the formula ie (12: 2) x3 or 12: (2x3). EZPZ...no confusion
@MJ-vl9eu10 ай бұрын
PEMDAS is ambiguous, since multiplication & division are interchangeable operations (as shown here by a focus on left-to-right, vs the stated order of operations). Addition & subtraction are interchangeable as well. PEMDAS can be PEDMAS, PEDMSA, or PEMDSA. That's why most people get confused, so such facts need to be more widely taught.
@gweilospur587710 ай бұрын
It’s arbitrary - it is simply defined that division goes before multiplication. If you want multiplication to go first you simply put brackets around it, hence brackets (parentheses) always goes first.
@milsimgamer10 ай бұрын
@@gweilospur5877 rules have changed....IDK if they will again, but who knows.
@gamesletter10 ай бұрын
@@gweilospur5877 yes exactly, separating the 2 and 3 in the numerator results in the operation yielding a different answer. which is why the expression is written badly in the first place and wouldn't appear in that form in a math paper (unless deliberate) and even then the student would rewrite it - otherwise the 12 would be divided by 2 = 6 then x 3 = 18 then divided by 2 = 9
@countingfloats10 ай бұрын
Looks like you are lost the PEMDASMDEPEMDSA forests. Don't do math, ask someone else Stop presenting these mindless problems. All of them wrong, including your "solution". The correct answer is this : "use proper parenthesis such that it removes all ambiguities. End of story !!!! That teacher was wasting years of your life. Find his or her and enclose them into pairs of parentheses.
@MJ-vl9eu10 ай бұрын
@@countingfloats What I've stated is what has been displayed here. If you disagree with it, then research it & disagree with the math teacher that is teaching it... & the countless others that state it all over the internet. I was taught PEMDAS, period, but here we are...
@eduardopena589310 ай бұрын
I am of a slightly older generation and never learned PEMDAS (Please Excuse My Dear Aunty Sally). I learned it as "Order of Operations." The way Order of Operations goes: Parenthesis (or Brackets) Exponents Multiplication/Division (one does not take precedence over the other, the order goes from left to right, so you do whichever comes first in the order) Addition/Subtraction (just like the above, the order is from left to right, one does not take precedence over the other.) According to this method, the answer is 9. Because the order would be: 12/2 = 6, x3 = 18, /2 = 9 *extra note* I was considered a class clown in my school days. Education bored me to tears and I didn't goof off because I wasn't paying attention. I simply grasped the concepts quickly and was tired of hearing it repeated 5 more times and I was ready to move on or get started on my homework so I could get it done before leaving class. Teachers would always try to call me out for not paying attention by shouting out my name and then asking me to repeat what they just said. I would do so verbatim. My middle school math teacher was the first one to catch on. She asked me to stay after class one day. I agreed and she had a lovely conversation with me. She told me that she understood that I knew what was going on, as evidenced by me always getting 100% on all of my tests. She knew I was picking things up quicker than the rest of the kids in the class. She explained to me that not all kids have the ability to do so like I did, so that they needed to perhaps hear it explained again or a different way. She said that normally because of my behavior she wouldn't ask me, but she asked me to be a tutor to some of the kids that didn't quite understand it. She then asked me if I would do them the favor of not distracting the other kids while she tries to teach them. She wasn't angry with me, not yelling at me, or trying to insult me. That had been the approach of all the other teachers and that was what I was expecting. It caught me very off guard and when she was done I smiled very wide and said, "Sorry, I didn't know, and I would be happy to help the other kids." So I was a tutor for Order of Operations and equations. I had a lot of kids coming to me during classwork and asking to see my answers and they would say, "I got something different." I would then ask them how they attacked the problem, and then I would show them the way I did it and explain it.
@TigerDelgado10 ай бұрын
God bless you. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@eduardopena589310 ай бұрын
@@TigerDelgado Thank you. I had another conversation later in my college years with a professor who once again, asked me to stay after class. I had grown out of my class clown/acting out phase long before this point. She started to ask me all sorts of questions about my educational history and I thought it was a bit odd and then she said, "This confirms what I thought about you. You are one of the Gifted and Talented, but you slipped through the cracks. They really missed the boat on you." I had only heard about gifted and talented and in my young ignorance, I thought it always referred to special needs children and never gave it another thought. After my conversation with this professor, I did some research, and I started to tear up a bit. What they were explaining to me fit me to a tee. I wasn't goofing off because I wanted to be a jerk. It was because I was simply SO bored. I learned my lesson, I proved I could do it, so what is the point of doing it again and again? There was no purpose to it, and that is a huge problem for people like me. If we don't think it makes sense, we're not interested. There was a lot more information included in the description of gifted and talented students and I was pretty much a classic case of it. Almost everything applied to me. I could have been a straight A student for my entire primary school education. I just didn't see the point of doing homework and just never did it unless I had to in order to pass a class. See, I was coming up through the "no child left behind" nonsense which boiled down means that if a child simply turns in their homework (which is not graded) and gets zeroes on everything else, they will pass the class with a 70% score. Here I was getting 100% on all the tests in every subject. Another middle school teacher, my science teacher had me stay after class. He told me he knew I was a very bright kid, I aced all of his tests, but that he was upset that he couldn't give me an A in his class because I didn't do any of the homework. I asked him why I should do it. He said because it was practice for the tests. I told him, "Well, you already said I am acing all of your tests, so why do I need the practice?" He sat there stunned for a few moments, didn't have an answer, and simply smiled and let me go to my next class. At any rate, I went through college and now have a PHD and a Masters, worked in the medical industry for years, ran a few businesses and am now semi-retired.
@apveening10 ай бұрын
@@eduardopena5893 Glad everything turned out right for you in the end, there are too many who keep slipping through the cracks downright to rock bottom.
@eduardopena589310 ай бұрын
@@apveening Thank you. It left me feeling pretty empty inside after learning about it. Most of my k-12 education was torture for me. The only thing that made it worthwhile was the best friend I met in 4th grade that I still have in my life today. I never wanted to be there. I looked for reasons not to go. The teachers were hit and miss. I had some really good ones. Some recognized that I wasn't the trouble-maker I seemed to be. Some tied into my humor and focused that into my creativity. Sometimes they would ask me to teach lessons for them and inject my silliness into it. I did very, very well in those classes. I had other teachers that just had no idea what to do with me, so they just ignored me for the most part. And then I had some really bad ones that used to try to pick me apart. I took a great deal of delight whenever they would call on me for an answer or to repeat what they just said, and could answer them correctly and repeat what they said like I was a tape recorder. Their faces would get bright red. I debated a great deal about going to college. I thought it would be more of the same. But, thankfully, I met some great professors there. They took the time to explain why you were learning these things. What applications it would have in your life. It was a great experience. I had one professor I would disagree with numerous times, but instead of getting bent out of shape, he would just ask me questions and to explain my view. We'd have a dialog, and sometimes he would change his mind on something or simply say, "I never really thought about it that way, it is interesting. I will have to think about it some more." Other times it would get him to explain things a bit differently and I would agree with him. It just makes me wonder that if I had gotten into the gifted and talented classes, what would my education have been like? A vast majority of my k-12 education memories are bad. How would I have turned out?
@eduardopena589310 ай бұрын
@@apveening I know I tend to post some rambling responses, but this is why I had thought about being a teacher. My experience of not being very well understood and my perspective on things, I felt I could relate to children a bit. I would try to explain things in a way to help them understand rather than simply as something to drill into their heads for a test. To try to help them not be bored. I studied Froebel and felt as if I was learning about a kindred spirit, and I very much connected with his theory. There was a statement he made about the educational system to which I will paraphrase, "They recited their lessons parrot-wise, with seemingly no understanding of what they were saying." He is saying that they didn't LEARN anything. He was a pretty amazing man and if you haven't studied him, and any current teachers and would be teachers, I would emplore you to do so. If I had to break down his lessons as simply as possible, it would be: 1) Do not underestimate the intelligence of the child. They are often more clever than you think and they will ever let on. 2) Pay attention to them and listen to them, especially when they play. That is when they are most likely to show you who they are, their creativity, and imagination. 3) He was a firm believer is that you take a concept a child already understands, and use that as a building block to introduce a new concept. For my term paper on him, I engaged my classmates. I had them participate by holding up some learning aids, reciting some quotes for me. And then I left them with a question. I started with the concept of having a child in a crib with a playtoy that had a steering wheel on it and a horn, which is something I had as a little kid. Then a baby buggy that also had a steering wheel and a horn on it. Then a pedal pusher car. Then I brought in my Playstation and a racing simulator game with my steering wheel and pedal attachments and let a fellow student play it. And then I brought up the driving simulators they had in my high school. My question was, "Do you think this would be an example of Froebel's idea of taking something familiar, building upon it, and ultimately teaching them how to drive a real car?" I saw a lot of smiles in class that day and my professor just looked at me and shook her head.
@jayrandall907510 ай бұрын
12 divided by 2 = 6, 6 x 3 = 18, 18 divided by 2 = 9. Three steps and you’re done 😊 I failed at maths in high school, simply because it was explained to me in such a confusing round about way.
@DJMcFlinty10 ай бұрын
I think they teach it poorly on purpose. 100 years ago people used to do calculus in their head, now young adults can't add 7 plus 9
@virgeliotudtud31256 ай бұрын
. . . . .and you still failed today. MDAS is the code!
@gavindeane36705 ай бұрын
@@virgeliotudtud3125 They didn't fail. They followed the MDAS process exactly.
@Burt-km2dl5 ай бұрын
OR do it this way: 12 divided by 2 = 6, 2 divided by 2 = 1, 3 divided by 2 = 1.5 *so* 6 divided by 1 = 6 X 1.5 = 9
@cheo42012 ай бұрын
@@virgeliotudtud3125And perhaps you know math but have no class on how to treat others.
@davidcollins272412 күн бұрын
I'm in the UK ('maths' rather than 'math') and studied maths at school for 6 years and then for 1 year at university. We were taught that in a problem like this there should always be parentheses shown, so it should be (12 ÷ 2) x 3 rather than 12 ÷ (2 x 3) the latter being equally possible if simply shown as 12 ÷ 2 x 3.
@suehoffman63947 күн бұрын
You were taught correctly. PEMDAS is a scourge.
@shirleykathan-sayess57643 ай бұрын
OMG! If only I had learned this when I was young!!! I’m 76. I actually get this in my spreadsheets on the computer. Now I understand what to do. Thank you. ❤ Shirley
@cyrnus10 ай бұрын
It is either 9 or 1 depending on the proper grouping of the numerator. Left to right is BS multiplication and division on a properly written equation can be done in either order and get the same result. This is a purposefully ambiguous equation that could potentially have 1 of 2 answers, but not both
@gg-gn3re10 ай бұрын
wrong, there's no way to get 1 unless you are doing something wrong.
@cyrnus10 ай бұрын
@@gg-gn3re and that's where the education system failed you. If the order of multiplication and division matters in an equation, then the equation itself is wrong and all answers are invalid
@gg-gn3re10 ай бұрын
@@cyrnus This is incorrect. The line is putting it as a fraction which gets simplified last. This isn't an "order of multiplication and division" issue. It is generally written different but that doesn't make this worse written equation have two answers.
@jimbailey112210 ай бұрын
No, with no parenthesis you go left to right on the top. That's how you get the only correct answer, which is 9
@Llortnerof10 ай бұрын
And you get the same result no matter which order you do them in. Hint: 12/2*3 = 12*0.5*3 For that matter, you'd still get the same result if you wrote it as 12/2*3/2 instead of (12/2*3)/2 There is no ambiguity. Just a whole lot of people who don't grasp how the math actually works.
@smallmeadow110 ай бұрын
I am 70 yo, and I watched this because I have forgotten these things. You are a great teacher, and explain things very well. A lot of teachers teach to the smartest person in the class who already knows a lot.
@zargonfuture404610 ай бұрын
Yo? 70 years old? I think not. Lol
@JohnBowl1469010 ай бұрын
I thought the answer was 17. I still think it's 17.
@marablemorgan829210 ай бұрын
I'm 73 and think so...
@zargonfuture404610 ай бұрын
@@marablemorgan8292Hello again, interesting, why the yo? That's not normally a slang expression associated with an elder person, I'm 60 and my generation don't use it much either. Just curious about usage of languages, slang and different uses depending on age and cultures. 👋
@marablemorgan829210 ай бұрын
Actually, it's 9.
@StrawhatOtakuDrew26 күн бұрын
Order of operations treats multiplication and division with equal priority, so they are solved as they appear from left to right. Solve above the line first. Therefore 12 divided by two is six. Six times three is nine. At that point, we divide the top number by the bottom number, leaving us with the correct answer of nine. Simple! As long as you are intelligent enough to follow simple instructions (like order of operations).
@eshanyawalls265910 ай бұрын
Thank you so very much for explaining the M. and the D. order. I’m 51 years old, with college education, who has been diagnosed for many years with Dyscalculia. The way you explained this, it just stuck and helped me understand. I know this may sound silly or “slow” to some. Dyscalculia is the math form of dyslexia. Numbers especially in written form seem very confusing, all over the place, freezes our brain, and may become distorted while looking at the math problem.
@zakelwe10 ай бұрын
There is no M and D order so Dyscalculia will not effect the result you get It's a notation issue. Seems like 99% of people on here are suffering from it including the presenter, who is just counting money at the moment He has done this more than once to get views.
@MattRios-jn1qx9 ай бұрын
I was taught that in algebra division is no different than multiply. And adding is the same as substraction. And I still believe that was right. This stuff...?
@aday163710 ай бұрын
I had a math teacher who worked with me after school on multiple days over a month or so where I was able to learn the order and method of solving algebraic equations. We never discussed Pemdas or what ever. Never heard that term until today's video. We just learned the proper sequence by memory. Now in my mid 70's this stuff still serves me for solving problems. Setting up proportions and solving them helps me in so many ways in the course of my days. Even a simple recipe where I want to make less (or more) of the recipe and where some of this stuff is automatic is a regular use.
@gps11035010 ай бұрын
1
@luisbatista110310 ай бұрын
We were taught B.E.D.M.A.S🇨🇦
@sarumano88410 ай бұрын
Bless My Dear Aunt Sally
@countingfloats10 ай бұрын
Stop presenting these mindless problems. All of them wrong, including your "solution". The correct answer is this : "use proper pairs of parentheses such that it removes all ambiguities. End of story !!!! That teacher was wasting years of your life. Find his or her and enclose them into pairs of parentheses.
@johnnycee517910 ай бұрын
I would say C, 9. You sank my battleship.
@srireddy436310 ай бұрын
In the USA, we use PEMDAS Method: Parenthesis, Exponents, Multiplication, Division, Addition, Subtraction
@peterkonitzer44109 ай бұрын
In USA you believe in Moon landing.... but you are not US guy
@maxheadroom15069 ай бұрын
there is no need for a method you just need to see what is infront of you
@grizzlygrizzle9 ай бұрын
Without parentheses, the problem is stated ambiguously.
@chrislee8829 ай бұрын
The opening phrase "in the USA" IS not that relevant on the internet anymore ! As in ,so yes you have your American system and convention AND as a culture and nation you no longer have that much respect globally. So saying what you said does not carry any example of better way of doing things anymore. You are no longer the light on the hill beacon of better democracy anymore. So mine and I am sure a lot of the rest of the world, democracies included, have shifted to a sounder conventional wisdom of international agreed standards for things like explaining why a world citizen needs the context of consensus of agreements to work together. Doing math is important AND it no longer currently needs to be stylised nationalistically. Like math that understood and works on all the continents rather than giving any precedence or nod to allowing the USA to set the standards for the future. Tell me do you still think the Monroe ~ somewhat jingoistic outlook ~is still relevant and proper way to approach diplomatic affairs still. The blunt point is that PEMDAS method is more universal than being an American thingie, so ... if you give up your American prejudices and biases ( apologizes to the Canadians, Mexicans, Cubans etc) there is strong case and instances international too see, hear and feel this. way 🤣😂🤣😂
@TheRealScooterGuy9 ай бұрын
@@chrislee882 -- I think the point was that this person was explaining what they were taught, and how widespread it is. The Monroe doctrine is outdated.
@VincentvanSteen13 күн бұрын
I would suggest using the starting P of Pemdas as an advice: always use parentheses to avoid possible ambiguity and confusion!
@gavindeane36709 күн бұрын
We don't do that in the real world. For example, absolutely nobody wants to have to write a simple quadratic as (a•(x²))+(b•x)+c when we can just write it as ax²+bx+c Ditching precedence and doing it all with explicit parentheses would make mathematics basically unreadable. There's a reason why our precedence convention evolved in the first place and stuck around. It's because it works. Don't be fooled by the fact that we could easily add parentheses to the expression in the video, and they would help not hinder. That's just because the examples used to illustrate and teach these grammar times necessarily have to be very simple so it is clear what point is being made.
@verdettewilkins862210 ай бұрын
When I was young, I experienced classroom humiliation and beatings because I couldn't grasps math concepts which lead me to conclude, it was a painful subject. Subsequently, I developed "Math Anxiety" and avoided the subject. This tutorial was very comprehensive and has revitalized my curiosity and confidence that I can learn this subject.
@Jaji194810 ай бұрын
Beatings?
@brightemerald392410 ай бұрын
I also suffered humiliation and feelings of shame.
@seangordon106010 ай бұрын
Dang. Beatings at school over math ? What kind of nerd geek school was this?
@ewakomorniczak240210 ай бұрын
C.
@cockeyedoptimista10 ай бұрын
Wow, revitalized just from one video? Well, congratulations. I'm sorry you had such a dreadful childhood experience. I'm glad you can now enjoy the intelligent, calm explanation of a math process. (You must have learned Something, then - but it sounds VERY unpleasant!)
@sivaniam10 ай бұрын
I was thought BODMAS 60 years ago. Brackets, Of (power of); Divide; Multiply; Add and finally Subtract. Our teacher had us memories this and it still sticks in my mind.
@lindickison305510 ай бұрын
Thought? Or taught? Wasnt there something about My Dear Aunt Sally and parentheses?? It's been many years - and truly, I havent needed it in well over 50!!!!
@sivaniam10 ай бұрын
@@lindickison3055 Thank for the spelling correction.
@Miami710 ай бұрын
Same here but we didn't learn acronyms, we just memorized it. I needed this throughout my career in IT, along with the Boolean operators.
@pt853110 ай бұрын
Yes India it is bodmas as we say brackets instead of parenthesis
@gweilospur587710 ай бұрын
Who taught you how to spell taught?
@peterrasmussen280510 ай бұрын
How to turn a 3 second math problem into a 13 minute video 😅
@chgosatrap10 ай бұрын
which is how math teachers left me in the dust when I was younger.
@aleksandermilic891910 ай бұрын
And in the end get an incorrect calculation. Because the right result is: a) 1
@missnirvana253510 ай бұрын
😂😂😂 That could be answered in 3 seconds turns into a complex essay. 👽
@chrislienfield281910 ай бұрын
@@aleksandermilic8919 See the video and go to school...
@Darryl.M10 ай бұрын
@@aleksandermilic8919 nope
@lex_hayes27 күн бұрын
NOT HARD!! Apply the Order of Operations and voila you get the correct answer, which is 9. 1:10 This will be interesting! Oh good!! You got it right!! However, I'm very strongly against the use of a Mnemonic unless you teach the actual mathematics behind it and the Order of Operations. PEMDAS BODMAS BEDMAS BIDMAA DMAS MDAS GEMS GEMDAS These are all mnemonics and acronyms that are taught around the would. And look at the list, it's long and confusing, especially if the mathematical reasoning isnt taught alongside it. Why are multiplication and division done together whichever comes first from left to right. Why are addition and subtraction similarly related? What the heck does the E for exponents, the I for indices and the O for orders in these mnemonics actually involve? How about roots, radicals, factorials, trig functions and fractions?? What and how are parentheses used in math ( ) ? The P for PEMDAS and the B for brackets are what exactly and how do they work?? I drum basic arithmetic into my students. We look at the relationships between the operations. I teach high school math at a private school in Australia. When my Year 6 students arrive at the Senior Campus and begin the Middle School (12 year olds) they get a bit of a shock. Because I take them way back to basics. Manipulating, visualising and understanding ALL the arithmetic operations. On Day 1 in class I take them back to: basics and they think I'm joking. I am not. I'm my experience, an solid grounding and an excellent understanding of basic arithmetic is vital for success in later years. I spend a good of couple of weeks on just the basics 1+1 Then we look at how addition and subtraction undo each other. How they are opposites or and discuss why multiplication and division are relatesd and they 5+5+5+5+5+5+5+5+5+5=50 5×10 =50 The Order of Operations can be used to solve harder arithmetic like this: 4-8+60÷(16÷2×4)²√36+5! I'm proud of my students success; not just in my maths class, but in every class. Because I teach back to basics, because the basics are often skipped over or not taught in the educational context. You can't teach young primary students the reasoning and relationships behind the order of operations, and it's not revisited or it becomes "assumed knowledge" and isn't actually taught at all. The moral of the story is TEACH THE ORDER OF OPERATIONS AND DON'T BE LAZY AND JUST GIVE STUDENTS AN ACRONYM TO REMEMBER. TEACH THE ACTUAL MATH.
@Stuart6850510 ай бұрын
I remember, my dear aunt Sally. (I have a sister named Sally), but the concept of left to right, and which comes first multiplication or division to process first is new to me. Also you multiplied the numerator first even though it was a fraction which symbolizes division. So simplifying the numerator first seems to be a hidden rule also.
@pamelas910 ай бұрын
If you had taken each part as a fraction it still works out to 9. 12/2 divided by 2/2 multiplied by 3/2... becomes 6 divided by 1 multiplied by 1.5 equals 9. It's just easier mentally to resolve the numerator first then apply the denominator.
@johnl.tiemannjr.266210 ай бұрын
The numerator was done 1st because the vinculum is also a Grouping symbol (like parentheses) it has a beginning and an end. As far as left to right, you actually started learning that when you started learning to add. The key to the Order is left to right for similar operations .
@marcallen234810 ай бұрын
@@johnl.tiemannjr.2662 left to right is not necessary, it just avoids confusing fractions for some -- you can do × and ÷ in any order. But of course you can't do "2x3", rather if you go right to left it you have to know "÷2" is the same as "×1/2". Just like (for example) 3+4-5+6 you can also go right to left but you cannot start with 6+5, it must be 6+(-5). The "-" or "÷" prefix for EACH TERM changes how you handle it. ...Or the simple way if you don't understand all this, just go left to right does work too.
@marcallen234810 ай бұрын
@@pamelas9Sorry but that is incorrect. It happens to work in that example, but what about (for example) add x8 to the numerator? Your method would be: (12/2)÷(2/2)×(3/2)×(8/2)=36 But the correct answer is: (12÷2×3×8)/2=144/2=72. In fact, since " ÷2" is the same as "×1/2" the whole thing can also be written as: 12 x 1/2 x 3 x 1/2, or also (12x3) / (2x2), both of which resolve to 9. If you include my "x8" you get 12 x 1/2 × 3 × 8 × 1/2, or (12x3×8) / (2x2), Both of which resolve to 72.
@duncancremin17088 ай бұрын
I’m a very long time out of school, but I remember this problem being discussed. We were told there is no correct answer. A maths sentence such as that needs parentheses to make it solvable. In the absence of parentheses, we are not given sufficient information to solve the problem. In the unlikely event an error such as that crept into an exam, we were told to go left to right, as you’ve done, but to put a note in the margin saying that was what we’d done. Always show your work! I think we covered that in 3rd class, purely because of the classroom I remember it in. The teacher had deliberately given us the problem in our homework, to illustrate the importance of parentheses and how they work. From memory, most of our group got 9, but quite a few said 1, having struggled with it and consulted a parent. The teacher concluded by giving us a handout full of parentheses problems for homework and told us that omitting them was every bit as bad as omitting any of the operators in the sentence. In my head I thought of it as like omitting capital letters and punctuation from an English sentence, making it impossible to know what the words mean. Thank you for this trip down memory lane. I didn’t know I still had that memory!
@simonk94258 ай бұрын
Sorry, but this is the type of nonsense our kids are being taught today. Math is a pure applied science! This means there is an answer, and only ONE answer. Math problems are not open to interpretation! That is why we have Social science. God help us!!
@olgabaker65257 ай бұрын
😂😂😂 No correct answer! Answer for Woke generation
@lufknuht59607 ай бұрын
maths? math!
@duncancremin17087 ай бұрын
@lufknuht5960 Depends on whether you speak English or American. I speak English, so for me Maths is the correct abbreviation for mathematics.
@gavindeane36706 ай бұрын
The operators, and the precedence and associativity rules that apply to them, are the punctuation. In this instance, just begin at the beginning. None of the punctuation tells you to do anything different.
@jameskleist401910 ай бұрын
I was only introduced to math problems like the one you had in the video, but it all made sense to me. Now, my older brother was taking calculus in the 8th grade. 1 time he cought the teacher had made a mistake. The teacher put a problem on the backboard then asked if anyone had questions; and my brother asked shouldn't the answer be this instead of what you have? The teacher re-did the problem and said yes John you are correct."
@TheJorgSacul10 ай бұрын
We had a geometry teacher who would intentionally do that late into a day's lesson, randomly- she'd put a big flub on the board to see who was still paying attention. It was a great idea, because it made us smart-aleck slackers pay attention and learn, just TRYING to find her errors.
@gerardljean-baptiste46736 ай бұрын
The answer is 9
@pmoyer5022 күн бұрын
I got it right. All through school I got D's and F's in General Math. It wasn't until 11th grade that I got A's and B's in Algebra. I had a learning disability, which wasn't diagnosed in the 50's and 60's, so after I graduated, all I know and understand is from being self-taught. No smiley face is needed - I'm wearing one ear to ear.
@jomccutcheon217310 ай бұрын
I'm 71 and I have always been terrible in math, even I followed and understood this video, thanks so much!
@jladdyost10 ай бұрын
Thank you. So many people have responded with superior, snarky attitudes. If they had a better math teacher than some others, that's luck and not some accomplishment of their own.
@zakelwe10 ай бұрын
It's wrong. It's a notational problem rather than any generic teaching aid such as PEMDAS or BODMAS, hence the discussion with this badly written ambiguous equation
@zakelwe10 ай бұрын
@@jladdyost The problem here is that this is very middle grade maths using generic teaching rules. If you go to Berkeley or Harvard with high end mathematicians then they don't agree with the result of the OP
@cheriewilson819110 ай бұрын
You can easily clarify order of operations by using parenthesis
@cadenorris400910 ай бұрын
Exactly. The whole premise is meaningless.
@reginapotts258310 ай бұрын
Exactly! What happens if you can't remember the formula?@@cadenorris4009
@MS-ig7ku10 ай бұрын
Yes the correct answer is use parentheses and don't be ambiguous.
@bernadettecartin10 ай бұрын
You don't need the parentheses though. Order of operations goes left to right. The "multiply/divide" means that you do whichever operation comes first in the equation. Multiply doesn't come "before" division. They are equal. Whichever comes first is what you do first. Like he said, it's M OR D.
@TrevorSachko10 ай бұрын
@@MS-ig7ku But it is not ambiguous...
@colleenorrick541510 ай бұрын
I was always taught that order of operations is BEDMAS brackets exponents division multiplication addition subtraction.
@bagel25510 ай бұрын
It's the same exact concept with the only difference being some parts of the world use brackets instead of parenthesis. I believe some other parts of the world use curly braces as well. Really BEDMAS, PEMDAS, and whatever the other ones are is just a way to teach order of operations, which is entirely universal. EDIT: Their may also be regional differences in the name's of certain operations, such as exponents and roots also commonly being refereed to as indices and orders leading to BIDMAS and BODMAS respectively. So remember the acronym used to teach order of operations does not change the order of operations, that is universal.
@gg-gn3re10 ай бұрын
multi and divide are the same step, as are add and sub. B, E, DM, AS You go left to right with them
@dirtfreshink731410 ай бұрын
Pemdas
@zakelwe10 ай бұрын
@@gg-gn3re Incorrect, there is no left to right or right to left with M and D there is no convention. In general, to any expression of the form a/bc : one needs to insert parentheses to show whether one means (a/b)c or a/(bc). See a page called Order of arithmetic operations; in particular, the 48/2(9+3) question by Gary Bergman at Berkely
@jakemccoy10 ай бұрын
@@zakelweDivision is literally an inverted multiplication operation. So, multiplication and division are the same in priority. The example you provided can be re-written simply as 48(0.5)(9+3). There is no ambiguity here. If there were ambiguity, then a program like Microsoft Excel would be calculating unpredictable answers all over the place. With the rules, Excel provides a predictable answer every time.
@GamingTillLateАй бұрын
In the UK we learn BODMAS. If you simplify to 0.5(12 / 2 x 3) = 9 you resolve the bracket then times a half.
@steveburke151910 ай бұрын
I did this problem slightly different than he did, but still got 9 as the correct answer. Cancelling out the 2 on bottom and 12 on top to make the problem simpler: 6/2*3=9.
@jra5541710 ай бұрын
If you do that you end up with 6/1*(3/2)=9. Cancelling out the 2 means dividing all terms by 2. You can’t just simplify the 12 in isolation
@steveburke151910 ай бұрын
@@jra55417 No, you're mistaken. You cancel out all of factors on the bottom with something with same factor or factors on top, in this case 2 has one factor, 2. 12/2*3 becomes 6/2*3. PEDMAS, remember? 6/2=3, 3*3=9. if you took 2 out of everything on top you'd get 6/1*3=18
@jra5541710 ай бұрын
@@steveburke1519 yeah. Not sure what I was thinking!
@DrBrooksNY10 ай бұрын
I graduated HS in '85 and wasn't taught the acronym PEMDAS, but instead the initialism PPMDAS, and Pretty Please, My Dear Aunt Sally as the explainers of the letters. I think it was also more accurately taught as PP(MD)(AS), but just to remember the 'pretty please, my dear aunt sally' part as sufficient. The extra parenthesis were there to let you know that they were a group of systems together and were separate from each other. With the understanding that the solving of left to right in the groups MD and AS. (All of which you explained as well.)
@jessicasanchez576510 ай бұрын
I took calculus 40 years ago as a senior in high school. However, when PEMDAS is the ORDER in which you solve a problem, how does division come before multiplication? 40 years later, is it now PEDMAS???
@EMnessmonster10 ай бұрын
M and D are equal. Division is inverse multiplication. e.g. 3 divided by 2 is the same as 3 multiplied by 1/2
@rogerlevy216010 ай бұрын
I don't think that PEMDAS is the best tool to use to learn this concept. Computational precedence is really what's under discussion and I don't have a cute mnemonic - you just need to learn the rules. In most formulations, multiplication and division have equal precedence and when both appear consecutively in the absence of parentheses, the order of evaluation is left to right. That's kinda' hard to encapsulate in an acronym/mnemonic. I say "most formulations" because all of the many computer languages have computational precedence rules in their definitions and you cannot rely on them all using the same rules, which is why many programmers use parentheses liberally in mathematical expressions..
@fuzzyjax10 ай бұрын
This is a 4th grade math problem. What’s the problem?
@richlaue10 ай бұрын
Another way to write this (12 / 2 * 3) / 2=
@richlaue10 ай бұрын
@@fuzzyjaxi did not like math, and by 4th grade i was using a slide rule
@virgorising7388Ай бұрын
Multiplication and division are higher order of operation than addition and subtraction but if the operators are of the same precedence, conventionally they are evaluated from left to right.
@lamper210 ай бұрын
7:31 key words! "whatever you see first". Whenever this PEMDAS is written there should be a circle around the MD and an explanatory asterisk above it.
@rascocky636610 ай бұрын
That;s why BODMAS is the best! In any case with PEMDAS one can do the multiplication 1st and still get the same answer!!
@christopherellis266310 ай бұрын
@@rascocky6366 Americans like their backward ways. I learnt BODMAS in the sixties.
@sickandtiredofbeingsickand10 ай бұрын
@@rascocky6366😂
@sickandtiredofbeingsickand10 ай бұрын
@christopherellis2663 😂
@aviatorpianokraft10 ай бұрын
They're still using feet, inches, pounds quarts etc: Why would you expect anything else?@@christopherellis2663
@veronicamorrison605610 ай бұрын
Just discovered you, happy days. At 80 years young, I have always been hopeless @ maths and have long planned to conquer that hangup. As the summer approaches, I will again be spending more time on the golf course but am looking forward to getting my brain limbered up too. I would really like to enjoy maths before I pop my clogs. You sound like the guy for me in 2024. Let’s do it! Thanks 😊
@monserrat993610 ай бұрын
That’s a good idea! I got the equation right but I think it was luck. Taking a math class would be fun. I’m 67
@countingfloats10 ай бұрын
Stop presenting these mindless problems. All of them wrong, including your "solution". The correct answer is this : "use proper parenthesis such that it removes all ambiguities. End of story !!!! That teacher was wasting years of your life. Find his or her and enclose them into pairs of parentheses.
@badpussycat10 ай бұрын
@@countingfloats where do you need parenthesis here?
@darrellwilliams125610 ай бұрын
The answer is a) 1
@bobboscarato131310 ай бұрын
@@darrellwilliams1256 Correct and I did it mentally and I'm 87.-
@milsimgamer10 ай бұрын
Before listening to this, the answer s/b a) 1. But, I was in school back in the day when MDAS was the rule. I think, it was changed somewhere down stream, so IDK....Back in the day, multiplication was always first.....
@kingsolaa10 ай бұрын
You must be really old, The order of operation came about in the 1600s.
@countingfloats10 ай бұрын
Note : if the answer is s/b a then you are not designing a 747 Jumbo jet. Otherwise read on : Stop presenting these mindless problems. All of them wrong, including your "solution". The correct answer is this : "use proper parenthesis such that it removes all ambiguities. End of story !!!! That teacher was wasting years of your life. Find his or her and enclose them into pairs of parentheses.
@kingsolaa10 ай бұрын
@@countingfloats There is no need to use parenthesis when no parenthesis is needed. The order of operation is not really a complicated concept.
@Darryl.M10 ай бұрын
@@kingsolaa actually the modern order of operation was in about 1908.
@davidhandyman75712 ай бұрын
I am 70. I learnt BODMAS. Brackets, of (e.g. Half of 6), Division, Multiplication, Addition, Subtraction.
@luapjb16 күн бұрын
See, we were always taught BIMDAS. Basically, they should use brackets in the original question in order to account for the confusion around the order of operations, particularly in relation to divide and multiply.
@smokydiyeap13734 ай бұрын
As a math teacher I find the biggest problem is other teachers teaching pemdas. They cause the misconception that multiplying comes first. Please stop teaching tricks and teach mathematics instead!
@ArdellDelara3 ай бұрын
This day an age, it is so confusing the way they teach mathematics. I try to help my grandchildren but I’m lost now. 😮
@rollygala52733 ай бұрын
The answer is later B 36
@carolynzaremba54693 ай бұрын
I was taught that multiplication comes first. Therefore: 2 x 3 = 6. 12 divided by 6 is 2. 2 over 2 = 1.
@smokydiyeap13733 ай бұрын
@@carolynzaremba5469 I’m sorry that you had an incompetent math teacher. In mathematics we follow left to right, just like we read. It’s been that way for centuries
@GaliFreyan3 ай бұрын
In Australia we were taught BIDMAS OR BIMDAS. We were always told that Multiplication and Division were equal, then Addition and Subtraction were equal. (Brackets, Indices, Multiplication/Division whichever came first then Addition/Subtraction whichever came first)
@xyz-g3w6b10 ай бұрын
I had to watch your video ALL the way through to the end before PEMDAS made sense (I initially got the answer "1") -- thank you for the clarification 🙏
@Ed1960110 ай бұрын
With PEMDAS the answer is still 1. M comes before D
@LeeLoo_2210 ай бұрын
I was taught solv x is first, then ÷. So i got 1.
@Ed1960110 ай бұрын
@@LeeLoo_22 and you are right
@LeeLoo_2210 ай бұрын
@@Ed19601 ☺
@Darryl.M10 ай бұрын
You are correct to watch the whole video and learn how to do order of operations correctly. The answer is 9. Don't worry about the comments below. Multiplication and division do not take precedence over each other and are done from left to right just like addition and subtraction.
@Janai110010 ай бұрын
Haven't done this in a very long time; like 55 years and still worked it out = C. 9
@zakelwe10 ай бұрын
At 56 I get 1 and we are noth right with this ambiguous equation. High 5
@butter773410 ай бұрын
46 and didn't do any of this since high school and I got it because I'm not stupid. Blows my mind people are this dumb these days. Op you are right and I'm not sure the first comment you got is even English, but like I said I'm not surprised because idiocracy was a documentary.
@Useruserusername79010 ай бұрын
1 or 9 is the answer these are bullshit made up equations that Equate to nonsense. Yes PEMDAS,BEDMAS and so on are all correct but there is no TRUE answer here except keeping People divided.
@oldkstater11145 күн бұрын
This may be correct for some math books, but many computer programming languages make Multiplication and Division at the same priority and Addition and Subtraction also at the same priority, so these are solved left to right in the case if equal operators, solve the left pair first, the the modified left value with the next operator and its operand (value).So 2 X 3 / 6 gives 1 on most computers and 2 / 3 X 6 gives 4 on many computer languages. If you are not sure, use plenty of parentheses to control the order. In other words, RIFM (Read the ****** manual).
@gavindeane3670Күн бұрын
Multiplication and division have the same priority as each other in mathematics too. As do addition and subtraction. That's the reason WHY computer programming languages use the priority rules you describe: because they are the priority rules of mathematical notation.
@charleysadler181210 ай бұрын
I live in the UK. I was taught B.I.D.M.A.S - Brackets, Indices, Division, Multiplication, Addition, Subtraction. Basically the same. I don't remember the rhyme that went with it but those letters became a word that will forever be imprinted on my maths brain.
@schwarzerritter572410 ай бұрын
Division has a higher priority than multiplication in the UK?
@businessbear407610 ай бұрын
I learned BODMAS in Australia where O is for Orders but still the same idea. Multiplication has the same priority as division. The video does not make sense because PEMDAS and BODMAS have division and multiplication reversed. Maths can't change depending on the country you were taught. @@schwarzerritter5724
@Illawong10 ай бұрын
@@schwarzerritter5724 Division and multiplication have equal priority. It is just easier to teach it one way around but either are correct.
@schwarzerritter572410 ай бұрын
@@Illawong I assume D stands for division and M for multiplication? D is clearly left of M. If D and M have the same priority, than BIDMAS makes people memorize the wrong rule.
@jakemccoy10 ай бұрын
@@schwarzerritter5724BIDMAS is a correct rule. Multiplication and division have the same priority. When multiplication and division (or division and multiplication) are seen in a series, then you calculate left to right. Whichever comes first is calculated first. There is no ambiguity. Microsoft Excel calculates a predictable answer every time.
@2150dalek10 ай бұрын
I had a misconception about Mult. having priority over Division...so I got it wrong. ..I ignored Left to Right operation because of that misconception....Common sense of going L->R (regardless of signs), is what solves this problem. Yes, I learned some logic out of this so it was worth getting it wrong.
@stevenjohnson791110 ай бұрын
I agree. Believing you are right and to learn why you are not seems to have a stronger hold on how to do things.
@michaelmolitor7390Ай бұрын
Me to as I did the multiplecation first ..wrong
@DavidCowsert-u5i12 күн бұрын
12/2x3/2 6//1x3/2 6x3/2 18/2 9/1 9
@76MUTiger10 ай бұрын
9. The order of operations is not confused by addition or subtraction.
@arunregmi7162 ай бұрын
You can use BODMAS - bracket, of, division,addition then subtraction
@degumarerw81322 ай бұрын
9
@smartmd4278Ай бұрын
This is how I do
@jorganzola115 күн бұрын
You forgot M (multiplication). Go ahead, do your edit.
@Pearlstrand10 ай бұрын
Where were you when I was struggling with math in school? I love your clear, simple explanations.
@richardlewis196610 ай бұрын
I sure would've helped you! I hated geometry!
@lugia888810 ай бұрын
Actually its wrong
@zakelwe10 ай бұрын
Yes it is wrong and he has done it more than once now just to get more clicks and more money .. SAD
@GodsIn2LoveАй бұрын
I've always loved math. At 71, I learned which to calculate first. Thank you. I was looking at 1 & 9. Clear as a bell now.
@digimont10 ай бұрын
The first I ever heard of PEMDAS was a couple of years ago. I'm 57 and was educated in Australia, where we were taught BODMAS (Brackets of...)
@gg-gn3re10 ай бұрын
They're the same thing and result in the same answer
@bernadettecartin10 ай бұрын
Can you please tell us the rest of yours? I've never heard of that one. Thanks!
@faddyify10 ай бұрын
It's brackets, of ,division multiplication, addition and subtraction
@DARRELLGRIFFITHS10 ай бұрын
@@faddyifyI’m 51, that’s what I was taught, Wales UK
@digimont10 ай бұрын
@@gg-gn3re Yes I'm saying I'd never heard the term PEMDAS prior to a couple of years ago. America does this...takes something that already exists, renames it, claims it as theirs..it's all about projecting a false sense of adequacy (and it fails every time). I've even seen a website claiming that Americans speak English, and in England they speak "British English".
@wkelly305310 ай бұрын
I was an engineer; no math or engineering text I ever studied printed mathematical operations like this where parentheses and/or brackets are omitted. While it may be interesting for a simple operation, doing this in the real world where calculations can become complicated quickly would introduce an unacceptable risk for computational errors.
@jakemccoy10 ай бұрын
True, nevertheless you cannot rely on others to use the best math grammar. Gotta know the rules.
@zakelwe10 ай бұрын
Exactly
@forgottenpeopleplacesandol42589 ай бұрын
An engineering degree in 1972 and had no problems with math, yet never heard of PEMDAS. We used parenthesis, brackets, and braces without confusion. If you want your bridge to stand up or your amplifier to amplify without smoking, play it safe and use these.
@bessviola35459 ай бұрын
I got it but you make things too complicated
@doughoffman946311 күн бұрын
@@jakemccoy As a supervisor of engineers, I would have a talk with any of them that communicated equations without parentheses. We don't like mistakes when building complex machines, especially when it is so easy to avoid these kinds of math mistakes.
@mithrasrevisited487310 ай бұрын
You need to use brackets to take away the confusion. The left to right rule applies if that is not given.
@zakelwe10 ай бұрын
Correct on the first with brackets, wrong with left to right with M and D, No such thing. Hence the need to use brackets.
@BaronDuxbury9 ай бұрын
You don’t need brackets. You just do it in order.
@herrbonk36359 ай бұрын
No! There is no ambiguity whatsoever, and never has been. Operators with the same precedence (like division and multiplication) are evalutated left to right. It cannot be much simpler than that.
@avayanguyen43612 ай бұрын
@@zakelweM and D .solve from left to right
@happyhapley11 күн бұрын
Very well explained. We could also put the top '2' to the bottom of the fraction to make it 12 X 3 divided by 2 x 2, which is 36 divided by 4, which is 9.
@bokkenka9 ай бұрын
I dropped the "÷2" to below the line where it should be to get 12x3 over 2x2. Two 2s cancel out of 12 to leave 3x3.
@toby99999 ай бұрын
You do not drop it below the line. There is no reason to do so. It is the division operator. People confuse division with fractions. Not quite the same thing. Depends on context.
@KEngum110 ай бұрын
I never heard that M and D were interchangeable depending on which comes first. Thank you.
@ernesthakey339610 ай бұрын
Yep, and good for you, for learning! That's why both BODMAS and PEDMAS acronyms are correct, even though one has DM and the other MD, because without parentheses, left to right for all division and multiplication is correct. Ditto with AS: 5-2+3=3+3=6, go left to right even though the first operation is subtraction.
@dexasmoru833310 ай бұрын
This video is wrong. Don't think him. He is literally confusing people on purpose.
@primubuds67110 ай бұрын
Exhibit A 😭
@guizot201010 ай бұрын
@@ernesthakey3396 Which means that using an acronym like PEDMAS is kind of pointless because it implies that multiplication is always first by the sheer fact that it is a sequence of letters. By itself, the acronym can't indicate that one specific pair is interchangeable while others are not. Why then wouldn't multiplication and addition be interchangeable? The acronym requires some extraneous knowledge, so it's defective as a mnemonic device. It's really just a convenience for teachers who already know what they're teaching, rather than an actual learning-centered practice.
@Pbcup310 ай бұрын
The answer is a) 1... this guy is changing math history and is wrong multiply divide add subtract
@PemaDrolma3 ай бұрын
I am in my 70’s. The use of PEMDAS wasn’t heard of, or at least I was never taught it. Thank you for teaching this. It makes such problems as you present here easy. I am keeping it in mind.
@jakipullman3 ай бұрын
Like my dad used to say ‘back in the day’ we didn’t have any of this.. I used a big algebra book that was as heavy as I was too 😂😂 When my kids were in primary school, my youngest had a lot of trouble understanding the way the teacher was teaching them maths, so I started teaching him the old way and he understood it straight away then it became easier for him to understand maths and he got to understand the teachers way.
@oscarblase43733 ай бұрын
PEMDAS - Parenthesis Exponents Multiplication Division Addition Subtraction then from Left to Right.
@jladdyost3 ай бұрын
And thank you for not saying it's all nonsense as so many people have said. It's what mathematicians agreed upon a long time ago. Most of the people objecting to the video either learned PEMDAS (BOMDAS in the UK) when they were young and think it's totally obvious (which it isn't), or they think you just do all the operations as you find them, from left to right, which is logical but wrong.
@lynnmcnamara23423 ай бұрын
I agree this was not taught to me either. You went with what came first on the paper
@lynnmcnamara23423 ай бұрын
If you were never taught this PEMDAS then you don’t stand a chance of getting this right
@69BTony27 күн бұрын
I did this equation two ways, 1st the way you described it, and to check my work, I divided each numerator by the denominator, so 6/1*1.5. 6* 1.5=9
@annebritraaen223710 ай бұрын
Nice to see I still got the basics. Thank you for the test.
@patchup10 ай бұрын
Thank you for putting helpful material on social media. We need more of this. I have one question. I always thought it better to present the correct way and avoid showing all the potential wrong ways? This keeps the flow of information simple and easy for students to follow. A teacher can talk about the risks of the wrong way afterwards, add in some funny anecdotes, etc. This builds a shared experience, that everyone makes mistakes. Again, thank you for your positive content.
@annwithaplan976610 ай бұрын
I agree. I'm almost 67 and it was confusing, even though I knew how to do it right.
@zakelwe10 ай бұрын
It's actually wrong
@patchup10 ай бұрын
@@zakelwe What does "It.." represent as a pronoun? The video, the math, my comment on the presentation, or something else?
@jakemccoy10 ай бұрын
@@zakelwe If you think 9 is wrong, then you should sue Microsoft for Excel Spreadsheet being wrong for decades. (9 is the correct answer.)
@zakelwe10 ай бұрын
@@patchup The solution I should have been more verbose.
@charlottejacobs439710 ай бұрын
I definitely forgot a lot of my math as I am 81 . Once you did this basic problem, it all came back. Use of math is also necessary for remembrance! I rarely use math except for bank statements or very basic necessities. Retention is another problem and I think that is due to interest in a subject, or its usefulness to you.
@Jpoy213Ай бұрын
While recovering from a severe stroke this has helped me with improving cognitive function, thank you so much, I look forward to more problems, thank you 💕
@Videogame95598 ай бұрын
Great explanation good for us who have been away from math for a long time a good refresher. Thanks
@faithfielder949310 ай бұрын
I really appreciate this explanation. I don't remember being taught order of operations, even though I had good math scores, so it was very helpful .
@gk58919 ай бұрын
It's been 50 years, but I believe it was first covered in Pre-Algebra. We used to have two math tracks. I don't believe the Business track had any Algebra courses
@joslynfarkash641610 ай бұрын
Thank you so much. I have been looking for years for someone with your skill to teach math in such a simple language
@jazzmikegreg989427 күн бұрын
What if instead, the numerator was 2 X 3 instead of 12 divided 2 X 3 in the original equation? The answer would be a) 1 in this case. When there is a fraction present, the numerator is parenthesized, which calls in the parentheses and so by PEMDAS, what’s inside the parentheses, is performed first and the denominator it put directly to the right of it. Therefore 2 X 3 = 6 and so from left to right, 12 divided by 6 = 2, and then 2 divided by 2 = 1.
@georgesthibaudeau153310 ай бұрын
I got the answer right, although with some degree of uncertainty. The reason being that in the days and place I was taught algebra (in the 1960s in Montreal, algebra manuals from France), the writing of such an equation required that there be paranthses to determne the order of opeartions. So, we would have been required to write the numerator as follows: (12/2)x 3.
@dicksanders820610 ай бұрын
Right. That's better!
@gypsy621110 ай бұрын
It's very simple. PEMDAS works. You just have to re-imagine the question. As shown, the equation in single line is (12 / 2 * 3) / 2. So solve the parentheses first, in order.
@BenSamways-js9rt10 ай бұрын
Wouldn't that be even easier as (12 / 2) * 3 for the top line, or even (12 / 2)3
@treeblindbuck326010 ай бұрын
Why do you divide first, when PEMDAS clearly states multiply first? If you truly followed the rules you would get 12÷6÷2=1. Multiplying 2×3 first, then reading left to right with division.
@andrewvoorhees406210 ай бұрын
Multiplication and division go together, so you do whichever one comes first (left to right). In this case the division is first. If it was 12x2÷3, that would give you 8.
@countingfloats10 ай бұрын
Stop presenting these mindless problems. All of them wrong, including your "solution". The correct answer is this : "use proper parenthesis such that it removes all ambiguities. End of story !!!! That teacher was wasting years of your life. Find his or her and enclose them into pairs of parentheses.
@treeblindbuck326010 ай бұрын
@andrewvoorhees4062 no it does not. That is not how it was derived. P, everything in parentheses first, then exponents, then multiplication, no matter where it falls, then division, then addition, and finally subtraction.
@andrewvoorhees406210 ай бұрын
Wrong... think of it more like this: Parentheses, Exponents, Multiplication/Division, Addition/Subtraction. You are correct that P and E are always done in that order first but you need to consider both M/D and A/S as a grouping, not that one is always done before the other. You might want to try using google if you don't believe me but thanks for trying!
@Kuulei26510 ай бұрын
@@treeblindbuck3260That’s what I thought, but then my answer was wrong. These things confuse the heck out of me. Too many “exceptions, when if it goes according to the Order Of Operations, you don’t divide before you multiply. Help me someone!!!
@jamesreynolds415227 күн бұрын
I would rewrite the problem as this 2/(12/2x3). Now you have a parenthesis to work first. Solving this step we find (6/1x1.5). Now we are rid of the parenthesis leaving 6/1*1.5. 6/1 is 6 thus we have 6*1.5 which is 9. The answer is 9.
@wza3210 ай бұрын
I think there is a hidden understanding of grouping that exist between the operations involve and MD is interchangeable same as AS as long as MD comes first before AS....and the solving is from left to right....
@TheHowardski10 ай бұрын
Wow, the most complicated and in depth video ever to tell you the basic answer
@Darryl.M10 ай бұрын
and still people are arguing that it is wrong.
@zakelwe10 ай бұрын
@@Darryl.M It actually is wrong because there are not enough parenthesis to be able to determine which answer is right. It is called an ambiguous equation. In general, to any expression of the form a/bc : one needs to insert parentheses to show whether one means (a/b)c or a/(bc). See a page called Order of arithmetic operations; in particular, the 48/2(9+3) question by Gary Bergman at Berkely
@Darryl.M10 ай бұрын
@@zakelweno sorry it's not ambiguous if you use the order of operations correctly.
@peterblack366510 ай бұрын
1 is the answer 2x3 first equals 6 then 12 divided by 6 equals 2 then 2 on top divided by 2 on the bottom equals 1
@Dbb2710 ай бұрын
It’s not in brackets so it’s not first. It’s 12/2 x3 = 18/ 2=9
@EdsonSinganoАй бұрын
1 is the answer, first 2×3 equal to 6 then 12 divided by 6 equal to 2 then 2 on top divided by 2 on bottom equal to 1
@paulzenev4346Ай бұрын
I agree!! 1..!!!!
@Art-Wise10 ай бұрын
What's the point of having the principle PEMDAS if you're not going to follow it? I minored in math in college, and using that background, got the right answer (9). But according to the formula you teach, the answer should be One. I'll confess I just don't get it.
@countingfloats10 ай бұрын
Neither is right !!! Stop presenting these mindless problems. All of them wrong, including your "solution". The correct answer is this : "use proper parenthesis such that it removes all ambiguities. End of story !!!! That teacher was wasting years of your life. Find his or her and enclose them into pairs of parentheses.
@Dbb2710 ай бұрын
There aren’t any brackets
@Darryl.M10 ай бұрын
the answer is 9. Multiplication and division do not take precedence over each other and are done from left to right just like addition and subtraction.
@Darryl.M10 ай бұрын
@@countingfloats there is no ambiguities.
@Theresa10578 ай бұрын
Same here, if I did 2 haircuts at 12 each i would have $24.00, 24 divided by 2 would be 12.00, it seems like a great way to steal money from people
@nigelbarratt682510 ай бұрын
Here in England in the 1960s I was taught BODMAS, 'Brackets', 'Of', 'Division', 'Multiplication', 'Addition', 'Subtraction'. By the way, here we do mathS, short for mathematicS, not math! I did get it right and get 9 though.
@spuriouseffect27 күн бұрын
Bodmas and Pemdas are exactly the same, just worded a different way.
@shradhakarmahakul734810 ай бұрын
0:13 Ans is 9
@susanwoods350725 күн бұрын
I don't recall being taught PEMDAS in Australia as an Acronym - however, we were taught this order - maybe I have just forgotten. I don't mind maths - I can't do the basics - it all started when we were introduced to fractions - after that I just got lost. I am a nurse and I still really struggle with calculations for medications !! yikes - I always seek help first before administration.
@fuzzyjax10 ай бұрын
I do the top left to right. I got 18/2=9
@shawnbottomley638110 ай бұрын
you did it correct I got 18/2 = 9 since 12/2 = 6 and 6 x 3 = 18 So you do know ya math.
@ferengiprofiteer914510 ай бұрын
It's been 60 years since I was a wiz at this. I can justify both 1 and 9, so I figure I've forgotten a rule or 2. It won't surprise me if they're both wrong.
@ferengiprofiteer914510 ай бұрын
Ha! Worse than I thought, I can't recall ever hearing of PEMDAS. (Order of operations rings a bell. [Or is that tinnites😂])
@countingfloats10 ай бұрын
Stop presenting these mindless problems. All of them wrong, including your "solution". The correct answer is this : "use twins of proper parenthesis such that it removes all ambiguities. End of story !!!! That teacher was wasting 6 decades of your life. Find his or her and enclose them into pairs of parentheses. @@ferengiprofiteer9145
@freqgirl9 ай бұрын
Thank you for explaining the order of operations. I kind of forgot a bunch of basic math just because I never use it. Recently a question like this came up. I tend to do math in my head all the time but I really wasn't sure of the O of O because I couldn't remember which came first, multiplication or division and I swear I remember multiplication coming first. It's been well over 50 years since my last basic math course. I did get the answer right, because I made an educated 'guess' but now I know for sure that I did it correctly and I won't make the mistake again of second guessing my answer.
@lookingup763826 күн бұрын
I just subscribe. Stumbled on this video. It reminded me so much of the troubles I had learning math. He explained so easily to remember. Look forward to watching more videos.
@Steve-dg3md10 ай бұрын
9 is correct..... did it in my head while reading the formula the 1st time. I'm 70 years old. I speak some Japanese, latin and French.... constant reader of historical books. I have no college degree.... served in The Marines.... do I qualify to vote? We are no longer a free country if we disqualify Americans from voting. The only qualification should be that you are a US Citizen. Semper Fi
@jtfmfhp708010 ай бұрын
PEMDAS - parentheses, exponents, multiplication, division, addition, subtraction. I applaud your knowledge and your service, but the answer is 1.
@markking544810 ай бұрын
@jtfmfhp7080 what do you mean the answers 1? Back to school for you champ!