By recommend, I mean content you actually find to be high quality, well done, and easy to absorb and follow. By relearn, I mean I have forgotten everything I ever learned in high school.
Kahn academy. It’s free and goes as deep as you want. I had to brush up on some stuff and it was great.
Khaaaaaan!
Some men just want to watch the world learn.If I ever won the lotto, I’d donate a big chunk to Sal. He got me through my worst classes. Him and the organic chemistry tutor on youtube, who also does lots of easy to follow math.
Khan academy got me through the end of high school and engineering. It really made the concepts a lot more understandable than the lecturers.
If it’s content is still up to scratch, I hope it’s getting the recognition it deserves!
Helped me get through my engineering degree. Absolutely the best maths education I’ve ever seen.
Started!
You got this!
As others said, Khan academy, but in the event that you need something even more broken down, patrickJMT on YouTube is a godsend.
That’s a name I haven’t heard in a long time.
I used Khan Academy when I reentered uni as a mature-age student and found it very helpful
The best source I know: https://betterexplained.com/
Also plenty of youtube channels, like Numberphile (many of the featured hosts have their own channels), 3Blue1Brown, Mathologer, Wrath of Math and many more. They have vast libraries covering pretty much any topic imaginable. It’s all top tier presentation, so intersting they made me study math for fun - I’d rather watch Numberphile than Netflix.
Brady Haran was a journalist and is is excellent at explaining things
You have to write out a lot of exercises and there is no getting around it. You can’t learn the violin by watching videos or reading a book. You have to practice. It’s the same with math. But as people said, Khan Academy lectures are very good in steering you through a topic.
Besides algebra, I think it is important to know a bit about probability and a bit about logic. Don’t worry about stuff like covariance matrices, but understand what conditional probability is (be able to explain the “prosecutor’s fallacy”) and write out some of those annoying exercises about urns full of colored balls. Also, show how to write e.g. “you can fool all of the people some of the time, and some of the people all of the time, but you can’t fool all of the people all of the time” in predicate logic notation, and see how the parts of the sentence involve switching the order of quantifiers.
Another comment mentioned Baron’s workbooks. Any other resources for exercises which you’d recommend?
Ok, I emailed my friend (above) and she said Khan Academy and she says it has exercises. That’s great, I had thought it was just video lectures. So I’d go for that.
Thank you. That’s kind of you to follow up with us
I’d expect textbooks would have tons of exercises at that level. Schaum’s outlines are good for college level math but I don’t know if they have them for stuff like basic algebra. I have a friend who is a HS math teacher so I can ask her for recommendations and get back in a day or so, hmm.
As others have said Khan Academy has helps plenty of students so I’ll recommend another yt channel.
Has has multiple channels but this particular one, bprp math basics, goes over tricky math problems students would solve and he goes over his solutions step by step fairly well
If you graduate to college level you can try Opencourseware -> https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenCourseWare
In terms of british highschool level
I got 345 videos from a maths watch DVD I hold dear to
Just reply with ‘yes’ if you would like that
‘yes’
Yes
Professor Leonard. Check the playlists https://youtube.com/@professorleonard
For relearning all school-level maths and terminology,
has very concise explanations of maths concepts.
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I cannot recommend english-speaking content but if you happened to speak french, as well as for all french speaker on this post : The king of all math teacher Yvan Monka has anything you need on YouYube from middle to high school @ymonka@youtube.com
And to learn to love math and interesting facts about it look for Mickaël Launay @micmaths@youtube.comGrab a test prep study guide - GED, SAT, … You can probably get a super cheap one at a used book store.
Take some basic logic classes first. It’s really helpful for a lot of people before learning math and science. I didn’t realize how many people aren’t just logical thinkers by default sine I am. But being able to consciously think that way will help a ton with math.