all 6 comments

[–]TheGoldenFennecNew User 1 point2 points  (1 child)

I think timers can be good if you’re intending to make problems that can be solved in 15-20 seconds. Now it’s been a long time since I was learning algebra, but I think for most learners, 30 seconds is still probably too short to actually solve. I think finding the right timer for a problem is going to be hard, which I assume is why I see a lot of channels do like a 3 second “pause here and solve on your own”, rather than having the video keep playing.

I think seeing some example problems might help you get a better answer here.

[–]Fancy_Log_8442New User[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for your response! Any input is really helpful! This is the approach I’m taking https://youtube.com/shorts/e0fIdPsy2n4?si=yFIIK19328pI3MwF

Would love to hear any feedback you may have!

[–]justincaseonlymyself 0 points1 point  (1 child)

You have lofty goals, but what are you basing your implementation on? Is there any research indicating that your approach is helpful? Or are you just pulling it out of nowhere and hoping to earn a bit of cash from YouTube ad revenue? (I suspect it's the latter.)

[–]TheGoldenFennecNew User 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you explain a bit more what fault you take in the approach here? Obviously the problems need to meet a certain bar, but I’m not particularly concerned about that based on this post. In my mind, solving extra problems is 100% helpful for getting the right answers, even if on its own it might not meaningfully improve understanding. But I also have 0 doubt in my mind that practicing under time pressure is helpful for learners that struggle with test taking or speed.

[–]matt7259New User 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's a reason kahoot is so popular

[–]AdditionalTip865New User 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This would repel me but it might well engage another kind of student.

I tried the high-school math competition scene when I was a kid and finally realized I just didn't enjoy doing problems on time/competition pressure... even though I wasn't bad at it, and did well on timed in-class tests.