Instructional Video2:08
Curated Video

Determine Probability from a Table

9th - 12th
In this short video we will answer a standardized math test question were we are asked to determine the probability as a percent from a survey. We will first review the table of data given to understand the survey. We will identify what...
Instructional Video13:56
Virtually Passed

Work Energy Proof Part 1 - Kinetic Energy

Higher Ed
This video will prove that the total work done on a particle between positions 1 and 2 equals the change in kinetic energy.
Instructional Video4:56
Curated Video

GCSE Secondary Maths Age 13-17 - Probability & Statistics: 2 Way Table - Explained

9th - 12th
SchoolOnline's Secondary Maths videos are brilliant, bite-size tutorial videos delivered by examiners. Ideal for ages 13-17, they cover every key topic and sub topic covered in GCSE Maths in clear and easy to follow steps. This video...
Instructional Video2:31
Brian McLogan

How to find the conditional probability from a contingency table

12th - Higher Ed
👉 Learn how to find the conditional probability of an event. Probability is the chance of an event occurring or not occurring. The probability of an event is given by the number of outcomes divided by the total possible outcomes....
Instructional Video3:37
Instructional Video6:25
Curated Video

GCSE Secondary Maths Age 13-17 - Probability & Statistics: Bar Chart - Explained

9th - 12th
SchoolOnline's Secondary Maths videos are brilliant, bite-size tutorial videos delivered by examiners. Ideal for ages 13-17, they cover every key topic and sub topic covered in GCSE Maths in clear and easy to follow steps. This video...
Instructional Video5:18
Curated Video

GCSE Secondary Maths Age 13-17 - Probability & Statistics: Histogram - Explained

9th - 12th
SchoolOnline's Secondary Maths videos are brilliant, bite-size tutorial videos delivered by examiners. Ideal for ages 13-17, they cover every key topic and sub topic covered in GCSE Maths in clear and easy to follow steps. This video...
Instructional Video6:07
TED Talks

TED: 3 lessons on decision-making from a poker champion | Liv Boeree

12th - Higher Ed
Is it better to be lucky or good? Should we trust our gut feelings or rely on probabilities and careful analysis when making important decisions? In this quick talk, professional poker player Liv Boeree shares three strategies she's...
Instructional Video12:08
TED Talks

TED: The math behind basketball's wildest moves | Rajiv Maheswaran

12th - Higher Ed
Basketball is a fast-moving game of improvisation, contact and, ahem, spatio-temporal pattern recognition. Rajiv Maheswaran and his colleagues are analyzing the movements behind the key plays of the game, to help coaches and players...
Instructional Video7:30
Curated Video

How to Win at Sports Betting Guaranteed

6th - 11th
This video is only to highlight math, I don't encourage gambling or sports betting. Source of problem: Su, Francis E., et al. "Sure Betting on Different Beliefs." Mudd Math Fun Facts. http://www.math.hmc.edu/funfacts. Also see my blog...
Instructional Video5:53
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can you solve the basketball robot riddle? | Dan Katz

Pre-K - Higher Ed
You’ve spent months creating a basketball-playing robot, the Dunk-O-Matic, and you’re excited to demonstrate its capabilities. Until you read an advertisement: “See the Dunk-O-Matic face human players and automatically adjust its skill...
Instructional Video5:24
Curated Video

A 10 Year Old Discovered This (Sum 1 To 100 - Based On True Story)

6th - 11th
It's the final play of the 1787 World Math Championships. The talented 10-year old Gauss faces a challenging question from his math teacher. Will the young student show up his teacher, or does he still have lessons to learn? I wanted to...
Instructional Video10:07
Curated Video

The "Hot Hand" IS Real - Classic Fallacy Debunked

6th - 11th
Probability and statistics rarely get this kind of attention. But this story is special. It’s about debunking a long-held statistics result that itself was about debunking sports lore. A 1985 study found that basketball players do not...
Instructional Video2:50
Curated Video

How Closing Roads Could Speed Up Traffic - The Braess Paradox

6th - 11th
The Braess Paradox is an unexpected result from network theory. It states that adding capacity could actually slow down the speed of the network. Applied to highways, the Braess Paradox means the existence of some roads slows down...
Instructional Video7:45
The Royal Institution

The Monty Hall Problem - Christmas Lectures with Ian Stewart

9th - 11th
Ian Stewart explains the Monty Hall problem and its solution. Subscribe for regular science videos: http://bit.ly/RiSubscRibe The Monty Hall problem became infamous in the 1990s where newspaper columnist and puzzle solver Marilyn vos...