成年后重新学习数学
Relearning math as an adult

原始链接: https://gmays.com/how-im-relearning-math-as-an-adult/

加布里埃尔·梅斯 (Gabriel Mays) 的这篇博文讨论了他如何重新燃起提高成人数学技能的兴趣。 他发现了 Math Academy,这是一个提供真实学习体验并使数学教育对于忙碌的人来说更加方便的平台。 通过他们的自定进度和互动课程,Gabriel 在三个月内完成了 100 天的练习。 为了最大限度地提高便利性和一致性,他在课程中使用了 iPad、Remarkable 笔记本和廉价的保护套。 尽管数学仍然具有挑战性,但 Gabriel 的目标是一次一节课地处理这些困难但丰富的主题,并为自己设定了掌握数学基础的目标,这些基础可能使他深入了解大型语言模型 (LLM) 和 Transformer 的架构。 最终,数学学院的有效性将学习数学变成了一种新的爱好,改变了加布里埃尔的看法,即在线平台可能适合软主题,但不适合计算机科学、物理和数学等复杂的 STEM 领域。 最后,加布里埃尔强调了他对数学学院的兴奋,强调了通过赞助许可证投资和为儿童提供入学机会的可能性。 总体而言,本文展示了现代教育资源(尤其是数学学院)的便利性和有效性,强调了传统实体学校之外的替代方法和途径。

期望最大化的成功实施通常涉及几个关键步骤,包括选择适当的先验分布、设计有效的算法、处理参数估计、实施贝叶斯技术(例如马尔可夫链蒙特卡罗)以及确保正确的数值方法。 这些过程需要扎实的概率和统计学背景,以及熟悉各种计算技术。 实施可能涉及调整参数以获得最佳性能、基于实验数据迭代完善模型以及仔细评估错误指标。 虽然给定 EM 算法的初始实现可能会在阅读数学描述后几天内完成,但根据复杂性和应用,持续迭代、优化、调试和改进可能会持续数周或数月。
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原文

I recently passed 100 days of practicing math every single day 💯

I’ve wanted to beef up my math chops for a while, but I needed a good reason that would justify the time investment. Plus, it’s always easier to learn when you have a clear goal and something meaningful to apply it to.

So, it never reached the top of my priority list. But then a couple things happened recently that gave me 1) sufficient motivation and 2) a clear path.

The motivation

I’ve worked on various AI products over the last year and like understanding the technical aspects of the products I build.

But as I dug in to learn more about how large language models (LLMs) and transformers worked…I was lost. It was humbling.

From Spencer Becker-Kahn’s Notes on the Mathematics of LLM Architectures.

I’d need a much better understanding of stats/probability, linear algebra, and calculus (overview).

Aside from corporate projections/financials, I haven’t done much with math since grad school, so I lacked a foundation. I don’t need to become a mathematician, but at a minimum, I wanted more intuition around the core concepts and connections between them.

The path

So, how does an adult with a job, kids, a mortgage, and other hobbies, learn math in an effective, time-efficient way?

Fortunately, a friend I met a decade ago at MicroConf, Jason Roberts, founded a startup called Math Academy with his wife, Sandy. I kept up with it since the early days (they have a great story), and now I finally had a reason to try it out.

It was still in beta, so I reached out, bought a license, and was in!

Math Academy

How would I describe Math Academy?

One word: Amazing.

I’ve been consistently impressed since I started using it. Despite still being in beta, it feels quite polished and works well (though it’s clear an engineer designed the UI 😂).

Its current focus is helping kids learn math, with tools built-in for parents to help their kids be successful, but it’s quite effective for adult learners like me as well.

Their current courses cover math from middle school through university (graduate level) and are fully accredited. Below are the current courses.

Math Acedmy’s course offerings as of Nov. 2023.

The ‘Foundation Series‘ is what I’m starting with. It’s for adults to help streamline learning (it skips the stuff that kids need, but adults don’t) and work back up through college-level math relatively quickly (emphasis on relatively 😂).


One of the other reasons I love Math Academy is the authenticity of the people in addition to the process. The founder and others are true math nerds, and they’ve spent thousands of hours teaching math. They know what works.

Jason, founder of Math Academy, teaching kids math (including his own kid!).

This authenticity translates to authentic learning, which comes through from the very beginning. After signing up, it starts off with a diagnostic that shows you how much of a dumbass you are helps assess your current math proficiency so you can start off at the right level.

Then the self-paced, interactive lessons start. One thing I especially love as a busy adult student is that most lessons are ~10 minutes long, which makes it relatively easy to squeeze in sessions (e.g., between kids screaming or while they’re distracted watching Bluey 😂).

I also love how it teaches, assesses, reviews, and builds on concepts. When it comes quiz time I’m often impressed with how much I’ve learned and the ability to apply it. This thing is legit—it really works.

And there are no fluffy videos that just ‘feel’ like learning. The lessons have explanations between problems to make it a very concrete, hands-on process. It’s a highly effective way of learning.

…which gets to something important: Math is hard.

Math Academy makes learning math as easy as possible, but it’s still hard work. Really hard work.

Math is hard

Learning math is challenging. It’s real work. This isn’t some casual app you can just flip through.

Unless you’re like John von Neumann, most of it requires pencil and paper to knock out. The only exception is the early lessons when you’re just refreshing and can do most of it in your head.

But if you’re serious about legitimately learning math, there is no better, more convenient way.

Setting myself up for success

To make this a habit I’d stick to, I’d have to lower the activation energy of doing it and make it as close to a new ‘default’ behavior as possible. “This is just what I do.”

So, I started with convenience and consistency, which helped me form other good habits as well.

Convenience

Learning math is hard enough, so how can we make it somewhat convenient?

Math Academy’s short (~10 min) lessons help. I also use an iPad for the lessons (it’s web-based) when I’m not at a computer and a Remarkable 2 for the work (e-ink for pencil/paper). I also found a cheap case that fits both perfectly.

This makes it easy to knock out lessons here or there. For example, I had jury duty recently and knocked out a few lessons while waiting.

And just this past Wednesday, the kids were ready early, so I got to the gym about 15 minutes early and knocked out a lesson or two in the car. I’ve also started doing them during a light walk on the treadmill (I have one under my standing desk).

My usual routine is to do lessons in the evening after the kids go down and after I work out. It is challenging to muster the energy to work out and do math after a long day, but making it a habit has made it easier.

Consistency

I’ll say it again: Math is hard. My goal is to work up to the math needed to better understand LLMs and transformers.

Thankfully, Math Academy has a ‘Mathematics for Machine Learning‘ course I’m working towards, which gives me a clear goal. Given my limited time, it will likely take years for me to get there.

Why years? Two reasons:

  1. Math is hard.
  2. Math is BIG.

I had no idea how broad and deep math was. I probably still don’t.

Case in point:

This is the knowledge graph of the concepts in the first Mathematical Foundations course, showing the topics, how they relate, and what gaps you have.

Impressive, right? And this is just the first course (!) of the ~10 or so I want to take. It’s going to take years.

So, how do I get there? One lesson at a time. If I keep at it, I will get there.

I’ve been doing at least 1 lesson a day, every day since I started, giving me a 106-day streak as of today.

Screenshot of my Math Academy streak from Habits Garden, where I track my habits.

106 days down, ~1,000 more to go 😂

It’s a hard, but worthwhile and enjoyable new hobby for now.

Takeway

For hard subjects like math, I always assumed the only ‘real’ way to learn was in dedicated environments like college since online courses were best for softer, less technical topics. This was a bummer, especially for adult students like me.

But Math Academy changed my mind on this, and I’m a huge fan so far. I hope they continue to grow and expand to other complex STEM topics like computer science, physics, etc.

Overall, I’m just so excited there’s an effective, accessible way to learn hard things. If I were a billionaire, I’d invest to accelerate its progress and find a way to sponsor a license for every kid who was interested…

But for now, I’ll just talk about it to anyone who will listen 😉

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