Tumgik
marija-hunska · 21 days
Text
Kako su srpski vampiri postali evropske zvezde | POGLED IZ SVEMIRSKOG BRODA
0 notes
marija-hunska · 21 days
Text
I want weird math textbooks. Group theory textbooks in the style of a comic book. Real analysis textbooks written as a long dialogue between forest animals. Elaborate romantic fan fictions about the relationships between Lie groups and their corresponding Lie algebras.
4K notes · View notes
marija-hunska · 21 days
Text
math rant, sorry
i genuinely think that math hating is a learned social behavior. you have to hate it to be relatable, otherwise you're a nerd - and not the eccentric fun kind of science nerd. also there is this assumption that if you're not naturally good at it, you shouldn't even try, which doesn't really exist for other subjects. like, students won't mind writing an essay, or doing arts, even if they're not amazing at it, but doing math when they might fail is somehow torture.
all these memes like "pythagoras is useless irl" and "satan put the alphabet in math" read to me like "the curtains were blue cause they were blue!!>:(" bs, but receive way less criticism online. do people even agree with the memes, or is it just herd mentality? cause honestly, why is math more useless than anything else we learn in school? why is saying "x-2=4" more evil than saying "what minus two equals four"?
of course, math people with low self esteem and condescending auras are also to blame for making math unappealing, as well as math teachers with no social skills lol. but the overall meme-ability of math hating sure is not helping, cause kids go into school with the expectation that math will be hard and they won't enjoy it
551 notes · View notes
marija-hunska · 1 month
Text
Tumblr media
97 notes · View notes
marija-hunska · 1 month
Text
Tumblr media
0 notes
marija-hunska · 1 month
Text
Tumblr media
0 notes
marija-hunska · 1 month
Text
2 notes · View notes
marija-hunska · 1 month
Text
Tumblr media
0 notes
marija-hunska · 1 month
Text
Tumblr media
1 note · View note
marija-hunska · 1 month
Text
Tumblr media
0 notes
marija-hunska · 1 month
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
0 notes
marija-hunska · 1 month
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
0 notes
marija-hunska · 1 month
Text
Svet matematike (1) Prof Terzić otkriva tajnu miliona, nule i... - YouTube
youtube
1 note · View note
marija-hunska · 2 months
Text
youtube
2 notes · View notes
marija-hunska · 2 months
Text
En vedette dans le magazine: The Scarlet Flower (Аленький цветочек, réalisé par Lev Atamanov, Soyuzmultfilm, 1952)
14 notes · View notes
marija-hunska · 5 months
Photo
Tumblr media
19K notes · View notes
marija-hunska · 5 months
Text
I often see posts about curating your own online experience that make the point, “content creators aren’t your parents.” And, yes, that is absolutely true! And I try not to be like “as a parent,“ but as a parent…
EVEN PARENTS ARE SUPPOSED TO ENCOURAGE RESPONSIBLE READING/VIEWING BEHAVIOR. NOT filter everything ahead of time for their kid.
When my kiddo was 5, his pediatrician was asking him the usual Well Child Visit questions (“What are your favorite foods? What do you do to get your body moving? Do you know what to do if you get lost in a public place?” Etc.) and she asked, “What do you do if you see something on TV that scares or upsets you?”
I piped up like, “Oh, he doesn’t watch TV without one of us in the room,” which was true at the time and is still largely true now. She said, “Yes, but that won’t always be the case, so make sure you’re talking to him about what to do if he sees something that upsets him.”
So we started talking to him about that, and the answer is simple: “Turn it off or leave the room, and talk to someone you trust about what you saw and what you’re feeling.”
The answer is NOT “Ask your parents to make sure you never see anything upsetting again,” because that’s just not possible — and ultimately that would be doing the kid a disservice, since sooner or later he’s going to be out in the world where we can’t control what he watches or reads. That doesn’t mean we don’t try to make sure he’s watching/reading age-appropriate stuff, it just means that’s not the only safeguard he has — and that’s a good thing.
So yes, content creators aren’t your parents and aren’t responsible for making sure you never see anything you don’t like — but also, your own parents should have taught you what to do when that happens. So if they didn’t, take it from me, your internet mom:
Turn it off.
Walk away.
Talk to someone you trust about how you’re feeling.
And leave the person who created the thing that upset you alone.
56K notes · View notes