If Only I Had Known Hating Math Is a Generational Sin: Solving for "X" without Knowing "Y."
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Before I let more letters represent the equation to success in math, I need to go back and address a key algebraic point. Often in algebra, we must solve for "x" without knowing "y." Hopefully, we know some number to help us solve for "x." But, there are times when even that number hides amid graphs, quadrants, and number lines. The slope, the rise, and the run may make us feel we are on a roller coaster. Sometimes we are a parabola without an origin. How, we wonder, could that be the right answer?
If Only I Had Known Hating Math Is a Generational Sin: Solving for "X" without Knowing "Y."
If Only I Had Known Hating Math Is a…
If Only I Had Known Hating Math Is a Generational Sin: Solving for "X" without Knowing "Y."
Before I let more letters represent the equation to success in math, I need to go back and address a key algebraic point. Often in algebra, we must solve for "x" without knowing "y." Hopefully, we know some number to help us solve for "x." But, there are times when even that number hides amid graphs, quadrants, and number lines. The slope, the rise, and the run may make us feel we are on a roller coaster. Sometimes we are a parabola without an origin. How, we wonder, could that be the right answer?