
Most educators who want math to be taught conceptually are the only one in their building trying to do it. They go to a workshop, get excited, and come back on Monday to a team still teaching algorithms and admin who wants scores to go up. The excitement fades and not because the idea was wrong, but because doing hard things alone is exhausting.
In this episode, the last one before the 10th annual Virtual Math Summit, I talk about why that isolation is the real barrier to change in math classrooms, and why community matters more than information. I also share what I've seen happen over 10 years of the summit: the thing educators say most isn't "I learned a great strategy." It's "I finally felt like I wasn't the only one."
So pick your one thing you want to learn about and get registered for the 2026 Virtual Math Summit (Feb 28 – Mar 1) so you can find your community.
There are 34 free sessions, keynotes from Dr. Kristopher Childs, Dr. Raj Shah, Pam Harris, and Graham Fletcher, free Brainingcamp access for all registrants, and giveaways during live sessions.
Register free at VirtualMathSummit.com
Mais episódios de "The Build Math Minds Podcast"



Não percas um episódio de “The Build Math Minds Podcast” e subscrevê-lo na aplicação GetPodcast.








