Learn how to divide using timestables | Maths | FuseSchool SA
Click here to see more videos: https://alugha.com/FuseSchool Learn how to apply tables for division!
Click here to see more videos: https://alugha.com/FuseSchool Learn how to apply tables for division!
Learn the basics about How the elements are laid out in the periodic table? Why are they all named and placed that way? Find out more in this video! Click here to see more videos: https://alugha.com/FuseSchool This video is part of 'Chemistry for All' - a Chemistry Education project by our Charity
Learn the basics about Periods and groups in the periodic table. Groups and periods are two ways of categorizing elements on the periodic table. How do you tell them apart and how do they related to periodic table trends? Find out more in this video! VISIT us at www.fuseschool.org, where all of our
Click here to see more videos: https://alugha.com/FuseSchool In this video, we’re going to look at frequency tables. These numbers are enough to give someone a headache and there's only 200 of them. Lots of datasets have thousands or even millions of pieces of data, so we need to collect and reco
Dividing a polynomial by an integer or an expression is really just another way of simplifying. There isn’t actually anything new to learn: you just need to be able to simplify numbers (like 20/15 simplifies down to 4/3) and know how to divide with indices (when you divide with indices, you subtra
Patagonia is located at the southernmost tip of the American continent. The Andes divide the country into a Chilean and an Argentinean part. The Patagonian Andes are an extreme climatic divide. Author: ZDF/Terra X/R.Marel/S.Hillmann/C.Gerisch/A.Kindler/SpiegelTV/Maximilian Mohr Translation and dub
In this video we’re going to look at how to use substitution in equations to generate a table of ordered pairs. Ordered pairs (coordinates) can be used to solve equations, to plot graphs, and so we come across them a lot in Maths. You should already know how to substitute into equations, and how t
In the mid-19th century, the nature of the elements was still largely unknown. In 1869, Russian chemist Dimitri Mendeleev develops the periodic table, which is still valid today with slight adjustments. Authors: ZDF/Terra X/T. Schrader/J. Koester/F. Steinhardt/Caligari/Moods in Pictures/Maximilian
Learn the basics about Group 1, as an example of Groups in the periodic table. Click here to see more videos: https://alugha.com/FuseSchool This Open Educational Resource is free of charge, under a Creative Commons License: Attribution-NonCommercial CC BY-NC ( View License Deed: http://creativeco
A surd is a square root which cannot be reduced to a whole number. Surds are irrational; they are decimals that never end and never repeat, so cannot be written as fractions. Leaving a number in it's surd form is easier and more accurate than writing and rounding the decimal places. We see surds
The (truly) Periodic Table is an animated film that tells you everything you ever wanted to know about the Periodic Table: why it has this shape, how the elements are organized, how they combine or ... not really! Produced by the Science Office for the University of Aveiro, in the framework of the
There are some key angles that have exact values in trigonometry. The ones we need to know are 0, 30, 45, 60 and 90. In this video we will discover one method of remember what these values are - using a table. In the second part we will discover a different method (using our fingers) which you may p