Financial Feminist - 33. Is Math Anxiety Making You Bad With Money? with Black Girl MATHgic
Episode Date: August 2, 2022If an episode about math has you sweating, we get it. It’s estimated that 93% of adults have math anxiety –– so it’s no wonder we have anxiety around everything that math touches. Especially w...hen it comes to money. Today’s guest is Brittany Rhodes, founder of Black Girl MATHgic –– a monthly math subscription box for 3rd-8th grade. Whether you’re a parent or guardian to a child in this age range or have experienced math and money-related anxiety, this episode is for you. You’ll learn more about why math anxiety exists, how young girls are often more likely to experience it, and what we can do to help ease this anxiety as adults to become more math-confident in all areas of our lives. Follow Black Girl MATHgic on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/blackgirlmathgic/ Save 10% on your first box with code “MATHISFUN”: https://blackgirlmathgic.com/ Pre-Order “Financial Feminist: Overcome the Patriarchy’s Bullsh*t to Master Your Money and Build a Life You Love”: https://bit.ly/3PpHvlC Join Investing 101 to get access to Treasury: https://treasury.app/herfirst100k/investing-101-workshop Our HYSA recommendation [affiliate]: http://sofi.com/herfirst100k Episode show notes: https://herfirst100k.com/financial-feminist-show-notes/ Follow us on YouTube for behind-the-scenes and extras: https://www.youtube.com/c/HerFirst100K/featured Follow Financial Feminist on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/financialfeministpodcast/ Follow Her First $100K on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/herfirst100k/ Looking for more actionable money advice? Take our FREE money personality quiz! https://treasury.app/herfirst100k/money-journey-quiz Leave Financial Feminist a voicemail: https://www.speakpipe.com/financialfeminist Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, Financial Feminists. Welcome back. So excited to see you. We went on a little bit of a summer break. It was very lovely. We all got very tan. And we appreciate you staying with us, giving us a much needed break. It was very nice to have a little bit of time off and our team and myself appreciate it. So thanks for sticking with us. And thanks for listening to previous episodes too and catching up. If you haven't rated the show, reviewed the show, subscribed to the show, please do so. Easiest way to support us
and to support our mission of financial feminism. And as always, a reminder that my book is out.
Financial Feminist, Overcome the Patriarchy's Bullshit to Master Your Money and Build a Life
You Love is available wherever you get your books. Available in hardcover, available in ebook, and available
in an audiobook read by yours truly. So please feel free to check those out. We'll link it in
the show notes. Okay, today's episode. If you saw the word math in the episode title and you were
like, no, no, no, no, no, started immediately sweating, know that you're not alone. We know
from countless studies and statistics that women are constantly
told that we are not as good at math and science as men, and that math and science are not quote
unquote for us. And it also sets us up for more anxiety with our finances in the future.
So our guest today has had enough of that and decided to create a product that helps promote
math literacy among children with a specific focus on young Black girls. And in addition,
children with a specific focus on young Black girls. And in addition, changing not only young girls' perspective around math, but also changing us as adults. Brittany Rhodes is a math tutor,
former GED math instructor, and founder and general math-ager of Black Girl Math Chick.
BGM's flagship product is the Black Girl Math Chick box, which is the first and only monthly subscription box designed
to increase math confidence and decrease math anxiety in girls from a third to eighth grade
math level. Black Girl Math Chick has been featured on Beyonce.com, hell yeah, Forbes National Math
and Science Initiative, and more, and named STEM's Toy Experts 2020 Best STEM Subscription Box for Kids.
I actually got connected with Brittany because we partnered a couple months ago with Dove
Chocolate to give multiple grants to women-founded businesses, and she was one of the recipients of
those grants. This episode is for every girl who thought she wasn't good at math, who's felt
anxiety over their finances because of math, for people who think, okay, I'm bad at math, who's felt anxiety over their finances because of math, for people who think,
okay, I'm bad at math, so I'll be terrible at money. Not true. And for parents or caregivers looking for ways to encourage young women in their lives to help grow their confidence.
We get into why math anxiety exists, the disparities in the way we teach math to young
girls, and how we can change our own mindset around math and money. You're going to absolutely
love Brittany. Her passion is so infectious and amazing. So let's go ahead and get into it.
I'm so excited to have you. Thank you for being here. I would love for you to tell me
where your love of math began. And did you immediately feel like an anomaly for being
a woman who liked math and felt comfortable with math?
So my love for math actually began when I was very young because I don't have a memory of not ever enjoying math.
It has always been my favorite subject, you know, from elementary school all the way through high school and, of course, through college and beyond.
So I don't I don't even have a memory of not liking math.
And even though I struggle sometimes and, you know, math didn't always come easy to me, but it was still something I very much enjoyed. So I've been a math enthusiast my whole life.
That's amazing. I will spend a lot of the interview chatting about this. But one of the
things that I had chatted with my team about in preparation for this interview is, unfortunately,
the statistics back this up as well. We see, I think, that girls are conditioned
to believe that math is not for them. So, they're either not given the resources they need to
succeed at things like math or science, but they're also actively told, girls are not good at math,
math is not for you, go, you know, focus on reading or writing. And, I mean, I, you know,
a communication and theater major in college, I was never actually that bad at math i think i grew to you know like writing more
and i wonder how much of that was my honest interest or the environment that we all grow up in
that tells us what we should or should not like so can you can you touch on that a little bit more of kind of the way that we think about,
especially if you're a woman identifying person, math as this like scary or intimidating thing?
Absolutely. And one of the things that I often, you know, that our children,
from the minute we're born, and even as I'm looking down here at someone who has now finished their meal, the messaging around mathematics and who gets to do mathematics and who gets to be good at mathematics and who who gets to have fun with mathematics starts very early.
One of the things I noticed since I've started Black Girl Math, I think I don't know if it's increased or if I notice it more now.
You know how sometimes you get you get a white car and then you start seeing white cars everywhere.
But one of the things I've noticed and it's been discussed many times is how math and science are presented in our children's media, their toys, their TV shows. So anytime, I would probably say 99% of the time on a TV show when the popular
girl is struggling in school, what class is she struggling in? It's math. And then the person who
comes in to tutor her is who? The ugly duckling, the nerdy girl, the one with the glasses and the braces and the pimples that
no one thinks is cool, that no one thinks is cute. What is this message telling our kids?
It's not a blatant message. So we have now made it a game and it's not a funny game,
but my mother and I, so my mother's a retired principal. So education has always been a non-negotiable in my household. And she just really instilled in me a love of education and
a love of teaching. Although I never ended up in a classroom, tutoring is much more my speed and
that's where I got my legs, so to speak. But now we sit and watch TV and we literally point out
all the times we hear these negative messages about math to the point that I was like,
I need to pull out a notebook and start noting this down and maybe even put together some type
of video collage because just everywhere you're hearing it, you're hearing it about girls,
even boys. Like if he passes this algebra class, he'll get this particular incentive,
you know, all of these various messages. So it starts really, really early.
But of course, for girls, studies have been done that show not only through pop culture,
media, and those types of things, but even the female adults in their lives. So mom, aunt,
teacher, even female teachers, because a lot of times teachers have math anxiety that is not
resolved. And then they go into a classroom and they unknowingly pass it along to their students.
But a study was done not too long ago that talked about how math phobic and math anxious
language from a female adult is much more detrimental on a girl than it is on a boy.
In fact, that study found that boys didn't really internalize those
types of messages from the female adults in their lives, but girls did. So one of the things I
typically recommend to my parents or even in the materials we put in the Black Girl Magic boxes is
watch your language around your kids when it comes to math. It's very easy to kind of fall
into that, oh, mommy wasn't a math person or
who I don't know. What is that? What is this new math? You know, all of those different messages,
you know, tell kids, especially girls, both directly and indirectly, that math is something
that you either are good at it or you're not. You either have it, have the gene or you don't,
and that there's nothing you can do about it, which we know is
not true. Yeah, my dad was an engineer. And so it was he was the one who helped with my math
homework. I don't know if my mom ever did. And I think he was better at math than my mom and is
better at math. But, you know, it's like chicken or the egg is that, you know, nurture nature.
And I would argue, you know, I don't think women are, you know, born bad at chicken or the egg is that, you know, nurture nature. And I would argue,
you know, I don't think women are, you know, born bad at math. And we may, you know, it might not
be our favorite subject, or it might honestly be one we struggle with. But I think you're just as
likely to struggle with any other subject too. We're just conditioned to believe that math is
difficult and hard and intimidating, much like personal finance, which was the perfect segue.
I didn't even mean to do it. I get asked all the time, like, oh, if you much like personal finance, which was the perfect segue. I didn't even mean to
do it. I get asked all the time, like, oh, if you're a personal finance expert, you must be
really good at math. And there's like this narrative that you can only be good at money
if you're good at math. And I would like to remind everybody listening, I majored in theater in
college and communications, and now I'm a finance expert. So I think there is a misconception that you have
to be good at math in order to be good at money. Do you find that to be true?
Well, I feel like that's an absolute statement, and I wouldn't necessarily speak in absolutes
in that sense. But I do think that having a strong foundation in basic mathematics will
serve you very well in the personal finance and financial
literacy space. Because you need math to be able to calculate, right? So you need math to be able
to multiply. I mean, multiplication is math, addition is math, division, subtraction is math.
So you need those basic skills to understand personal finance to help build that financial literacy.
But as you mentioned, although I tend to be able to connect math to everything, but as you
mentioned, you have a communications and theater background, which does have some math in it.
But here you are now a finance expert. Yeah. I yeah, I just think it's it. I think it's
perpetuated. Yeah, I think it's a narrative that's perpetuated as like the not excuse,
because again, I think it's socially conditioned. But I think it's the thing of like,
oh, I can't get my financial shit together because I'm not good at math. And I'm like,
you need a calculator. Like you can you can do it with a calculator and with a spreadsheet that
does most of the calculation for you. Right. Like, I think I, I don't think you have to be
not only a math expert, but like, like math, good at math in order to get good at your money. Those
things I don't think are mutually inclusive. It's really interesting because again, yeah,
my background is like, I took math. I liked math, math was fine. But definitely, like I was a reading and writing kind of girl.
But it's interesting, too, because when people say that to me, you know, sometimes, you know,
sometimes when people meet, and I've talked about this with some of my other friends who have math
degrees and math backgrounds, sometimes people feel like they have to explain why they feel like they're not a math person
so they'll say or they're or they're talking about their child if it's a parent and they'll say you
know she's really creative she's into the arts and I'm like well who said I always say and I love
saying it to students I'm like who told you you had to pick who told you that you had to choose
and guess what they're more They're more connected than you realize
they are. In fact, in the Black Girl Magic Box, we do different themes every month and we show
kids the math that exists in all of these real world scenarios. So we did a dance machine. The
thing was called dance machine and we were doing dancing math. So we were measuring angles of
different dance poses. We've done music boxes where we're converting the music notes into fractions and manipulating
the fractions in different ways because music after all, yeah, the notes are fractions.
Yeah. A measure you're going to have, you're going to have quarter notes, right?
Yep. They're fractions. So, so anytime I hear that, I'm like, see, the world told you that it was either or, but it's not.
Right.
It's kind of like sports and arts, right?
You either, you kind of had to pick one, right?
You were either the baseball player or in choir.
Like, and I feel like some people could do both, but I feel like there was that pressure
eventually to pick.
Like you were either an athlete or you were,
yeah, but I see a lot of parallels. And it's like, you can do, high school musical taught
us that you can do both. This is true. And I, you know, because I'm a tutor and because I'm
often working with students who have varying levels of math anxiety and, you know, aren't
always confident, I love to use myself as an example to show them
what's possible. So yes, I was an AP calculus in high school. Yes, I took five math classes in four
years, but I also was on the newspaper staff for two. I was on the yearbook staff for two. I went
to journalism camp, summer camp when I was going into the 10th grade because I love to write. I
used to write poems when I was little and I loved multiplication. So I love to show them you can be, in terms of, I feel like the way math is presented in the United
States is that it's a siloed activity. Like if you're into it, you can't be into anything else.
And that is really damaging, especially for our children to get those messages. So I often like
to, whenever I have a platform, whenever I have an ear, I just love to underscore that you can be multifaceted with math. You can enjoy math and
enjoy reading and all of those other things. But the one point I wanted to make that you brought
up a couple of times is when you were saying, is it that I was conditioned not to really be into
math or did I just really love reading and writing a lot more?
I cite a lot of studies because, you know, as as you mentioned earlier, they just help provide more context and make more sense of what we're dealing with.
And there actually was another study done and I don't I don't remember who conducted it.
But it found that it wasn't that girls were, quote unquote, bad at math.
It wasn't that girls were, quote unquote, bad at math.
It was just that they were better or they perceived they were they felt that they were better at reading and writing and the humanities. And I was like, interesting.
Very interesting.
That's really interesting.
You've mentioned a couple of times this concept of math anxiety.
Can you define it for us and then tell us why you think it's such a huge issue?
Yes.
So math anxiety, there are a few different definitions, but when you drill it down, it's
negative emotions around doing and solving math problems.
And that can be in a variety of contexts.
My favorite scenario to illustrate math anxiety is back in the day before the restaurants
really got privy at how to offer separate checks.
So the bill comes out, it's a group of eight, it's a group of 10. What does everybody do back
in the day when the bill comes out? What? Throw their hands up. Not me. I'm not the one. Don't
look at me. Don't look at me to split this bill up because it's math involved in doing that.
Don't look at me to split this bill up because it's math involved in doing that.
So math anxiety can take on a variety of different forms.
It can be physical.
So similar to how people feel if they have a fear of public speaking, sweaty hands, palpitating heart, you know, nerves just kind of all over the place.
It can look certain ways emotionally like fear, tears.
I've had to feel tears in several tutoring sessions.
Avoidance, right?
If we are anxious about something, we tend to not even want to deal with it.
And then from a scientific perspective, the brain, the part that helps with that short-term memory, sometimes it just goes out to lunch when that test is put in front of you,
because it's like, okay, I know I just studied all this, but I'm having this anxious moment.
It's kind of like stage fright where I just have forgotten everything. So those are just a few
examples of math anxiety. And ed.gov actually has this really glaring stat that I always love to
share, not because I love it,
but because it really illustrates what we're dealing with. And that is approximately 93% of American adults experience math anxiety on some level. 93%.
I mean, I'm in that 93%, I think. Whenever I go out and I'm trying to calculate my tip, I'm like,
like, I can't, it takes me much longer than it should. Like,
I have to sit there and I have to take 10% and then double it. And then I'm like, okay,
we're starting here. As I take Yeah, because I can do 10% easy. And then I double it. And then
I'm like, okay, we're starting there. Yeah. Oh, yeah, I'm definitely I'm in that percentage.
That's a good strategy that math teachers teach children when they're learning percentages and that kind of thing. Actually, I used to teach GED math to adults.
And I remember one day in class, we were going through a particular lesson and one of the
students raised her hand and she said, oh, I just, I know that I used to work in retail.
And she said, I know that 10%, you know, is where I could start to get to the answer. And I'm like, yes, yes.
Great, great way to do that. Is it because the 10% was her commission? Is that what it was?
I don't know. I don't know if it was because it was her commission or is it because of,
you know, sales and markdowns and that kind of thing? Maybe or maybe both. Yeah, maybe. Oh,
yeah, that would make more sense. No, that would make more sense. Yeah. I
feel like you get, you get better percentages, of course, the more you're around them. Yeah,
exactly. And they show up everywhere. So that's the whole, that's what we try to do is make these
connections. So 93% of American adults experience math anxiety. And to drill that down even further,
math anxiety has been shown to have a much harsher impact on females and people of color
than it does the rest of the population. And that's for a variety of reasons, some of which
we've touched on already. Societal bias, stereotype threat, oh, you're a girl, you must not be good
at math. Well, some people actually internalize that stereotype and then that's exactly what
happens. So looking at those two things combined, this high percentage of adults who just are
fearful and anxious around math and their understanding that there are some additional
factors that cause math anxiety to be a lot more detrimental in doubly marginalized populations.
I was looking at that and I was like, I feel like I need to
create something that's going to address both of those things simultaneously and catch people
before they become adults. So children, let me catch them before they become grownups
who are fearful of math and let's rewrite this narrative. Yeah. So this concept of math anxiety,
do you feel like in the people you tutor, of course this will show up, but like what sort of
stories or language do the students you tutor use when they are expressing math anxiety?
It's shown up in so many different ways.
And I often like to say that it shows up in boys and girls.
So I don't want to paint this picture
that only girls are math anxious
or only girls feel like they aren't good at math
because that's not the case.
But we just know that it's a confidence gap
between typically, generally speaking,
between a boy and a girl.
We know the messages. We've already talked about that. So what I have seen, I'll give two clear examples
that I think really underscore how it shows up. So one of my students, I think she's in the eighth
grade now, but at the time she was in the fifth or sixth grade. And I was at her house and we were
working on a concept and she had a grasp of the concept.
She was working independently.
She didn't need my intervention at that point.
So I'm just sitting there observing her.
I'm not saying much.
I'm watching her work through the problems and I'm excited with what I see.
And then out of her mouth, she says, Miss Brittany, I'm just not good at this.
And I was legit confused.
I was like, what do you mean? You're
literally doing it. You're literally doing the problems. You're doing them correctly. You look
okay. You're not looking flustered. So she was like, I'm just not good at this. And I was like,
I stopped for a minute and I said, what does it mean to be good at math? In your definition,
what does it mean for someone to be good at math? And she said, they're fast,
that they're fast, that they do math problems quickly. And I remember in that moment, I just
said, okay. And she looked over at me and she was like, are you going to tell my mom? She thought she was in trouble.
She did.
She thought she was in trouble.
And so after that, it was my mission, of course,
not only to help her with her immediate math assignments,
but also we had to do some mindset shifting
because again, and I get it in school,
you got the math time tests and who can do the multiplication problems the fastest. So again, messages that are always being delivered
to our children, whether we realize it or not. No, that's so right. Yeah. You sit there,
you know, you got 60 seconds and you're doing what 40, 40 multiplication problems or something like that.
And I used to rip through those and I used to feel so good when I got those done.
So accomplished.
And it works for some kids.
It works for, but it doesn't work for every kid and it can be very detrimental.
But I was also told, this is bringing up my own thing where I think my parents literally
told me if you are the first person to turn in your test, you are doing something wrong. Like they were they were telling me like, you need
to double check your work, and then triple check your work. And like, you know, before you turn a
test in, like you probably don't want to be the first person to turn the test in. At the same time,
we know you you're exactly right. We were being conditioned or told, okay, well, you're going to
do 40 math problems. Now they're, you're going to do 40 math problems. Now
they're simple, but 40 math problems in 60 seconds. Yeah. And we're not doing that in like
reading class, like, oh, who can read 10 pages in 10 minutes? No, that takes all the fun and joy
out of it. Right. Because you're looking at comprehension, right? In reading, you're looking
at comprehension. And if that takes you longer, but you comprehend it really well, great, right? In reading, you're looking at comprehension. And if that takes you longer, but you comprehend it really well, great, right? No, that's, oh my gosh, that's like blowing my
mind. Yes, because we value comprehension in reading, right? Rather than fully comprehension
in math, we value getting the right answer rather than maybe the process to which you got to the
right answer. You said it.
Sorry, are you preaching on the podcast today?
I don't know.
I just blew my own mind.
Really, you got me there.
But no, I think I've never thought of it that way before.
Where math, yeah, it was about getting the right answer.
And reading, it was like, do you understand what you're actually reading? Do you understand the words on the page and what the author is trying to tell you?
Yeah.
Do you think that this math anxiety and this lack of support for women in math or science
focused careers, STEM, right, has contributed to this larger wealth gap or this larger opportunity
gap for women generally and then specifically for women of color?
I do.
I think the short answer is definitely yes. Is it linear to, you know, to keep going with all
the, I love a good math pun. I mean, it fits. Is there a dotted line or a straight line that we
can draw that says math anxiety directly correlated to the wealth gap? I don't know.
directly correlated to the wealth gap. I don't know. Things are a lot more complicated in our society. You might say it multiplies, or if you want to go the next level, it grows exponentially.
So there's definitely a connection, I believe. And I believe that what we were talking about earlier in talking about
how people feel like, oh, I'm not good at math. So I'm not good. Ergo, I'm not going to be good
at my finances or I'm not even going to try to get my finances together. Well, of course, that
finances wealth. You know, there are definitely some correlations there. I think there are a lot
of other factors, you know, structural racism and things that we are still dealing with from many years ago that have not corrected themselves or they have not been corrected that play a role in that.
But math anxiety is definitely in there somewhere, for sure.
Yeah. And I think, I mean, again, I'm about to make a pun, but yeah, it compounds, right?
Where it's like, it's, you know, it's these narratives that you've been told throughout your life, in addition to the lack of support, right? You know, there's a general lack of support for women, especially women of color in STEM fields.
and, you know, both from the parent side, but also society. And then it's like, if you're even,
you know, if hypothetically you are told you're good at math and are able to, you know, foster those skills, do you have the support to go to college to actually get a degree to further,
right? So it's not a just, I'm nervous or scared about math. It's all of the things together that are compiling to
provide a lack of opportunity. Absolutely. There are many variables.
And it's so funny how we can keep using math language to discuss this.
Many variables. And like you said, it's cumulative. And again, another math term.
It's not isolated. and this is such a
perfect example of how math is in everything but but the points are the points are well taken like
literally they the common denominator there are many variables and it is cumulative so i mean
we're speaking truth i would love to speak to your experience. Speaking of education, how is your experience at a PWI versus an HBCU?
And do you think beginning your math career at an HBCU, a historically black college university,
helped you in your confidence as a mathematician?
Oh my goodness, yes.
Because,
so this is the thing, and I mentioned this earlier, a lot of times, or I alluded to it earlier,
a lot of times when people hear that I have a math background, I have a math degree, or, you know,
now I have a math-based business, they think that they automatically think that number one, I can do large, I can multiply large numbers in my head. Spoiler alert, I can't. You know, like one time I feel like I met somebody and, you know, came up in conversation that I had a math background. Oh, what's 438,362 times 21.9? I don't know. I don't know.
You're like, I don't know. I don't know.
You're like, I don't know.
Do it yourself.
Was that person a man?
Probably.
I don't even remember.
Because it's happened multiple times over the years.
People just, they have the most interesting reactions to that.
So that's one piece of it.
They're like, you can't do it in your head.
I can't do that. And there are some people who can do that, but that doesn't speak to their math ability.
That's another, that's something else. Like savant or prodigy or, you know, something else.
Or they think, and or they think that math just has always come easily to me.
It's not.
I had to study.
I had to work.
I had to do pool all-nighters. And so going to an HBCU where I didn't have to worry about whether I was being treated a certain way because I was a female or because I was Black or both happening at the same time, it really allowed me this environment.
environment and on top of that I went to an all-women's college so I really was in this environment where I could flourish and where I could grow and blossom and not be afraid to ask
questions and not be afraid to make mistakes and everybody who was there was rooting for me
I struggled through my math degree I struggled I had like I mentioned I stayed up all night
struggled. Like I mentioned, I stayed up all night writing proofs over and over again on whiteboards.
I dropped classes because I was about to fail them and then took them again. I stayed in my professor's office hours. And I had classmates in my major who didn't have to do that.
I struggled. I put in the work. So I don't know what my experience would have been like at a PWI
in that moment, because it really was a confidence dropper. Because up until college,
math had always been pretty easy for me. Now, again, that doesn't mean I didn't struggle,
pretty easy for me. Now, again, that doesn't mean I didn't struggle because I always studied well.
But once I got to college and the numbers slowly started disappearing and it was replaced with just letters and Greek symbols and proofs and theorems and abstract thinking, oh my goodness,
it was a wake up call for me. So being in an environment where I had classmates to commiserate and study with and everybody wanted to help everybody, it was a beautiful experience.
And that helped me in my journey to my PWI for graduate school because I had gained that assurance and that confidence at my HBCU that I needed to then go into an environment where I was a minority.
And I was pretty young when I started. I got my MBA.
You know, typically it's advised
that you have a few years of work experience
when you start an MBA program.
And I was only 23.
I had only been out of college for about two years.
So I was pretty young.
So I had that going as well.
But I was more confident.
I mean, I won't lie though.
I was intimidated, you know?
So I have some just brilliant classmates.
I felt like, OK, I'm supposed to be here, too, because I had been poured into so much at my HBCU.
And I had a math background.
And I was at Carnegie Mellon for graduate school, which, of course, has a great theater program.
I didn't know you went to Carnegie Mellon.
Yeah, they have top three musical theater program in the country. Yeah, my dad is from the Pittsburgh area.
So yeah, so I mean, it's it's a and this is a good, you know, all these puns, but even thinking
about Carnegie Mellon has a great theater program, but it's also known for its quantitative rigor.
Interesting, right? Like it has a strong arts reputation, but also the strong engineering
and STEM reputation. So I had that going. I was like, okay, I can thrive here because I have this
background. I had to take statistics to get going in that program because it was so quant heavy,
but I already had that foundation. And that's really what I just want our kids to have that
foundation, that core, because if you have that strong foundation and that strong core, especially in math, you can do anything. Yeah.
Oh, I love it. Okay. Talk to me about black girl math chicks. So you choose professionals each
month to feature in your boxes. You had mentioned that, about how they might use
math in the real world. What are you looking for in the people you choose to be like representative
of the theme in that month's box? Yes. So I don't have a box without the stories of these women
mathematicians. So the first thing they have to have, and I was just talking to one of my
teammates about this earlier, I said, this may change, but we're going into our third year
and I don't know when this will stop. But all of the mathematicians we feature
in the Black Girl Mathematics boxes have at least one advanced degree in math.
And that could also be like maybe actuarial science or data analytics or something that it's not mathematics,
but it's something closely related. And the reason why I set it up like that is because
it's a few things. I'm not necessarily trying to push a student towards being a math major,
although of course I would not be mad at the outcome. I'm just trying to show the various
career pathways
that are available to you with a math background.
Where did that come from?
When I was at my college,
majoring in math in the early 2000s,
anytime, again, 99% of the time,
along with thinking we can do large multiplication
in our head, multiplication of large numbers in our head,
the narrative was
always, oh, so you're going to be a teacher. Spoiler alert, I never wanted to be a traditional
classroom teacher. And a lot of people thought too, because my mother was a teacher and then
a principal, lifelong educator, that I was going to be in the classroom as well. I was never
interested in a classroom of students because I wasn't confident in my ability to manage
children, many children at one time. I was like, I watched my mother do it. I was like, I don't know if I have that gift.
Tutoring is much more my speed. I love the one-on-one, one-to-one or small group. So
when I would say, actually, I'm not really interested in classroom teaching, people were
clutching their invisible pearls like, oh my goodness, what are you going to do?
Like there was no other career opportunity available to somebody with a math background.
So that's why every single month,
I find a woman mathematician,
again, someone who has a math degree, at least one,
and whatever they do in their either career or hobby,
or both, we turn that into a theme.
So I'll just go back to one of the things I
mentioned earlier, since we've been talking about the arts. So last year we featured,
and we make the themes fun and exciting and catchy and stuff that stands out. So this thing
was the dancing machine. We featured a young lady named Donna, who's also a Detroiter like me,
a young lady named Donna, who's also a Detroiter like me. And she is a mathematician. She has a bachelor's in mathematics, a minor in English. Ooh, who does that? I found someone. And she works
for the US Army as a cost analyst by day. But she spent almost a decade, maybe longer, as a founder and head coach of her high school's dance team and had been dancing since she was like three years old.
So we did dance math and the whole box was around dance math.
So what does that look like?
So every box comes with the story of the woman mathematician.
So we interview them and we write a bio and do an interview and
turn that into something that the kids can read. So now they're reading in the math box.
And then we also include three to five items to bring the theme to life, understanding that a lot
of times math, again, doesn't feel tangible. It feels very abstract. So we put stuff in there that
they can touch, that they can feel. So at least one of those items is going to be a screen-free math activity or manipulative.
So in Donna's box, because it was a dance box and we were looking at geometry and angles
primarily, we included some angle eggs, which are like these little manipulatives where
kids can create different angles and study different geometric concepts.
But it's a dance box.
So we got to have some fun too.
So we put a duffel bag in there because what do dancers always carry
when they're going to their competitions and those things?
Duffel bags.
So we did a custom duffel bag.
And then we also include stickers because girls love stickers.
They just love them.
So stickers.
We also include a math affirmation
because again, we're talking about it's the confidence we're working on. So we include an
original statement. Sometimes it's related to the thing. Sometimes it's not. That just
uses I, me, or my that a girl can look at and read when she needs the extra boost of confidence
around her math ability, maybe right before a test or maybe after a test that didn't go, a homework assignment that didn't go so well.
Then we include a math activity booklet.
We have a third through fifth grade one and then a fourth, sixth to eighth grade one.
And that's where they're doing the math related to the theme.
So I mentioned earlier when we think about dance, that's a lot of angles, understanding patterns.
when we think about dance, that's a lot of angles, understanding patterns. So we had different dance poses that we put in the booklet and we were like, get your protractor out and measure these angles.
Thank you. Because when you're dancing, you're just creating a lot of different angles.
So we want to make those connections between what's being taught in the classroom and real life. We had them make up TikTok dances as kind of in a suggestion for future activities,
which we include on our Caring Adult Guide.
So understanding that mom or another female is typically the one purchasing the box for
the girls.
Obviously, a lot of women have carried math anxiety from childhood over into adulthood,
and we didn't want them to feel inadequate or like, I don't have any tools to help my
daughter or my girl with this box.
So we included carrying adult guide and we included a notepad because we asked the mathematicians
to like, what is in your mathematician bag?
Like, what can't you live without?
Kind of like how the magazines used to ask the celebrities, like, what's in your bag?
So Donna says she couldn't live without a to do list.
And so whenever we can sneak in social, emotional learning or or building other life skills, we like to do that as well.
So because she says she can live without a to do list, we put a notepad in there with to do's on there, you know, helping kids learn how to manage their time and those types of things.
So that's what we do every single month. We're going into box, I can't remember,
30 something. And we've done it all. We've done financial literacy math three different times.
We're actually getting ready to do a fourth installment. We call it Secure the Bag.
So our main theme is Secure the Bag Part Four. Employeepreneur, where we'll be featuring
an entrepreneur who also works full time at a corporate job just to help kids understand.
Again, you can do both. You can have a business. I did it for many years.
Yeah. And I think there's this kind of as an aside, I've seen in some of my students,
this narrative of not wanting to answer to authority. So I'm just going to start my own business.
Well, guess what?
That's not quite.
You still, but you also.
You still have clients you have to work with.
You still have clients.
You still have customers.
You still have people to answer to.
But guess what else?
You also can learn some really great skills on how to run a business in a corporation
or an organization before you do it. I learned a lot of how I did not want to run my business
by working at businesses. Some cautionary tales in there. Yeah, for sure. So we've done real estate,
we've done entrepreneurship, social media, dancing, quilting, baking, cooking,
and I could go on and on. So that's the box in a nutshell. That's amazing. What do you think the
impact of having these kind of role models has on young women, especially when the role models
are doing things that you a never thought possible, but specifically role models who look like you? What does that impact? Man, that impact is immeasurable. I mean,
it really is priceless because there's a saying now that we see a lot on social media that
representation matters. And it really does. It's very difficult for us to put ourselves in a
position to see ourselves doing a thing if we don't see somebody who looks like us doing that thing as well.
Especially a thing like math where it's already so villainized.
So it's already villainized in society. But then on top of that, I don't see anybody who looks like me who's doing it.
So what makes me think that I can do it, especially when you're a kid?
The box has helped so many girls and even some boys, too, because we do have boys who have who have had a chance to work with the box as well.
It's given them that concept around. Have you heard of that concept around windows and mirrors?
We talked about that a lot, like with children's books when they were talking about the diversity of children's books. I don't think so. Tell me about it.
So there is someone, and I don't know how long ago, but basically they were positing that we
need to give kids, and this was, again, the conversation started with children's books
in the United States and being largely focused on white characters. And it was like, we need to give
our kids windows and mirrors. So mirrors so they can see themselves in the products that they're using and the books that they're reading.
And is it windows so they understand somebody else's experience? I was gonna say if I had to
guess, I'm using my reading comprehension skills to determine. No, that's beautiful. It's a beautiful
way of putting that. I've never heard it put that way. Yeah, mirrors so you can see yourself,
right? And windows so you can see somebody else. Yeah. Cool. Yeah. I didn't learn about it
until I started BGM. And this was after I had started it, but it was just another great talking
point for me to really better illustrate the work that I do because of course the name of the
business was triggering, especially when I first started, I was getting messages left and right,
you know, like, well, what if my daughter isn't black or I have a son or why does it have to be why do we have to have race
and why and I'm like I know why because the entire world is built for you the entire world
is built for you this one thing is for somebody else I'm sorry it pisses you off oh I'm sorry
we get the same thing with men being like just women I'm like financial pisses you off. Oh, I'm sorry. We get the same thing with men being like, just women.
Exactly.
I'm like, financial feminists, you can be any gender identity.
But yes, we work largely with women because the world was not built for us.
And you're just really sitting there like, am I having to explain this in the 21st century?
Are these words really having to come out of my mouth right now?
And the thing is, Black girls are not the only subscribers we have.
We have white families.
We had a non-binary person who had no children, who's like a mathematical librarian at a
university and just liked the product, who was subscribed for almost maybe over a year.
We have teachers who aren't Black who use it in their classrooms.
I mean, it has so many uses, but it's making sure that those who are considered the least
of us, which is girls, Black children, and then the intersectionality of that, which
is a Black girl, that she understands that this subject is for her too in a world that's telling her it's not. Yep. Yep. Totally. I love it.
What are some simple ways that we can overcome math anxiety as adults? I'll start there. And
then I have a follow-up question for you. So some simple ways that we can overcome math anxiety as adults is first naming it, you know, just accepting that.
So instead of saying I'm not a math person because actually we all are math people.
Just saying I am experiencing math anxiety or I have experienced math anxiety.
So understanding that that's what- Right, or math makes me nervous.
Yeah, yeah.
Exactly.
And that's okay.
You know, it happens to a lot of folks.
We already talked about that.
So that's the first piece of it.
And then putting yourself in situations
where you have to do math,
which is not hard to do because it's everywhere.
So even coming up with fun games.
So, you know, Wordle is all the rage right now,
but there's a numbers component.
Do you want to guess the name of it?
Nerdle.
Nope.
Nerdle.
Have you heard of it?
No.
Is it Nerdle?
It's Nerdle.
Oh, I took number and Wordle.
No, I haven't heard of it.
But I also do Hurdle, which is it plays you
a second of a song and you have to guess what song it is. So there's a bunch of these like
iterations where they take the beginning of one word and then it's, yeah, it's dirtle or whatever,
you know? Oh, that's very funny. No, I haven't heard about those.
Nurtle. It is. So it's, yeah. Actually, one of my teammates who helps with the math activity booklets, she told me about
it.
I had not heard of it.
So it's a fun game where you're literally trying to figure out what an equation is in
the same way that you played Wordle.
Oh, this makes me, I'm immediately nervous.
Like my body is now drenched.
Are your hands sweating?
Yep.
I'm like, I'm like i'm like no thank you this
sounds like a nightmare no no i played it once i it was it was fun what is it fun nurdle
nurdle like nerd ellie so in the in the spirit of overcoming math anxiety, putting yourself out there by doing math-based fun activities like a Nerdle, like a Sudoku as an adult, right?
Not only are you having fun with math or at least attempting to, but you're also exercising that brain, keeping that brain sharp.
So that's one suggestion.
Another or a recommendation. I'll i'll do it you should try it
i'm trying to be present for you and then i looked and it gives you like the whole list of
and i was like oh i need to be fully present if i'm going to read these so i'm like i'm not going
to try to do okay well i i mean i'm sure it's you know you uniform wherever but i hope you're
looking at the same one i was looking at because I don't remember all of that.
I don't know if I remember all of what you have.
I mean, Wordle does that too when you first start.
It's like, here's how to play.
Oh, does it?
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
You scared me for a second.
And I was on my computer.
For the uninitiated.
That was the word I was trying to say.
I was on my computer.
So it's a little wider of a screen.
Your screen looked really robust.
So yeah, that would be the first one is just playing fun math games.
And the second one would be to try to, if you have a young person in your life,
kids, got children, nieces, nephews, work with them on their math homework
and try and make it a game.
Gamifying is really a concept in math because it can be fun if done properly.
But make it a game to see if you cannot use any math phobic language while you're helping this young person with their work.
Or and and or have them teach you what they're learning in math class or teach them something you know because guess what we all know
math like we we are most of us i think all of us know that two plus two equals four i also still
remember the quadratic the traditional sense that is buried in here like do you think so x equals
negative b plus or minus the square root hold on minus 4ac all over 2a. Hold on. I'll get the first part. The first part I missed.
x equals negative b plus or minus the square root. Oh, what's the first part plus 2a or minus 2ac?
You had all the other stuff.
It's this minus 2ac that I can't remember. And that's all over 2a.
Wait, you said, first you said 4ac. Then you said 2ac.
Oh, I did. Hold on. It's set to the dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun.
That's how I remember it it's really
yeah it's like x equals negative b plus or minus the square root uh four ac all over two a i think
it's four ac love it that's my final thing but i can't remember the four four ac i was out here
bragging like you guys remember the quadrata formula i don't remember you remember a lot more
than most people do who don't have to use it i know but it's literally
just because we put it to a tune that's the only way but that see but that works it works
it's b squared i was just about to tell you it's b the square root of b squared minus 4ac
b squared minus 4ac all over 2a yeah yeah thank you you had it yeah i did i was close
but yeah i love that so so asking what they're working on or telling them something that they
are that you remember yep yep so that's another one and just putting yourself in positions
where you have to do math which it's everywhere so it's not hard it's not hard i which it's everywhere. So it's not hard. It's not hard. I mean, it's difficult to overcome
anxiety in general, but you can work towards it just like you can work towards, you know,
overcoming other challenges. Yeah. And then my second follow-up question is how can we help
young girls overcome their math anxiety? This is a question I ask the mathematicians every single
month in their interview. What is one tip you would give to a girl who doesn't feel confident in her math ability?
My goal, which is my big hairy audacious goal, is for them to never know math anxiety in the first place.
But while I'm working on that, we still have, you know, thousands of girls who are experiencing math anxiety right now who we have to make sure feel supported in that it stops before they become adults.
So it's really a lot of different things that we can do to help girls. women, women identifying adults, watching our language, watching what we say about math around
girls, especially, or even if we think they're not listening. Because, you know, kids hear all
kinds of stuff, you know, and I got a seven month old and I'm like, oh gosh, I gotta really,
once she's old enough to know language, gotta really watch the things that I say. I don't,
I don't talk crazy, but sometimes things you say that you think are
just harmless actually are not in the minds of impressionable young ones. So in addition to that,
some of my, they're simple, but sometimes they're difficult to put into practice,
is for my young girls reading the book. And this came from,
and I do this a lot with my students, but one of the mathematicians, actually one who works at a
bank, this was her advice. And she was saying, read the textbook, read the instructions.
And you look at a problem and you're not exactly sure how to solve it immediately,
I invite my students to start drawing.
Start drawing.
Draw what you know about the problem.
If it's talking about a shape and maybe it's asking for the formula,
or excuse me, the area or something of that shape, draw the shape.
Because with you doing that, you're kind of unlocking things in your brain that can help you get to the shape. Because with you doing that, you're like kind of unlocking things in your brain
that can help you get to the answer. The visuals can help you get to that answer or understand,
as we talked about earlier, that work you through that process. But sometimes with more of my
students than I care to share, they have put themselves in a situation where they're very frustrated
and they're overwhelmed because they didn't read the section before the problems in the textbook.
I'm like, well, did you? Okay, let's go look because again, I'm a tutor. So I'm going to
first use the resources you have available to you. I have great reverence for your teacher
and I want to respect their work and how they teach.
So my question is typically, okay, what notes do you have? What did the teacher say about this or how to solve this? And then what did the book say? Did you read the section before? A lot of times
my babies had not read it or they did that cursory read and then they didn't go back when it was time
to actually do the problems.
And sometimes there's an example there for you that can be very helpful.
There's vocabulary and terminology there for you that can be very helpful.
It sounds really basic, but I mean, you would be surprised how many kids, you know, are not invited to do that or don't think to do that because, you know, we're still helping them develop.
So that would be one kind of like basic, simple piece. And then if I could offer just from a more confidence
building and kind of affirmative standpoint, it would be to understand that it's okay to make
mistakes. I just feel like, again, the way math is presented in a lot of situations and scenarios,
it's like, we talked about this time, this race against the clock.
I got to get it right on the first try.
No, you don't.
Who told you?
I mean, we know somebody told you, but who told you that you had to get it right on the first try?
And who told you that it had to be fast?
I often tell my students, and it sticks, sometimes it doesn't. I'm like,
you know Pi. You know the first three digits, typically 3.14. Did you know that Pi has
trillions of digits? And this is what I tell my students. I'm like, and guess what?
They're still adding digits to Pi as we speak. They're still like fine. I don't know the methodology or the process
for how to find digits to add to pie.
I'm just saying that
it's happening.
The point I'm making is that people
who are actual mathematicians
and this is their career and their life's
work, they work on
problems slowly.
Slowly.
We've all seen that. The movie or the problem they can't
solve yeah a beautiful mind yeah like all of those math related movies which i guess would
be another good suggestion for the question about adults overcoming math anxiety watch some fun
like watch some good movies related to math start like a beautiful mind's a good one as a theater
nerd i think of proof but proof is about
math but it's it's more about family relationships it's kind of dark but it's one of my favorite
plays it's also a movie i think with gwyneth paltrow kristin can correct me if i'm wrong but
yeah it's that's the one i think of all the time is proof um i haven't seen that one i have to
check it's good i did a couple monologues of it in theater in college. So there you go. Nice. Yeah. So I mean, so many connections. So just being comfortable with making mistakes,
I think releases a lot of pressure from young people. Because again, it's just this concept,
if I don't get it right, then I'll never get it right. And understanding that math is much like
anything else in life. The more you study it, the more you practice it, the more you spend time with it.
You know, they often talk about things not being a spectator sport.
Math is one of them.
Like you actually have to do math to get better at math.
So that those would be my two biggest pieces.
But like I said, we can we could go all day.
But every single month we get a little tidbit
from our mathematicians and the things they say, you know, they're just so powerful. And they all,
and it's funny because a lot of times they all, they say different things. Even now, like I said,
we're on box 30 something and we have 30 different answers around that, but just, just understanding
that it's okay to make mistakes, but also making sure that you're
reading, studying, taking notes, all that fun stuff matters as well.
Amazing.
Thank you so much for just such a thoughtful conversation.
Can you tell everybody not only where to find you, but also how to support your incredible
work that you're doing?
So our website is blackgirlmathgic, M-A-T-H-G-I-C.com. I'm sure it'll be in the show
notes as well. Our social handles are on the website, but for Instagram, it's at blackgirlmathjig,
Facebook at blackgirlmathjig. And then Twitter, blackgirlmathjig was too long. So we shortened it
to B-L-K, girlmathjig. And we're on TikTok. We're just on there.
Actually, thanks to you guys.
But I have not cracked the TikTok code yet.
It's hard.
The pace is hard.
It's ridiculous.
I can't keep up.
I just can't keep up.
I can barely keep up with Facebook and Instagram.
So we have a subscription box, but sometimes people do ask. So we
absolutely encourage if you are an adult and you have a young person in your life who you feel
would benefit from our product to get a subscription, especially if they already have
math anxiety, because we have to crowd out those negative messages with continuous positive
messages in the box every month. We have all of our subscriptions can be purchased as a one-time box.
We also have past boxes in our online shop
from inventory from past boxes that are available.
And we make a great Christmas gift,
birthday gift, just because gift.
And we know that because you can leave,
we include gift notes.
And this is what it says on the gift notes.
Happy birthday, so-and-so.
So please check us out and support us in that way. And like I said, we've covered math from a variety
of different angles, pun intended. So the young person in your life, we probably have a box for
them that speaks to something that they're interested in and passionate about. And I will
say this is something you can use regardless of your gender
identity, regardless of your racial identity. It's a great way to, of course, support a really
cool cause, but also support an incredible woman of color, incredible black woman who has
started this amazing company. So if you don't feel like you're represented on the box or your
child's not represented on the box, welcome to how people of color have been
feeling forever. And that's a great, a great opportunity for you to have an even additional
conversation. So please support her regardless of, you know, if you, if you aren't a black girl,
I think this is just as beneficial. So thank you. Thank you again for being here.
Absolutely. Thank you, Tori.
Thank you once again to Brittany for joining us
for this episode. She showed us some of the subscription boxes and what comes in them,
and they're just so cute and they're so amazing and so informative and they're just absolutely
fantastic. We also sat down and interviewed Brittany about her business earlier this year,
and we'll link that in the show notes if you'd like to read more about her work.
She also gave us an incredible discount code for the girls in your life, especially for the girls of color in your life.
So save 10% on your first box with code mathisfun at blackgirlmathjick.com. Again,
linked in the show notes. Also, August is Black-Owned Business Month, so I encourage you
to shop and support Black-Owned Businesses like Black Girl Math Chick. And even if you don't have kids in your life who could benefit, you can also donate and sponsor
boxes for families who cannot afford the subscription. As always, financial feminists,
thanks for being here. Thank you for supporting the show. Thank you for supporting our mission
and movements. And we'll catch you next week. Thank you for listening to financial feminist,
a her first 100k podcast. Financial feminist is hosted by me, Tori Dunlap, produced by Kristen Fields,
marketing and administration by Karina Patel, Olivia Koning, Charisse Wade, Alina Hilzer,
Paulina Isaac, Sophia Cohen, Valerie Oresko, Jack Koning, and Ana Alexandra.
Research by Arielle Johnson.
Audio engineering by Austin Fields.
Promotional graphics by Mary Stratton,
photography by Sarah Wolf, and theme music by Jonah Cohen Sound. A huge thanks to the entire
Her First 100K team and community for supporting the show. For more information about Financial
Feminist, Her First 100K, our guests, episode show notes, and our upcoming book, also titled
Financial Feminist, visit herfirst100k.com.