Hey Folks,
Peer Review for the Summer of Math Exposition is now officially over! We hope that everyone enjoyed the process of reviewing and found a few new content creators to follow.
From here, Grant (and his squad of super reviewers) will manually review the top 100 entries and should be done with this process by September 22nd-ish where he will reveal his personal list of favorite entries.
Please remember that the Peer Review tries to create an objective measure from a bunch of completely different subjective opinions. This is obviously an impossible task, so the notion of a “top 100” should be taken with heavy grain of salt. If you were not included in that group, don’t worry! The goal for the Summer of Math Exposition is to get people sharing their knowledge, and the framing as a competition is meant only to give people an extra push. If you shared a lesson that even one person out there finds it valuable, you’ve fulfilled the spirit of the event.
We will soon send an email to everyone who participated this year asking for feedback and also providing feedback back to those who submitted their own entries. We will send another email soon to those who made it in to the top 100. Expect the emails within the next 24 hours or so.
We’ll send another announcement once the winners are decided. Thanks again for participating!
Grant, James, and Fred
Hi! Thanks for all of your hard work and invigorating the community to make such amazing math content about interesting and thought-provoking questions and prompts.
I am a high school math teacher and was curious if there was a list or a way to find submissions, either video or non-video, that could be filtered as appropriate for people where English is not their first language, possibly any submissions that were in Spanish. In addition any videos that might be applicable for high school students.