In this video, I show you the easiest way to simplify radicals and write them in simplest radical form — step by step, no confusion, no memorizing tricks that don’t work. If radicals have ever felt messy, slow, or confusing… this method will fix it. Perfect for Algebra 1, Algebra 2, GCSE, IB, and anyone who wants clean, fast simplification. ---------------------------------- WHAT YOU WILL LEARN ---------------------------------- • How to break down numbers using prime factors • How to simplify variables inside radicals (even big exponents) • How to rewrite radicals using exponent patterns • The quickest method to pull perfect squares out • How to avoid the 3 most common radical mistakes students make ---------------------------------- TIMELINE ---------------------------------- 00:00 – Introduction 00:28 – What simplest radical form really means 01:51 – Breaking down numbers fast (prime factor trick) 03:12 – Simplifying variables inside radicals 05:04 – When to combine radicals 06:10 – Common mistakes and how to avoid them 08:02 – Full example set (easy to hard) 10:40 – Final summary + practice tips ---------------------------------- HOMEWORK (optional) ---------------------------------- Try these and simplify each to simplest radical form: 1) sqrt(72x^3) 2) sqrt(98y^5) 3) sqrt(125a^4b^7) 4) sqrt(54m^2n^5) 5) sqrt(200x^6y^3) Write your answers in the comments — I’ll check them. ---------------------------------- ABOUT ME ---------------------------------- I’m Maryam — international school math teacher. I don’t sugar-coat algebra; I show you the tricks, the traps and how to win. For personalized practice, one-on-one tutoring, or extra question sets, contact me at maryam_nr71@ I work with students around the world to build confidence in algebra and beyond. ---------------------------------- HASHTAGS ---------------------------------- #algebra #radicals #simplifyingradicals #mathtips #mathtutor #algebra1 #algebra2 #mathteacher #mathhelp #mathshorts











