"In a way, then, this is also a story about social and educational systems, and about how they matter, and how they can sometimes nurture talent and sometimes crush it. How many Ramanujans, his life begs us to ask, dwell in India today, unknown and unrecognized? And how many in America and Britain, locked away in racial or economic ghettos, scarcely aware of worlds outside their own?"
Thursday, June 23, 2016
Call to Arms
Saturday, May 25, 2013
Math & Nature Intersect, Again
Marcus du Sautoy uses the 17 yr Cicada as an example of the pervasiveness of prime numbers (and his favorite number) in Music of the Primes and Num8er My5teries. These are both regular resources that I use in my Math 5 Number Theory unit, so my 5th graders are excited to experience something they've already learned about, and it will be a wonderful first hand refence for my 5th graders next fall!
Recently, in response to #Swarmageddon, The New Yorker posted an article on the role of prime numbers in natural selection. Here's how I shared it with my students via our Edmodo STEM Forum:
As we have often explored in class, and will continue to explore through this forum, Maths are EVERYWHERE! I always say that the numbers have always been there, humans have only found ways to decode some of their mysteries through Maths. Most exciting, we keep discovering new Maths, new ways of describing and understanding the universe in which we live.
http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/elements/2013/05/why-cicadas-love-prime-numbers.html
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
40 Million Times A Year
How many times does your heart beat?...in an hour?...in a day?...in a month?...in a year?...in your life?
While I expected some interesting discussion about how the set up the problem, I did not expect the incredible level of discussion before doing a single calculation. And not by just the one or two über insightful students, but by the entire class. This simple prompt to initiate practice of a mechanical skill with real data has turned into a incredibly rich investigation. My students have engaged the school nurse, as well as outside experts via Twitter.
After presenting the prompt above, my students launched into an animated half hour long discussion, considering a wide range of associated questions:
- how many times does it beat in a minute
- How do we know how fast it beats?
- It matters if you're exercising or still.
- It depends on what you're doing.
- It might matter what you're eating.
- If you're running it beats fast.
- It depends how long you live.
- The months have different numbers of days and there are leap years.
- Does gravity matter?
- Does your mass/weight matter?
- Does our heart slow down while sleeping?
- Does fatigue or dehydration effect it?
- Does age matter?
- The rate is always changing.
- We need an estimate.
- Does your height matter?
- We need to get resting pulse, then exercising, get an average, something in middle.
- We need a rate between the highs and lows.
- Everyone will have a different answer.
- Does respiration rate matter?
As the discussion started to wind down, I asked for suggestions of what to do. Again, the idea of findinsg a median resting pulse was suggested. Not by name, but in concept: "Some people will have a slower pulse and some will be faster. We need to figure out what the middle [pulse rate] will be." We arrived at a median resting pulse of 76 beats per minute.
For homework, I asked them, "How many times will your heart beat in 2013?" And that brings us to the title of this post. Take care of your hearts my friends, it is a busy muscle.
The investigation has continued to build. I will share more in my next post.
Sunday, March 4, 2012
MW's Math Library
Arranged in no particular order, this is a list of some of the math(s) books on my shelf, piles actually, that I am currently reading, have read, or to be read. Ok, so its the pile within reach of my favorite chair. As time allows, I will create a more complete database and share it. These are the books that I read and reread as I am planning my lessons or simply want to escape into the world of math literature. There are fun problems, human stories, histories, theory... These are some of the books I routinely pull excerpts from to share with my math students to help the see the beauty of math and learn that math is more than arithmetic. They are the source of inspiration for challenging problems for my students, and me, to chew on. They are inspiration. I thought my followers might find something interesting here. Please use the comment box below to share some of the titles in your piles, or comment on how you make use of books like this with your students.
The Math Book From Pythagoras to the 57th Dimension, 250 Milestones in the History of Mathematics, Clifford A Pickover
The Mystery of Numbers, Annemarie Schimmel
The Golden Ratio, Mario Livio
The Man Who Counted, Malba Tahan
Fascinating Fibonaccis, Trudi Hammel Garland
Sacred Geometry, Stephen Skinner
The Num8er My5teries, Marcus du Sautoy
Finding Moonshine, Marcus du Sautoy
The Music of the Primes, Marcus du Sautoy
Symmetry, Marcus du Sautoy
Zeno's Paradox, Joseph Mazur
Cabinet of Mathematical Curiosities, Ian Stewart
Hoard of Mathematical Treasures, Ian Stewart
Number Theory and it's History, Oystein Ore
A Mathematicians Apology, GH Hardy
The Man Who Loved Only Numbers, Paul Hoffman
Number, John McLeish
Fermat's Enigma, Simon Singh
Thursday, February 2, 2012
MathCast Project
The first thing we did, was take a look at a video (Ma & Pa Kettle Do Math: see below) that used humor to explore a math concept. In this case it was the concept of place value, percents, fractions, and division.
- What is the math concept presented in this MathChat?
- What about the MathChat helped you understand the math concept being presented? Be specific.
- What suggestions do you have that might make this MathCast better?
- I got to listen to the ideas of the others in my group. Get their ideas and put them together with my own.
- A different way to learn the concept. You get to learn how other people beside yourself say and understand it.
- Having to perform it helps me understand it. Easier to get the understanding than just copying notes.
- You have to make sure you really know it or you risk presenting false information. Makes your explanations better.
- In our notes we don't always record all that we know and understand. This forces us to explain everything completely, as if to a younger student.
- Helps me remember the information, rehearsal of script.
- We think we know it, so thinking, "how can I explain this and have it make sense?"
- Have to put the ideas into our own words, forces you to really think about it.
- The process of making a movie: creating characters, writing script, using iMovie...
- Not just putting down notes. Not JUST math, have to learn to use the technology. Cool to learn how to link the math to the movie idea.
- I can use the technology to say what I've learned. Don't really do that in other [academic] areas.
- Like doing something creative in math.
- Most fun thing I've ever done in math. Had to do a lot of math, but also got to include the arts.
- Liked that there weren't so many boundaries. We just had to include the math.
- Liked that it was all our own ideas.
- Fun way to express what I know and creative.
- Would like to do this in EVERY unit. I think it should be LAW.
- It's cool to watch others' projects.
- Learned a lot from other groups movies.
- Makes math more fun.
- Like freedom of choosing my topic.
- Getting to work with others and hear their ideas. Learn how they thought about the topic.
- Collaborative group process. Have to work together. Have to learn how to compromise.
- Helps me think about more ways to understand a topic by listening to others' ideas.
- Hearing the ideas of others and putting them together with my own. I talked.
- More freedom, being able to use humor and entertainment, but still making sure we communicated some math.
Closing Thoughts...
I don't know what more I can say that my students didn't say above to illustrate the power of this project. Yes, I made a deliberate decision not to go on to a new topic and spend another week on these concepts. However, this was incredibly powerful and worth every class minute. Whatever items I don't get to this year are insignificant in comparison to how much they learned in creating these MathCasts and how it deepened their understanding of basic rational number concepts. Using the iPads and the various apps that students employed in their productions was a perfect vehicle for the project. It could of course be done with nothing more than pencil, paper, and a video camera, but having everything needed in one convenient tool helped make it more accessible to the students. It encouraged them to experiment. And, while they were learning, they were having a lot of fun! I encourage any of my followers to give this project a try. Feel free to send me an email if you have any questions about the specifics. Special thanks to my curriculum supervisor for sharing the MathCast idea, and thanks to our two wonderful instruction technologies specialists for helping me think through the technical details of the project.