• Math

    Technology Meets Tradition

    by  • June 12, 2013 • Math • 0 Comments

    Sadly, there are folks out there in the math and math education world who really don’t get what programs like GeoGebra and Desmos can do to open up mathematics to people who might not otherwise approach it. I happily commented on a forum thread recently, in which a member posed a geometry question. I...

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    Ancient Chinese Geometry

    by  • June 11, 2013 • Math • 1 Comment

    Liu Hui was a 3rd century Chinese mathematician. I first stumbled upon him when I saw puzzles based on dissection proofs of the Pythagorean Theorem (Shang Gao Theorem (商高定理)) at ICME11 in 2004. Recently I’ve been exploring the trisection of a cube, so I could give students a way to discover the formula for...

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    Volume of Platonic Solids & Spheres

    by  • June 2, 2013 • Math • 0 Comments

    How it might work – in a nutshell (maybe a coconut) Working as a class, students will construct the 50 pyramids that make up the five Platonic Solids. These pyramids all have a height of 5 units, and each one has a polygon that is a face of one of the solids as its...

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    Conic Section Animations

    by  • May 21, 2013 • Math • 0 Comments

    The CCSS call for lessons on conic sections – after many schools have stopped teaching them, at least in non-honors classes. So, I wanted a way to show students how these slices of cones are defined and where the parts of the equations come from. I got busy in GeoGebra, spending a weekend making...

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    Honeycombs and Hot Dogs

    by  • May 18, 2013 • Math • 0 Comments

    I came across this NPR article by Robert Krulwich, called “What Is It About Bees And Hexagons?,” and I got totally sucked in to the comment thread. The more I read, the cooler it seemed, and the more I wanted to build these things and teach my kids about them. Each cell starts out looking something...

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