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Bowland Maths

The new Bowland Maths Website is the website of a new project which seeks to ground maths in an explorative, problem solving environment.

Bowland Mathematics seeks to develop meta-cognitive skills and promote an analytical, quantitative attitude towards problem solving. These goals are worthy, and important life skills, but they are difficult to measure cleanly. With curricula that separate the strands of mathematics in a way that encourages their their teaching to be separated also, and with testing that aims at accountability over intelligence, school mathematics has become ever more piecemeal and disconnected with reality. Bowland is an important project that seeks to reclaim some of the lost ground.

I urge, in the strongest possible terms, that anyone involved in mathematics education take this initiative seriously. I have no vested interest in the scheme, but simply I believe that it is crucial that initiatives such as this succeed and are built upon.

More Radio 4 Media

Below I review two media resources that are well worth a listen, for teachers, interested adults, and perhaps older students. These are not resources in themselves, but I am sure that educators will find stories and examples in these programmes that can have direct application in the classroom.

Cosmic Quest

Cosmic Quest This fabulous narrative history of human understanding of the Cosmos tells one of the greatest stories in the history of ideas. It is pleasingly compact, and easy to listen to. All the episodes are available to listen to from the BBC website.

In Our Time – Probability

Melvyn Bragg’s excellent In Our Time broadcast and podcast on probability last week was an excellent discussion of the history of probability with, among others, Prof. Marcus du Sautoy, who is always worth listening to! The podcast can be found here.

Exact Sine and Cosine Values

Dr Ron Knott in the Department of Mathematics at Surrey University is not a name I recognised, but reading his resume, I now realise that I have heard him talk a few times about Mathematics on Radio 4, both on Simon Singh’s 5 Numbers series, and in Melvyn Bragg’s In Our Time podcast.

I was looking for some information about exact values of trigonometric ratios, and came across his most informative site. I was extremely pleasantly surprised to discover that for some values the trigonometric functions give exact solutions in terms of phi, the golden ratio, among other information.

For example, did you know that the cosine of 27 degrees is exactly a half of the square root of (two plus the square root of (two subtract phi)). (One day when I finish writing my own equation display movies, I’ll write that out in a prettier way, Dr Knott’s website tries a little harder than I do). I love that the number 27, which clearly wants to be prime so much it tricks generations of children into thinking it is, the square root of two and the golden ratio are connected inextricably through the circle-based cosine function. Fantastic!

The whole page, indeed the whole of his site in general, is steeped in extremely interesting, and relatively accessible mathematics with Fibonacci numbers, Egyptian Fractions and so on and so forth. It’s mostly a site for KS4 and beyond (14 years old +), with most material for the older students. Some of it is not for the faint-hearted. However, it is a valuable resource for mathematicians of all hues, and well worth a look.

Free eBook about Martin Gardner & Other Free Maths Resources

I recently stumbled upon Mr Barton Maths page of Essential Freebies, where I was delighted to discover Furbles was one of his essentials.

However, the real gem of the collection in my opinion is the free online PDF of a tribute to Martin Gardner, who was a spectacular mathematical puzzler, without whom the mathematical world would be much the poorer. You can download the ebook at G4G4.com.

John Mason’s Conference Thoughts

John Mason, Professor of Mathematics Education at the Open University, was the closing speaker at this year’s MA-ATM combined mathematics education conference.

The central theme of the talk was the importance of reflecting upon experiences in order to unify them. We don’t often seem to learn from experience alone Prof. Mason exhorted; we learn incrementally, unifying experiences with one another, gradually gaining awareness of a greater whole.

Unifying experiences does not happen by chance; or rather, it should not. As teachers we must act as faciliators of this reflective process. One way to achieve this is to offer students familiar patterns of problems which are then developed and extended, and the richness drawn out of them through reflection.

The associated prensentation to the talk, with examples of such activities can be downloaded from Prof. Mason’s website, or by clicking on the link below:

Powerpoint: Closing Plenary at the MA-ATM Conference

Of course, this presentation does not do justice to an impassioned talk from such an experienced educator!

There was a great deal of truth in Prof. Mason’s talk. One of the main things that I will take away from the talk was my reflection during the talk that as a teacher I found myself too often concentrating on the activity in quantity, searching to find new activities and new ways of approaching a topic. I would find them on the internet, or in books, or by asking others. By contrast, the activities considered in Prof. Mason’s talk could be found only by taking the mathematics seriously and doing the mathematics for yourself. He searched for activities in quality, searching for ways of reusing the familiar but provoking new thought within that structure. From this, students are in a position to draw upon previous experiences, become familiar with areas of mathematics, and begin to unify their experiences. That is a lesson worth (re)learning!

Physics Phun

Phun is a free two-dimensional physics sandbox for Windows.

A video of it in action can be found on this You Tube. Unfortunately they don’t yet have a Mac version, so I haven’t been able to try it out myself, but the videos looks stunning.

This has fantastic potential educational value for physics and maths, but in the same way that the Geometer’s Sketchpad does – it is easy to see the potential, but rather more difficult to harness it.

There must be some middle road between the openness of this sort of ‘sandbox’, which for university students and older computer literate school students has tremendous educational value, and something more rigid that allows more nervous or younger students to engage with the simulations it offers constructively. The problem is, what is that road?

Primitives Article

Cover of Mathematics Teacher 207

In this month’s Mathematics Teacher magazine is an article about prime factorisation by me. It discusses an idea for teaching and learning about prime factorisation that minimises ‘telling’ and maximises students mathematical exploration.

Dave Hewitt, a lecturer in Mathematics Education from the University of Birmingham (and my PGCE mentor a few years ago), has written a series of articles about separating the arbitrary (or contingent) and the necessary and mathematics, and teaching by ‘telling’ only those things which are arbitrary. The idea is that students need to engage and discover for themselves the necessary connections and patterns in mathematics, but the arbitrary are not discoverable in the same way, and so need to be told to people.

This position has influenced my thinking about mathematics education, particularly with respect to algorithms. My conjecture is that using an algorithm involves no mathematical thought; at best, it is an exercise in arithmetic. However, where an algorithm exists there is likely to be a kernel of really interesting mathematics, and creating an algorithm to perform a particular function involves a great deal of mathematical thought. The goal of the investigation was to capture the interesting maths in an interesting way, that the students can engage with, and which they can learn from.

The accompanying software can be found in the primitives section of this website.

Flat Earthers – Thinking about Limits

I was recently invited to do an IQ test. One of the questions was as follows: “You walk five miles north, five miles west, then five miles south. How far are you from where you started?” The answer that they were looking for was 5 miles.

Perhaps our use of maps convince us of this logic; a logic based on Cartesian 2-dimensional geometry. Unfortunately, we do not live on a Cartesian plane!

How should we understand this IQ test question when we correctly consider that we live on a sphere? A good way to consider this is to think about what happens at the two poles!

The South Pole

Start at the south pole. Travel five miles north. Travelling west is to travel parallel to the equator, so then when travelling five miles west, you get no further from the pole. Then travel five miles south. You arrive where you started, with no distance between where you started and where you are now.

The North Pole

The north pole example is more difficult to imagine, and some may think there’s a trick here. If you start five miles and a bit south of the north pole, move five miles north then five miles west in many tight circles around the pole ending up exactly opposite to where you were when you originally arrived near the pole. Then move five miles south. More or less, you are now ten miles away from where you started.

The trick here is the ‘bit’ which ensures two things: firstly that you can in fact travel west; secondly that having travelled five miles west you finish up exactly opposite where you were when you started moving west. It might be argued that if you ended up exactly at the pole then you would be unable to move west at all. The ‘bit’ ensures that there is a trivially small circle around the pole that you can travel west around. It is also necessary to end up exactly opposite where you started to maximise the resultant difference between the two starting positions. If you imagine the bit as a radius of a circle around the pole, then it can be calculated as any r such that 5 miles = (2n+1)*pi*r where n is a positive integer.

Summary

Thinking about a problem often involves thinking around its extremes or limits. When thinking about compass bearings on a sphere, the poles offer places where their odd relationship to each other are most apparent. The IQ problem assumes that we live somewhere where the relationship between the compass bearings closely resembles the relationship between Cartesian axes. At the poles this similarity breaks down most markedly. By thinking about moving to and and from the poles, it transpires that if you move five miles north, five miles west, and five miles south, you may end up a distance of x miles from where you started, where x is such that: 0 miles <= x < 10 miles.

Now, if the IQ test was testing for this as an answer, I would have been suitably impressed!

Philosophical Footnote

The earliest known argument against the earth being flat comes from Aristotle, who argued that the shadow that the Earth casts onto the moon during lunar eclipses is always circular. The only object which casts a circular shadow irrespective of its orientation is a sphere, and since night and day convince us that the earth does not have a constant orientation with respect to the moon and the sun, the Earth must be spherical. (Aristotle De Caelo, 297b31-298a10)

Our natural instincts about the world are perhaps that it exists on a plane that is looped; the outside of a cylinder with the poles at the top and bottom of the cylinder. This is a practical simplified model of the earth because until you get into the arctic and antarctic more or less, two people moving north are moving more or less parallel to each other, and the consequences of longitude and latitude working on quite separate principles need not be considered.

We could of course change the way that north and south work, and make them akin to east and west. Perhaps the great circle through Grenwich could be the East-West equator, as in some senses it is, and we could therefore define an east and west pole, somewhere on the equator! It is an interesting thought experiment. Would our concepts be more easily understandable if we did this? Why did North and South become defined as it is?

In Our Time – Fibonacci Sequence

In Our Time is a BBC Radio 4 presented by Melvyn Bragg. It is an intellectual talking-heads discussion programme about philosophy, science, mathematics and so on. This week the discussion was aobut the Fibonacci Sequence. The podcast can be downloaded here.

For maths teachers, KS3 and KS4 students will enjoy and learn from the discussion between Melvyn Bragg, Professor Marcus du Sautoy, and others. It is well worth a listen.

A new voice calling for exam overhaul

The Education Guardian reports that the Specialist Schools and Academies Trust urge school exam overhaul. It is encouraging to hear another voice added to the growing clamour for change.

The SSAT argue that the government has “consistently exaggerated the technical rigour of national assessments and the GCSE“. They argue that by changing the curriculum and therefore changing the content that is being tested, it becomes extremely problematic to maintain and compare standards.

The SSAT also argue that there are testing cause a degree of stress and that the level of continued stress that students are exposed to has become unreasonable and counter-productive. In place of the SATs they suggest using sample testing of randomly selected pupils to monitor performance.

The response from the DCSF is staggering: “… we are not looking at sample testing of randomly selected pupils … It is hard to see how any sample of children could be truly representative of one school … the idea that children are over tested is not a view that the government accepts … we don’t believe that in this day and age parents can be expected to have hidden from them the real achievements of their children at school.”

If the governmental body responsible for our curriculum do not understand sample testing, then I am deeply concerned with the science curriculum; if do not understand how sample testing can give representative data, then they do not understand science. Science is based wholly upon the statistical analysis of sample data. Given a sample and the overall population size, we can very accurately calculate how representative that sample is. Simply, this argument is nonsense.

The original premise for introducing SATs was as a means of measuring schools performance. The DCSF statement concedes that they have now become GCSEs for younger students – performance assessments for the students and their parents to measure themselves with.

Despite this the government does not accept that children are over tested. I am absolutely and utterly convinced that the government is wrong about this. Sadly, there is no easy way of measuring what level of stress is acceptable to expose children to. However, I would have thought that until tests GCSEs, the natural inclinations of all parents and teachers would be to minimise unnecessary stress. This is not the government’s inclination.