Appetizers and Lessons for Mathematics and Reason  ( Français)  
www.whyslopes.com            
 Logic mastery is key to easing or avoiding learning difficulties in work & studies. 
What does it mean to use a formula forwards and backwards? 

Online Volumes (Book Orders)
1,  Elements of Reason. 1996
1A. Pattern Based Reason  1995
1B. Math Curriculum Notes 1996
2. Three Skills for Algebra  1995
3.
Why Slopes & More Math 1995

Links To Tutoring Services

Site  Folders for Instructors & Adults
A. Public Policy Matters -  Essays
B.  Mathematics  Education Essays  2006-7
C.  Logic & Applied Math Program  
    for education,  June 22, 2008 
D.  Quebec English Math Ed  2002-7
E.  Help your child or teen
How TOs/ Ref.-08- 2008
1. Arithmetic Reference
2. Algebra 
3. More Algebra 
4. Geometry  
5. More Geometry
6. Calculus
7. Logics in Maths

Mathematics
Curriculum
Notes

Printed in Canada
ISBN 0-9697564-6-1



This folder has a tree like structure. The child, same level and parent level webpages for this webpage follow..

1. Introduction
2 For & Against Math
3 Algebra
4 Why Slopes & Complex No.
5 References - Past Efforts
6 Euclidean Logic
7 Geometry in 2 Ways
8 Modern Instruction
9 The Two Ends
10 The Transition
11 Primary School Math
12 Four Phases

 

 Mathematics Curriculum Notes is for teachers, course designers and advanced students of mathematics or a quantitative college discipline. This work describes simply yet precisely, the role of rule-based reason, that is logic, in providing a thought-based framework and codification for mathematical thought. It further describes how an inductive educational philosophy provides a context for math and logic instruction from primary school to college. Ideas which are easily repeated and understood may provide a common knowledge of mathematics and the rule-based reason sufficient for a more formal and rigorous comprehension.

This work was written prior to the my knowledge of how constructivism differed from earlier ideas and practices in education. So this work was written to report inductive principles and standards for what today might be called training  or direct instruction,  and not the constructivist form of education.  This work support one answer to the question of what should a mathematics student meet and master. The supported answer is the primary and secondary student should met and learn to apply mathematical tools and practices, rules and conventions, those collected to provide a practical command of mathematics and to prepare students for calculus.  Calculus itself might be part of a early tertairy or senior secondary program in mathematics. 

Book (Folder) Contents

Volume 1B and site material addresses gaps in the modern mathematics curricula of the mid-1950s to late 1980's in a manner discordant with constructivist principles and standards.  The application of subjective theories of knowledge to mathematics, law, science and technology, is inconsistent with the essence of  these disciplines, a striving for objectivity & expelling subjectivity , modulo, the origins, benefits and limitations of rule- and pattern-actions & theory. Subjective theories of education which say individual learning and knowledge is not observable and which imply student performance on tests is unpredictable provide a self-fulfilling prophecy in the absence of drill and practice. No work, no gain, needs to be understood.  Constructivist criticism of testing as unreliable is rhetorical twist on the well-known limitation of hypothesis testing in the  empirical science in which testing may refute & eliminate hypotheses but not confirm them.

 Site pages advocate an operational command of mathematical rules and conventions through drill and practice with testing & correction, and innovations in course design and delivery to speed learning and teaching. 

What should a student of carpentry master? Answer: the student learns to use the tools and practices that define the discipline in an observable and verifiable manner.  

In practice, mathematics consists of tools and practices which education needs to provide. Any thing different may be part of education, but not mathematics education.  . 

The Foreword provides inductive principles and standards for course design and delivery. Those inductive principles - support of them - guided book writing and site expansion. 

The first chapter introduces the main ideas in the rest of this work and describes gaps, flaws or inconsistencies in the exposition of the subject. 

The chapter For and Against Mathematics indicates why people and not just mathematicians may interest themselves in the subject. No one reason can satisfy everyone. Reasons for student aversion to mathematics and scientific thought are noted.

The chapter Algebraic Thought, describes the algebra barrier, its consequences in more detail, and offers words to lower or remove it. In brief, three skills, described with words and reinforced in examples, may introduce and explain the algebraic or symbolic way of writing and thinking clearly. Their discussion and illustration will further clarify as well two notions of a variable, one symbol-free. The mathematical adept are so accustomed to thinking in terms of symbols, that the pre-symbolic notion of a variable is often overlooked and taken for granted.

Skip on First Reading: The chapter Complex Numbers and Why Slopes offers two glimpses of mathematics. The first glimpse or example gives a simple exposition of complex numbers. Part of it motivates trigonometric reasoning and part of it, given say in early secondary or late primary instruction, defines multiplication so that the law of signs and the square root of (-1) both become clear and obvious to pre-algebraic students – an immediate consequence of the product definition. The second glimpse previews the geometric interpretation of slopes in calculus. This example requires only a familiarity with the slope of straight line segment and the geometric significance of zero, positive and negative slopes. These two glimpses show how a minimal background is sufficient to understand significant strands of reason in mathematics. (Postscript: Where rote learning is the rule, introducing complex numbers as indicated in site pages would give an efficient ways to introduce trigonometry while gifted students may be pointed to the missing details).

The chapter References identifies works which this author found useful and re-assuring in the composition of this work. Given the scope of this work, I looked in the library for supporting and/or conflicting material. The ideas below are not in conflict with those I have seen in the literature. Further exploration of the math education literature is left to those employed in the field.

A chapter Rule-Based Reason in Mathematics describes the un-ruled and pre-codified origins of mathematics apart from geometry. The algebraic and symbolic way of writing and reasoning was and still is, if done quickly, able to suggest more than can be proven. This chapter describes the advent of the deductive and axiomatic set theoretic foundation or codification for arithmetic based mathematics and the motivation for the advent. Geometry falls within the domain of this codification through coordinates. The next chapter says how.

The chapter Two Treatments of Geometry discusses and compares the older, ruler and compass oriented, synthetic treatment of Euclidean geometry, the synthetic treatment, with the newer analytic approach based on coordinates. Presence of two approaches, one older and one newer, gives at least two axiomatic developments of geometric knowledge – variants are possible. Both or all need to be recognized and reconciled in the exposition of geometry. That is, the correspondence between the two approaches should be discussed in class, else students are left with two unreconciled axiomatic perspectives of geometry.

Postscript: The site areas on Euclidean Geometry relies on physical ideas, impure mathematics, for arriving at conclusions and giving a deductive  Many ideas in mathematics derive from or are motivated by geometric factors. Those factors or similar ones could drive mathematics education from arithmetic to introductory calculus. 

The chapter Modern Mathematics Instruction describes how this author met a modern mathematics curriculum in the late 1960s and makes observations about mathematics instruction which support the recommendations given in this work. Further support for the recommendations is given in the next chapter.

The chapter The Two Ends describes primary mathematics instruction and college level mathematics service courses. For most people entering college, this represents the start and finish, the two ends, of their math education. Observations here support earlier instructional thoughts.

A long chapter The Transition details how intermediate level courses may provide a smooth transition between the two ends. This chapter offers a program to develop algebraic and deductive thought apart from geometry. Again, teachers or curriculum committees may think of further topics to add or to refine the proposed core of this program. See the companion books or their table of contents.

The long chapter Elementary Instruction describes its subjects pre-algebraic and pre-deductive, yet thought based, nature. This chapter describes how the common knowledge of counting, arithmetic and simple formulas might be cultivated or taught to a young child in pre-deductive fashion. Included at the end of this discussion is a recommendation. Complex numbers can be mastered via a simple operational approach. The approach is based on the addition and multiplication of points in the plane using rectangular and/or polar coordinates. There is a context here for the discussion of negative numbers and their square roots.

The chapter Four Phases describes a four stage development of skills, one suggested or implied by the previous chapters. The aim of the first three stages is to broaden the common knowledge of math and logic. In them, ease of exposition, preparation for the fourth phase, and preparation for quantitative reasoning in other subjects will be the guide. This work for the most part is dedicated to the first three phases: how to extend the common knowledge of TCPIT (the common person in the street). Implementation of the fourth phase is left to college level courses in mathematics.

Next: Foreword with Inductive Principles for Instruction.


 

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