Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Week 14

Lots of traffic on this paradox:  Newcomb's Problem.  Perhaps you would be interested in Cliff Pickover's list of 10 great puzzles.

Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Week 13

This (short) week we'll investigate (mathematical) origami.



Week 11

We're talking theorems ... maybe we look to what interests non-majors.  An engineering student recently showed me two that he found and shared in Physics class.

Zipf's Law --- popularized by a linquist ... this relates to another result, Paredo's Principle, a curious 80% - 20% relationship


Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Week 10

There's a new book (Hidden Figures) being made into a movie to be released in January 2017.  Take a look at its trailer.

Both are based on the stories written by Margot Lee Shetterly, showcasing three particular calculators.  One of them, Katherine Johnson, received The Presidential  Medal of Freedom Nov 2015.
 
Margot Shetterly                                    Katherine Johnson

Week 9


I received a post from Dan Meyer blog, and sent it to you last week.  Since then, Jacob W from class sent a nice solution, and I've followed what others have commented.

The reason for Dan's post was to comment on the need to "do math", and be as intentional about our last or favorite math problem as we might be about our favorite or last book read.  Luckily, I stumbled on comments from Keith Devlin and a new site for cool problems, Brilliant.

Week 8

There is a long tradition of Math contests.  In the US, many States have local exams.  Nationwide,
perhaps the most respected HS contests are the AMC contests.  At the collegiate level, the Putnam Exam has been a tradition more than 80 years old.

Another source of contest is not timed.  Problems are posed in various mathematics journals, and solutions to those problems are eventually published.  One example of problems can be found in the Math Magazine intended for undergraduates.

Monday, October 17, 2016

Week 7

Since there was no post last week, I'll post two that (I think) involve mathematical thinking.  The first clip is from the 1951 movie, Ma & Pa Kettle Back on the Farm.   What makes Ma and Pa so convincing, yet it's wrong, maybe, surely.




There were 10 Ma & Pa Kettle films during the 1940s and 1950s, and their popularity is said to have saved Universal Studios from bankruptcy.  Henry Shapiro explains that the invention of America's idea of Appalachia was in response to an ``otherness'' of these mountain people.  Elsewhere, the dominant theme was the homogeneity of American culture.