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Third Voices Conference On Teaching Stem With Music, September 22-23, 2019, Lawrence M. Lesser
Third Voices Conference On Teaching Stem With Music, September 22-23, 2019, Lawrence M. Lesser
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
The third annual VOICES (Virtual Ongoing Interdisciplinary Collaborations on Educating with Song; https://www.causeweb.org/voices/) conference will be held online September 22-23, 2019. Chaired by Tiffany Getty, this conference will explore the use of song to teach STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) at the postsecondary (or secondary) level.
How To Bake A Theorem, Cache Dexter
How To Bake A Theorem, Cache Dexter
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
We bake bread to satisfy our hunger, and we prove theorems to satisfy our hunger for knowledge and existence. Here I explore this analogy.
Tartaglia Re-Imagined, Aja Juola
Tartaglia Re-Imagined, Aja Juola
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
Niccolo Fontana wrote that he wore a beard because he feared his appearance was monstrous. No one should ever feel such shame about their physical appearance so I figured after all these years I would tell him to bare his scars proudly as a reminder of what he had endured and the life he led.
Applied Scientific Demiurgy I – Entrance Examination Information Sheet, Mario Daniel Martín
Applied Scientific Demiurgy I – Entrance Examination Information Sheet, Mario Daniel Martín
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
This document provides all the required information needed by aspiring demiurges to sit the entrance examination for the foundation course Applied Scientific Demiurgy I in the scientific stream of the Bachelor of Applied Demiurgy at the Topological Hyper-university of Technological Cosmology.
Our Binary World, Simona Carini
Our Binary World, Simona Carini
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
A poem about counting in binary, life, and love.
Tuesday, Ursula Whitcher
Tuesday, Ursula Whitcher
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
"It's Tuesday, and the week's no longer new . . ." This poem's form is taken from the structure of the field with seven elements: the meter, in iambs, follows a pattern based on 5, 4, 6, 2, 3, the nontrivial values taken by powers of 5 (mod 7) as it generates the group of units of the field.
What Is Math?, Christopher Ryan Loga
What Is Math?, Christopher Ryan Loga
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
Here is presented a poem examining what math is and is not and the conclusions (if any) we can draw as such.
A Life Of Equations Shifting To A Life Of Words, Thomas R. Willemain
A Life Of Equations Shifting To A Life Of Words, Thomas R. Willemain
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
As my technical life diminishes, my writing life increases. Since 2017 I have been writing, first a memoir of my time in the Intelligence Community, then poetry and flash fiction.
One of the missions I have assigned to my poetry is to expose to `regular' people the inner life of the mathematical person. The poems in this poetry folder develop three themes. "Formulations'' pokes a bit of fun at the bloated (and in this case almost musical) titles that can grow from our research; more seriously, it documents the change in self-definition that flows from recognizing the inevitable drift away …
Book Review: The Seduction Of Curves By Allan Mcrobie, Hans J. Rindisbacher
Book Review: The Seduction Of Curves By Allan Mcrobie, Hans J. Rindisbacher
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
This review emphasizes, as does the compelling and beautiful book, The Seduction of Curves by Allan McRobie, the “lines of beauty” that link art and mathematics. McRobie and his collaborator on the indispensable visuals of the volume, Helena Weightman, succeed admirably in connecting theoretically and visually the mathematical field of singularity or catastrophe theory and its graphical representations on the one hand and the seemingly intersecting lines around the volumes of the human body in the artistic representation of the nude. This book thus constitutes a creative and illuminating overlap of mathematics and art that lets the practitioners on both …
Book Review: What Is A Mathematical Concept? Edited By Elizabeth De Freitas, Nathalie Sinclair, And Alf Coles, Brendan P. Larvor
Book Review: What Is A Mathematical Concept? Edited By Elizabeth De Freitas, Nathalie Sinclair, And Alf Coles, Brendan P. Larvor
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
This is a review of What is a Mathematical Concept? edited by Elizabeth de Freitas, Nathalie Sinclair, and Alf Coles (Cambridge University Press, 2017). In this collection of sixteen chapters, philosophers, educationalists, historians of mathematics, a cognitive scientist, and a mathematician consider, problematise, historicise, contextualise, and destabilise the terms ‘mathematical’ and ‘concept’. The contributors come from many disciplines, but the editors are all in mathematics education, which gives the whole volume a disciplinary centre of gravity. The editors set out to explore and reclaim the canonical question ‘what is a mathematical concept?’ from the philosophy of mathematics. This review comments …
Ducci’S Four-Number Game: Making Sense Of A Classic Problem Using Mobile Simulation, Lingguo Bu
Ducci’S Four-Number Game: Making Sense Of A Classic Problem Using Mobile Simulation, Lingguo Bu
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
Ducci’s Four-Number Game is a classic mathematical puzzle appealing to a wide audience for its procedural simplicity, mathematical richness, and aesthetic values. This article first describes a few activities appropriate for school students and mathematics teachers to make sense of the intriguing behavior of the game. Then, using a mobile simulation, we delve into the lengths of the Four-Number Game and the corresponding probability distribution. The Ducci number game is playful, engaging, and full of mathematical surprises.
What Are The Odds At The Russia 2018 Fifa World Cup?, Gunhan Caglayan
What Are The Odds At The Russia 2018 Fifa World Cup?, Gunhan Caglayan
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
In this note we explore the group stage competition format in a standard FIFA World Cup Soccer Championship group phase. The group stage involves thirty-two teams divided into eight groups of four teams each, based on a draw that takes the national teams’ seeding and geographical location into consideration. Each of the four teams in a given group is scheduled to play one match against every other team in the same group. Upon the completion of six games in each of the eight groups (for a total of 48 games), the top two highest scoring teams (the winner and the …
Mathematics Out Of Nothing: Talking About Powerful Mathematical Ideas With Children, Matthew Oldridge
Mathematics Out Of Nothing: Talking About Powerful Mathematical Ideas With Children, Matthew Oldridge
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
Parents and educators have powerful opportunities to introduce children to big mathematical ideas, when those ideas become necessary. Children are capable and curious. They don’t need to be sheltered from big mathematical ideas. Bring out mathematical ideas when kids are ready, or when they are needed. This article describes one such instance, when I helped my six-year-old son move beyond zero in the negative direction when subtracting.
Everyman's Climb, Charles A. Coppin
Everyman's Climb, Charles A. Coppin
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
Hal and Verity represent two different philosophies of learning, one used by most of us. In today’s world, authentic teaching is indeed a heroic act, but may not be the most popular. This piece draws distinctions between these choices, each time we teach a course, each day we walk into the classroom, and even when working with an individual student; they are ever present.
Differential Equations Of Love And Love Of Differential Equations, Isaac Elishakoff
Differential Equations Of Love And Love Of Differential Equations, Isaac Elishakoff
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
In this paper, simple ordinary differential equations are discussed against the background of William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. In addition, a version of this relationship in a somewhat opposite setting is considered. It is proposed that engineering mathematics courses include this topic in order to promote additional interest in differential equations. In the final section it is shown that vibration of a single-degree-of-freedom mechanical system can be cast as a love-hate relationship between its displacement and velocity, and dynamic instability identified as a transition from trigonometric love to hyperbolic.
Beyond The Classroom: Mathematics In Service, Jeana Mastrangeli
Beyond The Classroom: Mathematics In Service, Jeana Mastrangeli
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
Mathematical expertise demands effective thinking and learning methods, and these techniques transfer well to other domains. In this article, I discuss how my own training as a pure mathematician influenced my performance in three disparate domains: electrical engineering, art appreciation, and learning Italian. In electrical engineering, the focus is on how mathematical reasoning and thinking processes impact knowledge acquisition and problem solving. Appreciating and analyzing art raises the question, “How do we know for certain?” Acquiring fluency in another language is akin to gaining mathematics proficiency, and here, I explore the human side of persistence. The article combines narrative, reflection, …
Mathematics Students As Artists: Broadening The Mathematics Curriculum, Marshall Gordon
Mathematics Students As Artists: Broadening The Mathematics Curriculum, Marshall Gordon
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
Mathematics has often been referred to as an art. For some it is “the purest of the arts”, where the mathematicians’ art is “asking simple and elegant questions about our imaginary creations, and crafting satisfying and beautiful explanations”. Yet with classroom time given primarily to “covering the curriculum”, testing, and practicing problem-solving procedures, students’ opportunities to appreciate the aesthetic dimension of mathematics are often limited. To promote a responsive environment in an effort to enable students to become artists of their own mathematics experience, I consider in this paper two facets of the mathematics classroom. Content-wise I make the argument …
A Few Firsts In The Epsilon Years Of My Career, Heidi Goodson
A Few Firsts In The Epsilon Years Of My Career, Heidi Goodson
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
In this essay, I describe the unexpected ways I achieved some milestones in the early years of my career.
A Graph-Based Analysis Of Anton Chekhov’S Uncle Vanya, Stanislaw Zawislak, Jerzy Kopeć
A Graph-Based Analysis Of Anton Chekhov’S Uncle Vanya, Stanislaw Zawislak, Jerzy Kopeć
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
We analyze the famous Anton Chekhov play Uncle Vanya by means of graph theory. Moreover, we make the ‘brave’ suggestion that Chekhov might have used graphs to represent the plot of the play and the relationships between characters. Our analysis also includes the analysis of a specific performance of the play held in Bielsko-Biała which differs slightly from the original script. The differences between the two versions are traced via graph-based analyses. When a first round of clique assignments did not give much insight we transformed them via a sequence of operations on consecutive graphs. The final graphs obtained this …
Mathematics Versus Statistics, Mindy B. Capaldi
Mathematics Versus Statistics, Mindy B. Capaldi
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
Mathematics and statistics are both important and useful subjects, but the former has maintained prominence in the American education system. On the other hand, statistics is more prevalent in daily life and is an increasingly marketable subject to know. This article gives a personal history of one mathematician’s bumpy road to learning and teaching statistics. Additionally, arguments for how and why to include statistics in the K-12 and college curricula are provided.
Finding Beauty: A Case Study In Insights From Teaching Developmental Mathematics, Victor Piercey, Geillan Aly
Finding Beauty: A Case Study In Insights From Teaching Developmental Mathematics, Victor Piercey, Geillan Aly
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
As mathematicians, we often fail to appreciate the opportunities open to us when we teach developmental mathematics. One such opportunity is that we may deepen our understanding of mathematics that we have taken for granted. This paper contains a brief case study concerning what we have learned about operations, inverses, and exponents in the process of teaching beginning algebra. Our inquiry takes us from student questions about signed numbers, through the category of rings, to the world of Lie groups and Lie algebras.
Public Recognition And Media Coverage Of Mathematical Achievements, Juan Matías Sepulcre
Public Recognition And Media Coverage Of Mathematical Achievements, Juan Matías Sepulcre
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
This report aims to convince readers that there are clear indications that society is increasingly taking a greater interest in science and particularly in mathematics, and thus society in general has come to recognise, through different awards, privileges, and distinctions, the work of many mathematicians. We provide examples of recognition accorded by institutions, societies, schools, communities, academies, and the public in general to these mathematicians.
Telling Women's Stories: A Resource For College Mathematics Instructors, Sarah Mayes-Tang
Telling Women's Stories: A Resource For College Mathematics Instructors, Sarah Mayes-Tang
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
Stereotypes about mathematicians that conflict with ``traditionally feminine" identities are widely held by people from middle-school-age onwards, and can influence their participation in mathematics and related fields. Simply being exposed to women in mathematics is not enough to change students' perceptions of mathematicians, and may even decrease girls' interest in mathematics. This paper proposes a storytelling strategy to help change students' perceptions of mathematicians. It includes several activities for intentionally incorporating women's stories into the post-secondary classroom and a list of resources for finding existing powerful stories. The diverse stories of women mathematicians, including details of their personal lives and …
Using Hidden Markov Modeling For Biogeographical Ancestry Analysis, Melvin R. Currie
Using Hidden Markov Modeling For Biogeographical Ancestry Analysis, Melvin R. Currie
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
This paper describes a methodology for analyzing X-chromosome data to establish biogeographical contributions to the author’s X chromosome. We present an exposition of how Hidden Markov Modeling (HMM) can be used as a black box for ancestry analysis and focus on a set of conditions that are not universal but fairly common. The first condition is that the ancestral populations are drawn from regions that have had very little or no contact with each other since prehistoric times. The second condition is that the number of possible ancestral populations is small. In this analysis, we assume that the ancestral populations …
Choose Your Own Adventure: An Analysis Of Interactive Gamebooks Using Graph Theory, D'Andre Adams, Daniela Beckelhymer, Alison Marr
Choose Your Own Adventure: An Analysis Of Interactive Gamebooks Using Graph Theory, D'Andre Adams, Daniela Beckelhymer, Alison Marr
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
"BEWARE and WARNING! This book is different from other books. You and YOU ALONE are in charge of what happens in this story." This is the captivating introduction to every book in the interactive novel series, Choose Your Own Adventure (CYOA). Our project uses the mathematical field of graph theory to analyze forty books from the CYOA book series for ages 9-12. We first began by drawing the digraphs of each book. Then we analyzed these digraphs by collecting structural data such as longest path length (i.e. longest story length) and number of vertices with outdegree zero (i.e. number …
Engaging Crisis: Immersive, Interdisciplinary Learning In Mathematics And Rhetoric, Meredith L. Greer, Stephanie Kelley-Romano
Engaging Crisis: Immersive, Interdisciplinary Learning In Mathematics And Rhetoric, Meredith L. Greer, Stephanie Kelley-Romano
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
This paper describes an interdisciplinary activity that crosses over between Mathematics and Rhetoric. The professors who created this activity both sought active-learning opportunities for their students, a sense of realism--even urgency--in what can otherwise be perceived as abstract material, and a meaningful liberal arts experience. Evidence of the power of this experience is seen in the media coverage, both from our college and from the Portland Press Herald newspaper. Both courses described in this paper are at the elective level, taken by majors or minors in their respective disciplines. Students have moderate to extensive backgrounds in their subject areas. However, …
Visual Teaching Of Geometry And The Origins Of 20th Century Abstract Art, Stephen Luecking
Visual Teaching Of Geometry And The Origins Of 20th Century Abstract Art, Stephen Luecking
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
As a group, the artists educated near the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries possessed greater mathematical knowledge than expected of artists today, especially regarding constructive skills in Euclidean geometry. Educational theory of the time stressed such skills for students in general, who needed these to enter the workplace of the time. Mathematics teaching then stressed the use of manipulatives, i.e., visual and interactive aids thought to better fix the student’s acquisition of mathematical skills. This visual training, especially in geometry, significantly affected the early development of abstraction in art. This paper presents examples of this visual …
Anschaulich: Visualization, Imagination, Mathematics, Mark Huber, Gizem Karaali
Anschaulich: Visualization, Imagination, Mathematics, Mark Huber, Gizem Karaali
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
No abstract provided.
Special Issue Call For Papers: Creativity In Mathematics, Milos Savic, Emily Cilli-Turner, Gail Tang, Gulden Karakok, Houssein El Turkey
Special Issue Call For Papers: Creativity In Mathematics, Milos Savic, Emily Cilli-Turner, Gail Tang, Gulden Karakok, Houssein El Turkey
Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
The Journal of Humanistic Mathematics is pleased to announce a call for papers for a special issue on Creativity in Mathematics. Please send your abstract submissions via email to the guest editors by March 1, 2019. Initial submission of complete manuscripts is due August 1, 2019. The issue is currently scheduled to appear in July 2020.