Weavings and Tilings

At the Bridges Math and Art Conference in Portugal I learned quite a bit about mathematics and weaving.  One of the many simple and fun ideas I left with was using weaving to explore tilings of the plane.

With some graph paper to plan your tiling, some pre-cut construction paper to assemble them, and some patience to work through the process, you can produce some nice results.  Here are some examples from a recent Math for America workshop I led on Math and Art.  More images can be seen on my Facebook page.

Geogebra Resources

This is an amazing collection of hundreds (thousands?) of well-designed Geogebra worksheets:

http://dmentrard.free.fr/GEOGEBRA/Maths/accueilmath.htm

The author, Daniel Mentrard, has put together a huge library of mathematics and physics demonstrations/explorations that are all available for free.

Although the site is in French, it’s not too hard to browse the many Geogebra resources covering Arithmetique, Art et Maths, Algebre, and much more.

And if you like, you can always run the website through Google Translate.

2011 Sloan Award Winners

I would like to extend my congratulations to the recipients of the 2011Sloan Awards for Excellence in Teaching Science and Mathematics.

These awards, presented by the Fund for the City of New York, recognize outstanding teachers in the New York City Public School System.  I am very proud to have received this award in 2010.

As a teacher, the current public discourse that focuses mainly on what is “broken” in public education can be deflating.  It is wonderful to be a part of something that honors the great work teachers do every day.

Here’s a short write-up in the New York Times about the winners, and bios and videos of this year’s recipients can be found here:  http://www.fcny.org/fcny/core/sae/.

The 11-10-11 Triangle

Today’s date, 11-10-11, reminded me to re-visit a recent post that posed the question “Which triangle is more equilateral:  the 10-10-11 triangle, or the 10-11-11 triangle?”

The original post elicited lots of great comments from readers, who weighed in on what they thought the question meant and how they might go about trying to answer it.  I offered one approach, and an answer to the question, in this follow up post.

As a math teacher, there are many reasons I try to create problems like this.  Here are a few that I think are important.

First and foremost, in order to address this question, a significant amount of thought must be put into deciding what the question means.  This process involves analysis, synthesis, reflection, and ideally discussion, all of which will be substantially mathematical in nature.

A second, related, virtue is that there is no obviously correct interpretation of what this question means.  Mathematics is often viewed in stark terms:  answers are either right or wrong.  But the certitude of mathematics comes only after we agree on mathematical models for our given problem.  There is often great debate about what those models should look like; the history of mathematics is full of such debate.

Problems like this one invite students into the modelling process, where they can discuss and debate the validity of various approaches.  Moreover, the problem allows solvers to create multiple different models to explore, compare, and contrast.  And in the end, we can pose and explore meta-mathematical question like “Which model most closely aligns with our intuitions?” and “Which model is the most useful?”

Lastly, this problem demonstrates one role creativity plays in mathematics.  A simple response to the question, one I heard many times, is “Neither of these triangles are equilateral.  They are both equally unequilateral.”  Given our rigid definition of what equilateralmeans, this response is technically correct.  But by relaxing our ideas about equilateral, by allowing ourselves to ponder what the phrase “more equilateral” might mean, by thinking creatively about what kinds of questions we can ask, we create an opportunity to explore, and possibly uncover, some new mathematical ideas.

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