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OnlineVolumes
1, Elements of Reason.
-with foreword for all volumes
1A. Pattern Based Reason
- striving for objectivity, etc
1B. Math Curriculum
Notes
inductive principles etc
2. Three Skills for
Algebra
- unifying themes + study skills
3. Why
Slopes & More Math - previews & starter lessons for
elementary & advanced calculus.
See Volume 2 and 3 if you are preparing kids for calculus.
More Site Areas
1. Help Your Child or Teen
Learn.
2. Linear Equations
& Fraction Skills - Sec I to V level
3. Fractions Ratios
Rates Proportions Units - Sec I & II
4. Euclidean
Geometry - Sec IV
5. Analytic Geometry -Sec
IV & V
6. Number Theory. Sec V
&VI
7. More Calculus Sec V
& VI
8. Complex Numbers Sec
II to VI
9. Qc Maths Education
10. Secondary IV(?) math
11.Real
Analysis College level
12. LaTeX2HotEqn College level
13. Electric Circuits Etc
Sec IV+
14 Français - Sec III +
15. www.whyslopes.com Entrance
Level Pages:
This Calculus
Preview and Chapters 2 to 6 in Volume 3 offer lessons to make
the hard easier at the start of calculus, or to provide a context for the study
of slopes and factored polynomials before calculus.
Your IP
Address &
how to use it
Three Links for Teachers:
(i) First
Year High School Math - Lesson Plans with Fraction Focus
(ii) Second
Year High School Math - Lesson Plans with an algebra focus
(iii) Algebra Lesson
Plans
Parents: Site Area Helping
Your Child or Teen Learn covers 1.
Speaking Skills, 2.
Reading & Writing, 3.
Preparing for Science, 4.
Math Work Books, 5.Books
for Parents, 6.
Mathematics for ages 6 to 14, 7.
Having Patience -you'll need it. Chaperone your sons and
daughters through jumpMath
workbooks for grades 3 to 8 along side site lessons for grades 7 to college and
material elsewhere. Parents and teachers need to say no for small things of
little consequence to build and maintain authority to say no for larger matters.
Parental authority: use it or lose it, but do not abuse it.
Lesson Plans and lessons
Secondary I - fractions
& allied concepts (decimals, percentages)
Secondary II - Algebra (arithmetic versus algebraic methods, backward
use of formulas and proportionality equations)
Secondary III - to come(?)
Secondary IV - Functions to Trig & Statistics
Algebra Lesson Notes & Ideas for All levels
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Educational theories calling for students to
discover and master skills and concepts through activities instead of direct
instruction lead textbooks be designed and chosen for their incompleteness.
Then their readers are left to discover what is not said in critical parts
of a subject or its development. That invite confusions, especially when
teachers new to a field or appointed at the last minute are two pages
ahead of the students in course delivery. Deliberate gaps or deliberate
incomplete make
learning and teaching difficult
While learning by discovery can lead to deep
understanding, learning by discovery when incomplete leads to key skills and
ideas being missed.
Post modern education theory holds that
comprehension is deeper if it follows from individual discovery instead of
direct explanation. However, prior this pedagogy and its
introduction of further vagueness, the
direct explanation and development of mathematical skills and concepts was
incomplete. So this additional deliberate vagueness compounds difficulties
with earlier developments of modern mathematics.
Students of present-day science and
technology are meeting empirical bodies of knowledge (rules and
pattterns) built on the earlier efforts of others. The history or
development of these bodies of knowledge need to be mentioned while the
rules and patterns are presented, so that students are aware of the
origin and limitations of the rules and patterns, the circumstances in
which they may apply, and of the needs to check prediction made with
these rules and patterns. That being said, an operational command of
these rules and patterns has to be taught directly as it is extremely
unlikely that a student has the time and ability to discover and
verify the rule and patterns in their present refined form by
individual construction or discovery.
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1B, Mathematics Curriculum Notes,
Chapters 1 to 12
Book Entrance Inductive Principles Three Remarks 1 Introduction 2 For & Against Math 3 Algebraic Thought 4 Why Slopes & SQRT of -1 5 Books & Articles to Read 6 Unruly Origins of Algebra 6. Axiomatic Civilization 7 Geometry, 2 Ways 8 Modern Instruction 9 The Two Ends 10 The Transition 10 Explaining Logic 10 Explaining Algebra 10 Why Sets in Math. 12 Four Phases Essay January 2007 Words for Teachers Grouping Students Site Eurekas Links Managing Reform Constructivism Revisite Math Ed. Professors More On Constructivism Educational Follies Missing the Point I Direct Instruction Damage Reversal
Chapter 11: Primary School Mathematics
11 Primary Math 11 Cue Cards 11 Counting 11 Decimals - Addition 11 Decimals -Times 11 Decimals & Subtraction 11 Fractions and Division 11 Notational Conflict 11 Reciprocals Etc 11 Decimals - Ratios 11 Size Comparison 11 Numbers, +ve or -ve 11 Rename < Sign 11 Complex Numbers
-Inductive
principles for course design & delivery require a clear
description of where and how skills and concepts may rest on earlier ones, so
that difficulties may be explained and remedied by looking for what was
missed or forgotten in earlier studies.
Mathematics is a demanding subject. All errors in notation and
comprehension need to be identified and corrected. In
reading, spelling and writing, students have to learn all the letters in the
alphabet, not just some. and memorize spelling. Anything less implies
difficulty.
Likewise in mathematics, students have to master key skills
and concepts, one at a time and one after another. Anything less implies
difficulty.
Teachers U are not alone. For online help and advice for
understanding and developing mathematics,, contact site author
Professor Selby via (i) Email
(ii) Yaho
(or MSN) Messenger, or (iii) Skype |
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for online sessions by chance when I am
online or appointment when I am off. The first session (saying hello) is
free. While talking online, we may scribble on Yahoo, MSN,
Skype or
whiteboards. The twiddla whiteboards has a built-in browser for students,
teachers and tutors in general to import webpages and explore/scribble on
them together. It also has audio in theory. [Session
length depends on supply and demand. Call during off-peak periods
for better service. ] |
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