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, 1A - Pattern Based Reason, 1B - Skill Development Principles + Troubles

Welcome: Site content may develop critical thinking, improve reading and writing, and build mathematics skills. See online chapters on on logic and pattern based reason.

Teachers: This December 2011, 5-phase framework offers a context for mathematics & logic instruction. Phases 1 to 3 focus on skills with actual or potential value for adult & daily life. College-oriented phases 5 & 4 focus on calculus & preparation for it. Phases 1 to 4 may also serve trades & professions not dependent on calculus.

Site Review: Math resources ... span ... arithmetic, logic, algebra, calculus, complex numbers, and Euclidean geometry. Lessons and how-tos .... provide a good foundation for high school and college ... mathematics. Read more.

Home < - Volume 1A Pattern Based Reason << Chapter 8 Change of Language

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Chapter 8, A (technical) Language Change

Implication rules can be stated in several ways. We need to recognize them.

One-Way Implication Rules

In the chapter Implication Rules , we met the rule

When Aunt Jane visits her nephew Tom's home, Tom goes out to play

Rules like this can be said in different ways. This gives variety and choice in the way in which we write rules. The form of a rule does not matter, if we understand exactly what it says. The above one-way rule can also be rewritten (or restated, again without changing its meaning) using the words IF and THEN as follows.

IF Aunt Jane visits her nephew Tom's home THEN Tom goes out to play.

The word IF introduces a condition, namely Aunt Jane's visit to her nephew Tom's home. The word THEN introduces the consequence, what should occur, when the condition is satisfied. Here the consequence is Tom goes out to play. Since the original rule can be rewritten in the IF condition THEN consequence form, we say the original rule and the if-then form are conditional statements.

Note that a statement If A then B is only false when the situation or condition A occurs, but the anticipated consequence B does not.

Another way of writing the above one-way Aunt Jane and nephew Tom rule (with no change in meaning) is given by:

Aunt Jane's visit to her nephew Tom's home IMPLIES Tom goes out to play.

The words forces or makes may be used instead of the word implies. We could also use the word suggests, but in everyday use, a suggestion is optionally obeyed or followed while a rule (when it is correct) should or must be obeyed or followed. In talking about rules, we use the words implies, forces or makes for those rules we expect will be obeyed, or more precisely will never be disobeyed in the circumstances at hand. The explicit identification of such circumstances is exhaustive unless the circumstances in question are understood from a context, an obvious one, we hope.

Postscript : Instead of writing If A then B we may write B if A. The latter states that the situation B will happen if the situation A happens. That being said we cannot say that

B if and only if A

holds when there is a third situation C different from A, a situation which may occur when A does not, such that B if C also holds.

In the case

B if A
and also
B if C

the situation B may occur because of situation A or situation C, that is, due to A OR C. So when situation B occurs, the occurrence may be implied by A, C or another situation.

However, we can assert or state B if and only if A holds when B follows from the occurrence of A and whenever B occurs, so must A.

Two-Way Implication Rules

In the previous chapter Implication Rules, we met the rule

Tom goes out to play
when and only when
Aunt Jane visits his home.

This is an example of a two-way rule. Two-way rules can also be said or presented in different ways. Again the form of a rule does not matter, provided we recognize exactly what is meant. The above rule also can be rewritten (or restated, again without changing its meaning) in the if-and-only-if form:

Aunt Jane visits her nephew Tom's home
if and only if
Tom goes out to play.

This form suggests we call such rules biconditional statements. The prefix bi- here signals two ways. Whenever the condition (or situation) Aunt Jane visits her nephew Tom's home occurs, the other condition (or situation) Tom goes out to play must also occur, and vice-versa, if this rule is to be never-disobeyed.

You may prefer to say if and only if instead of when and only when. For instance, I might say or suggest to you: I will do that for you if and only if you do this for me. Alternatively, I might say or suggest to you: I will do that for you when and only when you do this for me. Tone provides the only difference between the two suggestions. Both of these suggestions represent a two-way obligation to which we might agree. Confusion or disappointment or false expectations may happen when suggestions such as these are not explicitly accepted or rejected.

Two-Way or Two One-Way Rules

The two-way Aunt Jane and nephew Tom rule above is rewritten (with no change in meaning) as

Aunt Jane visits her nephew Tom's home implies Tom goes out to play,

and also that

Tom goes out to play implies Aunt Jane visits her nephew Tom's home.

In this form, the two-way rule is seen to be the same as two one-way implication rules, each going in the opposite direction.

Equivalent Conditions (or Situations)

Two situations or conditions A and B, each of which must happen whenever the other does, are said to be equivalent to each other. So when a first situation is equivalent to a second, each situation implies and is implied by the other.

Conditional versus Biconditional

One-way and two-way implications are called conditional and biconditional statements (or rules), respectively.

The Abbreviation Iff

The terms and phrases

  • if and only if
  • when and only when
  • iff (shorthand for if and only if)

can all be used instead of each other. They are interchangeable. No matter what term or phrase is used to indicate a two-way implication, the difference between one-way and two-way needs to be remembered. Otherwise, statements, definitions and assertions will be read incorrectly.

Teachers & Tutors: Site pages offer better or best practices for providing skills - simpler than expected & comprehensive but for exercises. For your charges, your duty is to study them alone or in groups and develop skill building exercises & activities to share. Start now. The effort here is the best I can do. Others are welcome to refine or exceed it. Please do.

Secondary Mathematics for Ages 11+, A Practical Approach for home-tutoring or -schooling, or for schools & colleges with local curriculum control. Study how to include site content - its skill development how-TOs and innovations into present or future lesson plans - some reading required.

Road Safety Messages and Questions: When and why should you face traffic when walking along a road or cycle path? Is it a good idea to hang limbs outside of cars etc? What gives more protection in a crash: a car, motorbike or bicycle? See too, the BBC-Belgium story Texting and Driving - texting & the impossible test - the article links to a gruesome utube video on the subject

The Logic of Injustice: How Texas sent an innocent man to his death - The wrong Carlos. Some judgments are irreversible. Procescution: Where and when prosectors play to win rather than for justice, guilt beyond a reasonable doubt goes unrespected due to prosecutors who putting winning first, those innocence before the law may be convicted. Some procescutors offices in continuing to accuse after a pardon due to reasonable doubt or innocent being shown, may sucessfully oppose compensaton for false convictions by asserting a pardon individual is still under suspicion. Then the pardoned individual or the latter's estate is not compensation for years or decade of improper or false imprisonment, or for execution. Site chapters on Logic
and some in Pattern Based Reason may slowly lead to greater precision in reading, applying and writing laws.

May 2012, Composition Starting: Pre-School and Primary Mathematics - Quantitative Skills, An Intellectual View, Feedback Welcome:

The 8 Most Popular Site Inlinks

20 Times Table - the most popular site page - popular pages - unexpected.
Fractions & Ratios - with lesson on raising terms to introduce & justify times, division & comparison as well addition & subtraction
Parent Center - See below
Volume 1, Elements of Reason - Intro to all site books.
What is a Variable - best for ages 13+
Written work formats for Arithmetic and Algebra - a skill method and standard!
Complex Numbers Visually - best for ages 13+
Natural Logs, Exponentials, Powers, Roots

Division of Labour: This site offers advice and directions with pointers to resources elsewhere, if known, when they help or lessen the need to write more.

Parent Center: Help your child or teen learn:

Parent-friendly Work Booklets for ages 3+ to 13 Use these or others to check or build skills. Other booklets are available but these booklets allow parents unsure of themselves in mathematics to help their children. The selection acquired in Canada is published in the USA. So it has a US orientation. In retrospect, the selection shows parents what to check with the booklets or by other ways, the choice is theirs. But in retrospect, the selection does not cover integral and fractions liquid weights and measures - ask the publishers to correct that! For ages 9 to 12 say, parents may compensate by showing boys and girls how to use weights or mass, and further measures in food preparation. Beyond that children may be shown how to measure and calculate angles, lengths and areas [proportional amounts too] directly or by using maps and plans drawns to scale. Learning how to gather and measure all the ingredients, pots and pans for a dish or a meal, along with cleaning up sets the stage for like activities or experiments in science courses, and in developing organizational skills, gives boys and girls a head start. Good luck. At the other extreme, more comprehensive than light, if your motto is McCainian: drill, drill, drill then Toronto mathematician and actor John Mighton's jump math organization has jump math workbooks for at least grades 3 to 8 for at-home and in-school use - training sessions for teachers available. Jump math has been expanding to cover older students. Jump Math Samples: plus Fractions for Grades 3-4 & Grades 5-6 [Read] Free Resources grades 1 to 8 [unread - likely to be good]. and

Mathematics Skills For Ages 3 to 14 - technical!

Skills with take home value - A few ideas

Basic skills include time-date-calendar Matters; money matters; map, plan and scale diagram matters;counting, measuring and figuring; decision making with logic and likelyhood; being careful and being aware of the domino effect of mistakes; reading and writing with precision.

Is your child able to add, subtract and multiply amounts of money, work with fractions, work with clocks and calendars, work with maps and plans, and measure length, weight-mass and volume? Schools may promote your son or daughter without providing basic skills in reading, writing and arithmetic.

Arithmetic and Number Theory Skills

Algebra Starter Lessons

1 Working With Sets
2 Formula Forward Use - Evaluation
3 Solving Linear Equations - Skip first step with students able to solve 1 eqn in 1 unknown.
4 Computation Rules and Function Notation
5 Real Numbers
6 More Less Greater Than Inequalities and Comparison
7 Axioms Logic and Equivalent Equations
8 Unifying Theme For Algebra
9 Proportionality Backwards and Forwards
10 Examples of Algebraic Reasoning
A Origins of Counting and Figuring Methods
B Real Numbers Extrinsic Development


Site coverage of formuala evaluation format, of computation rules and axioms, and of the forward and backward use of formulas and proportionality relations lessens the amount of natural talent needed to understand and explain algebra.

Geometry - maps plans trigonometry vectors

1 Maps Plans Measurement
2 Euclidean Geometry - Constructions + extras
3 Cartesian and Polar Coordinates
4 Lines and Slopes Take 1
5 What is Similarity
6 Trigonometry first steps
7 Complex Numbers
8 Unit-Circle Trigonometry
9 Lines and Slopes Take 2 with tangent function
10 Intersecting Straight Lines and Transversals
11 Parallel Straight Lines and Transversals
12 Function Translating and Rescaling
13 Vectors
14 Degrees to Radians and Radians to Degrees
15 Arc or Inverse Trigonometric Function

Pre-Teen and young teen mastery of skills and practices which should be common with map-plans-diagrams drawn to scale, contour interpretation included, has actual or potential take-home value for daily- and adult-life in solving routine problems. Elevating some practices to principles, axioms or postualates, provides a base for analytic and Euclidean geometry, an analytic view of similarity, and an efficient mastery of trigonometry and complex numbers. Right triangle trigonometry provide an analytic alternative to solving geometric problems by drawing diagrams to scale.

More Algebra

Natural-Logarithms Exponentials Powers Roots
Five Polynomial Operations
Quadratics Geometrically
Functions
5 Factored Polynomial Sign Analysis Examples
Rewriting algebraic substitution as function substitutions

The first topic leads to a full high school level theory for the forward and backward mastery of growth and decay models and for definition, range and domains of radicals, roots and powers. The next two topics make quadratics and polynomials easier to learn and teach. Site coverage of functions turns vertical and horizontal line rules into computation methods for evaluating functions.

70 Calculus Starter Lessons

Calculus Lessons Elsewhere:

  1. How to Ace Calculus: Street Wise Guide - Mostly Text.

  2. Flash Video for Calculus Phobics

They cover basic topics in ways likely to complement your notes, your textbooks and site material. When Goldilocks trespassed in the house of the three bears, she found three bowls of porridge, two not to her liking, and one just right. Different bears have different tastes. As invited guest here and elsewhere, if one or more explanations is not to liking, try another. It may be better or just right.

Unsolicited Advice

Learning to do and high marks if it comes to easy is often deceptive - light rather than deep. For that reason, students with learning difficulties determined not to let it get in their way may go deeper and farther than those with none. High marks, if the come easy, may be deceptive - provide a too light and not a deep mastery. That could have been your problem in secondary school, one that leads to comprehension shock or difficulties in calculus and more generally in the first year of college. Bon Appetite.


Return to Page Top

Home < - Volume 1A Pattern Based Reason << Chapter 8 Change of Language

[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10][11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] [18] [19] [20] [21] [22] [23] [24] [25] [26] [27] [28] [29] [30]


Logic-Reason for all
Careful Thinking
Chains of Reason
Mathematical Induction
Responsibility
Bodies-of-Knowledge

Arithmetic - Ages 10+
1. Deciml Place Value - fun
2. Decimals for Tutors
3. Prime Factors - quickly
4. Fractions + Ratios
5. Arith with units - science

Geometry
1 Maps + Plans Use
2 Euclidean Geometry
3 Rct +Polr Coordinates
4 Lines-Slopes [I]
5. What is Similarity
Algebra Starters - the base
1. Better Work Format
2. Solve Linear Eqns
3. Computation Rules
4. Axioms, Item 3 Viewpnt
5. Formulas Backwards
More Algebra
Logarithms-ax & m/nth roots
Five Polynomial Operations
Quadratics Geometrically
Functions || Vectors too
Arith. Skill Check+Answers
Calculus Prep/Preview
What is a Variable
Why study slopes
Why factor polynomials
Complex Numbers
Limits + Continuity

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