.: Mathematics Top Related Articles
1). Learning Math With Manipulatives - Base Ten Blocks (Part III)
In the first two parts, representing, adding, and subtracting numbers using base ten blocks were explained. The use of base ten blocks gives students an effective tool that they can touch and manipulate to solve math questions. Not only are base ten blocks effective at solving math questions, they teach students important steps and skills that translate directly into paper and pencil methods of solving math questions.
Article tags: math, mathematics, school, learning, teaching
2). The Invisible Ether and Michelson Morley
The concept of the invisible ether or 'aether' is an old concept dating to the time of the ancient Greeks. They considered the ether as that medium which permeated all of the universe and even believed the ether to be another element. Along with Earth, Wind, Fire and Water Aristotle proposed that the ether should be treated as the fifth element or quintessence; this term which literally means 'fifth element' has even survived down to the present day to explain an exotic form of 'dark energy' which is crucial in some cosmological models.
Article tags: relativity, einstein, special relativity, albert einstein, science, physics, math, mathematics, ptolemy, copernicus, galileo, newton, electromagnetism
3). Flexible Estimation in Math
Adults use rounding and estimation in their everyday lives. They approximate the temperature, the cost of items, the time, and even their age. Consider this conversation:
"How much did it cost to fix your car?"
"Six hundred bucks!"
Without any words such as: about, approximately, around, roughly, or nearly, it can be assumed that the second person rounded the actual cost.
Article tags: math, mathematics, teaching, learning, school
4). Entry to the Holy of Holies
Entry to the Holy of Holies
Article tags: entry, holy of holies, holy bible, sacred, writings, ancient, calendar, mathematics, 10000-years, antediluvian, calendar, patriarchs, begat, family, descendants, adam, genesis, ancestry, kings, pharaohs, lunar, solar, epochs, lifetime
5). Mathematics – Why Is It So Scary?
It's not lack of ability that causes problems with math - it's 4 false beliefs. Find out what they are, and how to overcome them.
Article tags: math, mathematics, education
6). Using Math Games to Enhance Learning
Ever wonder how you could get your son or daughter to be more interested in math? Math is hard work, but with some fun maths games, you can capture their attention while they learn. So, how can you find some fun maths games? They are actually not very hard to find. If you look up math games on Amazon.com, for instance, many books will come up that have math games.
Article tags: fun maths games, math, tutoring, learning, mathematics
7). Learning Math With Manipulatives - Base Ten Blocks (Part I)
Base ten blocks are an excellent tool for teaching children the concept of addition because they allow children to touch and manipulate something real while learning important skills that translate well into paper and pencil addition. In this article, I will describe base ten blocks and how to use them to represent and add numbers.
The numbering system that children learn and the one most of us are familiar with is the base ten system.
Article tags: math, mathematics, teaching, learning, school
8). Learning Math With Manipulatives - Base Ten Blocks (Part II)
In part one of this article, you read about representing and adding numbers using base ten blocks. Once these two skills are mastered, it is time to move onto many a child's nightmare: subtraction. Subtraction, as you may have heard, is essentially addition in reverse. It can be an arduous task on paper, but it can be quite easy with base ten blocks.
Article tags: math, mathematics, learning, teaching, school
9). Can You Draw a Perfect Hexagon?
It may not sound like a difficult task, but constructing hexagons and other polygons can be a frustrating and daunting task for children and adults. A sketch of a square is fairly simple to make as the corners are familiar right angles that most people have no trouble creating. Every other regular polygon from equilateral triangles to dodecagons and beyond can be a challenge without a highly developed ability to recognize and construct a variety of angles.
Article tags: math, mathematics, learning, teaching, school
10). Big Bang Booming - Back To The Future
Theoretical cosmologists spend much of their time perfecting what is now known as the 'Big Bang' theory. This concept originates from ideas percolating in the minds of scientists, theologians and astronomers down through the ages. However, much of what they consider as proof for the 'Big Bang' is dependent upon uncontrolled experimentation that is molded to meet their expectations.
Article tags: relativity, einstein, special relativity, albert einstein, science, physics, math, mathematics
11). Adding From Left to Right -- A Better Way to Add
More than likely, when you learned how to add, you started on the right and moved to the left. If you were adding whole numbers, you added the ones, "carried" if necessary, and repeated for the tens, hundreds and so on. This works well on paper, and it is the most efficient paper and pencil method; however, adding in the other direction has several.
Article tags: math, mathematics, learning, teaching, school
12). Galactic Mystery - Matter - On the Dark Side
Heralding a new age in the cosmos, Norwegian Kristian Birkeland predicted that the universe likely consisted of an exotic component that would later be called dark matter. His comments about this subject matter appeared in a description of the Norwegian Aurora Polaris Expedition (1902-1903). Birkeland's ideas about the Expedition were published in the fateful year of 1913 which would see the rise of the socialist Federal Reserve System and the Income Tax in the United States of America, two key components of the communist manifesto.
Article tags: relativity, einstein, special relativity, albert einstein, science, physics, math, mathematics, ptolemy, copernicus, galileo, newton, electromagnetism
13). "WE DON'T know what we are talking about" - Nobel Laureate David Gross
Last December ('05), physicists held the 23rd Solvay Conference in Brussels, Belgium. Amongst the many topics covered in the conference was the subject matter of string theory. This theory combines the apparently irreconcilable domains of quantum physics and relativity. David Gross a Nobel Laureate made some startling statements about the state of physics including: "We don't know what we are talking about" whilst referring to string theory as well as “The state of physics today is like it was when we were mystified by radioactivity.
Article tags: relativity, einstein, special relativity, albert einstein, science, physics, math, mathematics, ptolemy, copernicus, galileo, newton, general relativity, space, time, cosmos, astronomy, cosmology