A Mathematician's Lament (2002) [pdf]
Posted by xeonmc 6 days ago
Comments
Comment by f47204 5 days ago
PRE-CALCULUS. A senseless bouillabaisse of disconnected topics. Mostly a half-baked attempt to introduce late nineteenth-century analytic methods into settings where they are neither necessary nor helpful. Technical definitions of ‘limits’ and ‘continuity’ are presented in order to obscure the intuitively clear notion of smooth change. As the name suggests, this course prepares the student for Calculus, where the final phase in the systematic obfuscation of any natural ideas related to shape and motion will be completed.
CALCULUS. This course will explore the mathematics of motion, and the best ways to bury it under a mountain of unnecessary formalism. Despite being an introduction to both the differential and integral calculus, the simple and profound ideas of Newton and Leibniz will be discarded in favor of the more sophisticated function-based approach developed as a response to various analytic crises which do not really apply in this setting, and which will of course not be mentioned. To be taken again in college, verbatim
Comment by hingler36 6 days ago
I appreciate his focus on how to maintain engagement with students who are predisposed to math, but I think it's equally important to consider how to teach students who are deeply uninterested in math but still need a working knowledge to live life. Granted, the current system seems to be failing both kinds of students.
Comment by amai 5 days ago
Comment by Micanthus 5 days ago
Comment by lioeters 5 days ago
> ..The fact is that there is nothing as dreamy and poetic, nothing as radical, subversive, and psychedelic, as mathematics.
Comment by ChaitanyaSai 5 days ago
School inverts this. And that's a tragedy.
Wrote about it here. https://blog.comini.in/p/schooling-has-a-meaning-crisis-para...
Comment by graemep 5 days ago
A lot of this reflects the approach I took to teaching my kids maths (and everything else), both before/alongside school and after I took them out of school. They are both very good at maths and enjoy it.
Comment by ChaitanyaSai 5 days ago
Comment by graemep 5 days ago
if you are familiar with the UK system they were both home educated up to GCSEs (taken at 16, end of compulsory school age here), then went to college (school for 16+) for A levels. The younger one is 18 and just finishing college - and her A level choices included maths, which is quite a turn around given she hated maths when she left school. Her older sister works in power electronics R & D.
Comment by ChaitanyaSai 4 days ago
Comment by mouhamad215 4 days ago