Skip to main content
Search IntMath
Close

The IntMath Newsletter - Oct 2006

By Murray Bourne, 15 Oct 2006

You are receiving the IntMath Newsletter because you signed up, asked a question, wrote a comment or complimented Interactive
Mathematics.

======================
In this newsletter:
1. Tom's money math problems
2. This month's math tip
3. Latest from the math blog
======================

TOM's MONEY MATH PROBLEMS

Tom is up to his ears in debt - and needs to learn about money math to get himself out of trouble. See how he figured the math behind the money in Money Math.

THIS MONTH'S MATH TIP

For each new math topic, try the following so you understand - and remember - the topic better:

a) DRAW what is going on (a diagram, a graph, a flow chart)

b) WRITE the conditions for it to work (eg 'x must be positive' or 'c must be constant')

c) CHECK your answers! Most equations can be checked by substituting your answer in the original equation. Does it work?

LATEST FROM THE MATH BLOG:

1) THE MATHS OF MUSIC
I have always been interested in the close connection between math and music.

2) LEARNING MATH VIA A BLOG AND A WIKI
I came across a calculus blog where the contributions are made by the math class. They also have a wiki for sharing solutions to math problems.

3) MATH ILLITERACY
A funny math T-shirt company...

4) NEWTON'S LAWS REVISITED
Here are some laws which Newton may have written if he was alive today...

5) WHEN AM I GONNA USE THIS STUFF?
The Regional Applied Math Project (RAMP) gets math teachers to work in the "real world" for 40 hours and write up their observations on how mathematics is used in the workplace.

Enjoy reading

Be the first to comment below.

Leave a comment




Comment Preview

HTML: You can use simple tags like <b>, <a href="...">, etc.

To enter math, you can can either:

  1. Use simple calculator-like input in the following format (surround your math in backticks, or qq on tablet or phone):
    `a^2 = sqrt(b^2 + c^2)`
    (See more on ASCIIMath syntax); or
  2. Use simple LaTeX in the following format. Surround your math with \( and \).
    \( \int g dx = \sqrt{\frac{a}{b}} \)
    (This is standard simple LaTeX.)

NOTE: You can mix both types of math entry in your comment.

top

Tips, tricks, lessons, and tutoring to help reduce test anxiety and move to the top of the class.