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by acjohnson55
4484 days ago
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I'm not sure how addressable that is. While math could be modeled as a DAG globally, I think it is inherently linear locally (no smooth function pun intended) and incremental. Sure you could jump around, but I think at the end of day, if a student is going to progress to advanced math, they can't dodge tricky concepts. But maybe I'm misinterpreting your point. Do you have links to what you've written? |
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Advanced math, on the other hand, is a different matter. And as far as HS education is concerned I believe the focus should be on building mathematical thinking skills and not worrying about preparing students for a particular subject they're unlikely to ever use.
For example, here is a lecture that I give to HS math students on graph theory [1]. You'll notice there's no algebra, no geometry, no calculus, almost nothing is required except the idea of a function (and even that is technically not required, and I tell them not to worry if it's confusing). What is in this talk is a whole lot of mathematical thinking, and I do believe (though this sounds like bravado) that if I were to put my mind to it I could model a year's worth of HS education around developing this kind of mathematical thinking. It would also have some highly nonlinear components to it, organized instead primarily around proof techniques.
[1]: http://jeremykun.com/2011/06/26/teaching-mathematics-graph-t...