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- From: goddard@NeXTwork.Rose-Hulman.Edu (Bart Goddard)
- Subject: Re: Calculus and Mathematica
- Message-ID: <1992Aug19.163805.3972@cs.rose-hulman.edu>
- Sender: news@cs.rose-hulman.edu (The News Administrator)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: g214-1.nextwork.rose-hulman.edu
- Organization: Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology
- References: <347@moene.indiv.nluug.nl>
- Date: Wed, 19 Aug 1992 16:38:05 GMT
- Lines: 88
-
-
- In article <347@moene.indiv.nluug.nl> toon@moene.indiv.nluug.nl (Toon
- Moene) writes:
- > My advise: Unless you're absolutely sure MMA (or the other symbolic
- > algebra package you're looking at) does what you want it to do, or
- you
- > have enormous amounts of time doing it the hard way (i.e. programming
- it
- > in MMA's language), don't buy into symbolic algebra - it is no
- Artificial
- > Intelligence.
- >
- > --
- > Toon Moene (toon@moene.indiv.nluug.nl)
-
- This is good advise. It applies to anything: Don't hire a contractor
- unless he's going to do what you want. Don't by a car unless it
- does/has all the things you want. Don't marry that woman unless you're
- sure things will "work out",.....
-
- I have been using MMa in the classroom, but the choice of package was
- not mine. I would have chosen Maple, since it is more powerful and
- flexible, runs on a smaller machine (so more students could have it
- running in their dorm rooms and wouldn't have to come to the labs to do
- their homework), and runs faster (at least on our network) than MMa.
-
- The incorporation of Computer Algebra Systems into math classroom
- changes the game quite a bit. Two years ago, I taught all my calc
- students several integration techniques: parts, substitution, partial
- fractions, trig substitutions, etc. Last year, with the introduction
- of MMa, I was forced to think hard about whether integration by parts
- was a worthwhile topic. After all, the machine will do most of the
- book problems, and in real life, one can "always" do an integral
- numerically. So not doing parts would free up some time to spend
- studying more theoretical things (When CAN'T you do an integral
- numerically?). On the other hand, parts is derived from the product
- rule for differentiation, and students who understand this relationship
- have learned something about how functions behave, and I think this
- might be important, whether any of them ever actually evaluates an
- integral with this technique. So I ended up teaching the techniques I
- named above, (but no others). However, I didn't give an assignment
- that asked them to evaluate a "mixed bag" of integrals, wherein they
- would have to choose a technique and hope it worked. This sort of
- assignment is a "by hand" skill which (I think) is largely obsolete
- except for it's pedagical value (one learns about funtions by playing
- with them.)
-
- Having decided that my calc course would include the topic of
- integration by parts, I went to the next step: How to make them see
- the topic the way I see it (this is what I think teaching is). Two
- years ago, I had them do several integrals that required parts. They
- were able, then, to do integration by parts. Several of them
- understood the connection with the product rule. Last year, I gave the
- new class roughly the same list (but longer) and had them integrate
- them on the machine. (I had to check that the maching could do all of
- them before I made the assignment. If the machine can't, the problem
- isn't a good example for this exercise.) Then they were to find a
- pattern in the answers they were getting. We discovered the
- integration by parts relationship, and it was more fun this way. (By
- fun, I mean that instead of 30 students (with glazed eyes and drool
- running down the pencils they've been chewing on) taking notes and
- dissappearing, I had 30 students with whom I was interacting (something
- we don't get to do much of in mathematics.)) I think that one year
- later, these students are just as able to integrate by parts as the
- students from the year before (which isn't saying much). And they
- understand the relationship to the product rule better than the earlier
- class. PLUS, almost all of our students are engineering majors, and
- they have the added bonus of learning mathematics in the environment in
- which they will use it in their upper-level courses and in their
- careers.
-
- Calculus consists of just a couple easy ideas, upon which we build in a
- a straightforward manner. Once a student finishes the course, he
- wonders what was so hard. Now that his brain has abstracted and sorted
- everything out, all of calculus fits into just a couple brain cells.
- My job is to make my students see things this way. I can do it with or
- without a computer algebra system, but it's more interactive WITH. It
- doesn't matter if there is an occasional problem which stumps MMa, it
- still helps in other areas. Besides, by the time you figure out
- exactly what you want to do and how to do it, the software has been
- updated and it WILL do those persnickety problems.
-
- Sorry this is such a long tirade. My "friends" say that talking to me
- is like drinking from a fire hydrant.
-
- Bart Goddard
- Rose-Hulman Inst. of Tech
- goddard@nextwork.rose-hulman.edu
-