The 24th International Conference on Technology in Collegiate Mathematics (March 23-24, 2012) in Orlando, FL, had about 1000 participants. Keynoter Conrad Wolfram ("Stop Teaching Calculating, Start Teaching Math") told the audience that the way to fix math education is to adopt computer-based math.
This is the message in his TED video.
Wolfram likened the teaching of paper-and-pencil computations to ancient Greek. It's great that some people want to study such things, but these topics should not be part of a core education. Because people (other than math teachers) in the real world who need mathematics do their computations with computers, we should not be teaching computations but teaching instead how to ask the correct questions, how to translate the questions into mathematical syntax, and how to interpret the results of computer calculations into a solution in the real world.
He also gave the analogy that composition is to English as programming is to mathematics. We should be teaching programming in our math classes, but using a higher level language such as (coincidentally) Mathematica.
I was personally involved in two ICTCM sessions. I co-presented with Julie Phelps and Andre Freeman on a talk about the Statway and Quantway projects of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Andre did the lion's share, describing the homework (a.k.a "out of classroom experience") system MyStatway (based on Carnegie Mellon's OLI statistics course) and spreadsheet simulations that are part of the Statway package of resources.
I also gave a solo session: "Knowledge Exchange Networks and MathDL".
The sessions highlighting NCAT Emporium models for course redesign continue not to impress me. At least one two-year college campus can claim that the students show great success (not only in developmental math courses but also) in the transfer math courses following an Emporium model developmental math course. But the (unstated) caveat is that all the classes are taught in the Emporium model, which means that the student assessments in the transfer math course are all graded by the computer, specifically by MyMathLab. (I do not believe that MyMathLab or any other current computer-graded system can reasonably score questions that ask for interpretations or explanations in complete sentences, but I believe that we should expect our college students to be able to answer such questions.)
I liked Valencia Community College's idea of a "Math 24/7 Tutorial Website" (Jody DeVoe, Cathy Ferrer, and Jennifer Lawhon). 25 VCC math faculty created hundreds of videos (via Smartpens, flip cameras, Jing, etc.) and then created a webpage of links.
I'll also want to think more about Sarah Mabrouk's one-way use of Twitter--students follow her (class-specific Twitter account), she does not follow any students--to increase student engagement.
But I never made it to any of the theme parks.
Showing posts with label MathDL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MathDL. Show all posts
Saturday, March 24, 2012
Sunday, January 1, 2012
Joint Mathematics Meetings 2012
About 7000 mathematicians gathered in Boston for the 2012 Joint Mathematics Meeting January 4-7, 2012.
My first event was the Mathematics Digital Library advisory board meeting. One of MathDL director Lang Moore's items was that the MathDL's Course Communities now include Developmental Math. These resources are from the Knowledge Exchange Networks spearheaded by Tom Carey of U. Toronto, San Diego State U., and the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.
Haynes Miller (MIT) reported on MIT's online resource for faculty collaboration. First developed as an in-house tool to help facilitate writing across the curriculum, the resource is now being opened up for faculty collaborations throughout the US.
The CRAFTY (Curriculum Renewal Across the First Two Years) committee sponsored a contributed papers session on preparing students for calculus, and the College Board/MAA Committee on Mutual Concerns sponsored a panel session on promoting student success in calculus. Alison Ahlgren of U. Illinois and Marilyn Carlson of Arizona State University painted vastly different pictures.
Alison believes the UI has found a working solution using ALEKS (Assessent and LEarning in Knowledge Spaces) as both an assessment and placement tool. All UI students receive ALEKS assessment, and ALEKS placement scores are strictly enforced--even students who pass the UI precalculus course must earn the appropriate ALEKS score to be eligible to enroll in calculus.
Alison has data from many thousands of students on what ALEKS tests. Analysis of what topics were or were not mastered by successful vs unsuccessful students informs UI about what precalculus topics should receive greater of less emphasis. For example, UI students all appear to have mastered polynomials, but the great majority of pre-calculus students have little mastery of exponential functions and logarithms.
In contrast, Marilyn argues that ALEKS and other currently popular assessment systems do not measure conceptual understanding, and hence student success with ALEKS does not necessarily facilitate mastery of what we really want our students to learn. Marilyn led the development of ASU's Precalculus Concept Assessment.
The Committee for Two-Year Colleges sponsored a panel session on math for non-STEM students. Panelists Bernadine Chuck Fong and Jane Muhich of the Carnegie Foundation spoke about the philosophical and research-based underpinnings of the Statway™ and Quantway™ projects, while Larry Gray of U. Minnesota spoke on his reaction to the actual Statway™ lessons which he has reviewed. The audience included Mary Parker of Austin Community College and Katherine Yoshiwara of Los Angeles Pierce College, both faculty teaching Statway™ this year, and both speaking in favor of the project but indicating that there is still much work to be done.
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