Republic of Mathematics blog

Computational media: the universal acid of mathematics teaching (1)

Posted by: Gary Ernest Davis on: December 17, 2009

The times they are a-changing

In Darwin’s Dangerous Idea, Daniel Dennett discusses a fantasy universal acid that eats through and transforms  all containers into which it is placed. He applies this notion of universal transformation to Darwin’s evolutionary theory, and writes:

“… it eats through just about every traditional concept, and leaves in its wake a revolutionized world-view, with most of the old landmarks still recognizable, but transformed in fundamental ways.”

I claim that digital technology, particularly in the form of  computational media,  is a universal acid to the practice of teaching mathematics. We are, I contend, going through a process of re-thinking education, particularly in relation to mathematics and science, more profound than at any other time in human history. Old  topics and skills that seemed so critical just a few years ago are now  being brought into question. The nature of mathematical skill and cognition is under a spotlight, and many teachers at all levels, K-20, are becoming confused and  concerned about the changes afoot.  I see in my colleagues, both in universities and schools, aspects of Kübler-Ross’s 5 stages of grief: denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance. There is no holding the universal acid of computational media, so far as mathematics is concerned. All previous ways of acting and behaving, all esteemed skills, are being radically transformed as computational media eats away at  practices of mathematical education. Many teachers are in denial, many are angry, quite a few are depressed, and relatively few, yet, are accepting of the changes being wrought by the universal acid of computational media.

Computational media

Maple

I currently teach calculus and differential equations to science, engineering and mathematics majors. Fall semester 2009 I had a class of 44 engineering students, 40 young men and 4 young women, for multi-variable calculus. Anyone who knows anything about this subject will know it is very geometric in nature, with the behavior of vector fields in 2 and 3 dimensions on center stage.

Students, who are typically 19-20 years old, complain that they have trouble drawing 3-dimensional pictures. I tell them we all do (some geniuses excepted). The engineering computer lab in which the class is held is equipped with one computer for every two students. Those computers have up-to-date versions of Maple installed.  The engineering faculty expect that Maple will be used in one way or another to enhance student understanding of calculus concepts. One way Maple can do that is by plotting curves and surfaces that student find hard to do, such as a helix or a saddle:

Maple is not perfect at this job: using an inappropriate coordinate system can result in an unrecognizable picture. For example, here’s how Maple draws the cone z^2=xy using default rectangular coordinates :

Maple acts nicely to help students see more clearly in 3 dimensions, and to assist them in drawing better pictures, as a result of their clearer 3-dimensional  vision. This is a very positive aspect of computational media – of which Maple is an excellent example – and most mathematics teachers are keen to use this sort of technology for the purpose of assisting students to develop skills of thinking in 3 dimensions.

The same students generally do not recall facts and procedures from earlier calculus classes and still have quite weak algebraic skills. Very few can recall how to solve a quadratic equation, their trigonometric skills are weak, and they make a lot of algebraic mistakes.  If these students have to integrate by parts or by substitution they generally do not recall well how to do that. So  when it comes to double and triple integrals, and line integrals, these students are generally lost, way at sea.

I can, and do, get them practicing examples. Yet when they are bogged down with an algebraic expression, or with a simple single integral that they have forgotten how to do, I get them to do it with Maple. “Just let Maple do it” I say. “It knows how to better than you.”

expand((x+y)^5)

x^5+5x^4y+10x^3y^2+10x^2y^3+5xy^4+y^5

Maple does the algebra

integrate(xexp(-x^2),x)

-\frac{1}{2}e^{-x^2}

Maple calculates an integral

Is this bad of me? Shouldn’t they be learning these skills? Well, here’s where computational media as universal acid comes in: Maple can do all the algebra and all the integrals the students might ever be able to do, quicker and more accurately than they ever will. So what skills, what ways of thinking, what habits of mind, what learning outcomes do I really want? What does anyone want, and why?

The universal acid of computational media is eating away at and transforming the actual or likely skills base of these engineering students. After all, when they are engineers in a lab, workshop, or the field, do you seriously imagine they will work out a triple integral in their heads or by hand? No, of course not. They will use the software available on their workstation, netbook or cell phone. Yes: cell phone. Mathematics apps for cell phones can already do such complicated mathematical calculations, and draw relevant 3-dimensional pictures.  There is a drawback: currently these are expensive cell phone apps. They cost, oh, all of $30. You got it – $30 for an app that might previously have cost a thousand dollars, even if it were available for a cell phone at such an elevated price.

So you can see how computational media eats away at our conception of  important mathematical skills for engineers. Until a few years ago it was – rightly – regarded as very important that engineers should know how to work out complicated  integrals by hand. But now computational media can do better than them, more accurately, in a twinkling of an eye. Do farmers still plow their fields with oxen? Not if they are smart. Why then, should engineers calculate hard integrals, which they will likely get wrong if they are out of practice, by hand?

We can,  if we wish, be in denial, and refuse to engage with the question. The continuing and rapid improvement in computational media, and its widespread availability, mean that  if we are in denial, we will soon be angry!

MATLAB

Fall 2009 I also taught a beginning course in differential equations, as I have done for several semesters now.  Students in this class are largely engineers and mathematics majors. I use MATLAB as a computational engine for this course, not because I like it (I loathe its command-line interface) but because it is industry standard for engineers and computational scientists.

MATLAB has in-built procedures and functions for solving differential equations – either exactly or via numerical approximations when exact solutions are not possible.  Existing differential equations texts, even those using MATLAB as a computational engine, spend most of the chapters on different methods for solving differential equations. There are two relevant facts to bear in mind here. First most differential equations do not have exact solutions, and we have to resort to numerical approximation. This is most likely to be true of differential equations engineers will encounter in their working lives. Secondly, MATLAB can solve  differential equations that have an exact solution. It does this at the press of  a key, and will, if asked nicely, plot a graph of the solution.

Should I be teaching these students how to solve differential equations using pencil and paper? Or should I be teaching them to  use MATLAB and to discuss the features of the solution – its formula and its plot – as something they might or might not have expected from the differential equation. Should I, in other words, be building their intuition and sense of meaning for solutions of differential equations, and leaving the – fairly messy – grunt work to MATLAB?

Once again, the universal acid of computational media confronts us with this question. We can be in denial and we can, before long, be angry and then depressed. Sooner or later we will have to accept that computational media is transforming what we teach and how we teach mathematics.  Today’s important skills may be consigned to tomorrow’s trash can.

Geometer’s Sketchpad and Cabri

Geometer’s Sketchpad (GSP) and Cabri are most often thought of as dynamic geometry environments. From a geometry perspective the computational media aspect of these software is the ability to dynamically instantiate relationships between differing aspects of a geometric figure. One moves around a figure and certain features of the figure – relationships between certain lines, circle and points – remains constant.

GSP and Cabri have been been widely in schools as valuable  computational media that strengthens students geometric understanding. Somewhat less well  known or utilized is how much computational mathematics can be carried out in these environments: Key Curriculum Press has a free booklet with examples of the use of GSP in a number of mathematical areas.

GSP had, in the past, been dismissed by some college and university faculty as a mere toy, despite Jean-Marie Laborde having based Cabri, on which GSP is based, on his earlier program Cabri Graph, which was a software tool for professional mathematicians. Despite these earlier grumblings (anger?) some colleges are now using GSP in undergraduate courses, including statistics and geometry.

GSP and Cabri have been success stories in computational media in that they have helped revive and reinvigorate the teaching of geometry, as well as providing a platform for exploring and learning about many aspects of mathematics.

This aspect of the universal acid of computational media has not effected a complete transformation yet: I know of a number of teachers of mathematics who are opposed to spending the time to learn how to use GSP in their classrooms for what they perceive to be minimal  benefits (denial?)

Wolfram Alpha

With Wolfram Alpha we get right to the heart of the transformative effect of the universal acid of computational media, and the anger and denial expressed by many school teachers at how students use this medium.

Stephen Wolfram , inventor of Mathematica, and computational scientist, has envisioned Wolfram Alpha as a gigantic computational engine that, as it is asked computational questions, learns answers and how to do more extensive and deep calculations.

How does this impact middle and high school students and their teachers, who are unlikely to ask deep computational questions? Well, Wolfram Alpha will do homework for kids. Now you see the problem. Imagine a teacher sets some questions on solution of quadratic equations as homework. Following a non-computational media mind-set the teacher is most likely thinking that students will learn about the mechanics and procedures of solving quadratic equations by attempting the homework problems. Instead, these very 21st century students ask Wolfram Alpha to do their homework.

But wouldn’t the teacher be able to spot something fishy, because the students would  have an answer but no working,  the grunt work being done by Wolfram Alpha? Well maybe not, because Wolfram Alpha will show the steps in solving quadratic equations.  So students can put the question to Wolfram Alpha, which obliges with an answer showing all working. Students can copy this answer in their own hand to show the teacher. Currently Wolfram Alpha does this by completing the square. So if the teacher expected a routine use of the quadratic formula, or spotting factors, then the student would still have a  little bit of work to do (bit not much).

No surprise that this makes a lot of teachers angry: the computational media undermines the very skills the teachers wanted their students to practice. Could teachers think about why they wanted students to have these skills in the first place? Just because that’s the way it’s done doesn’t mean that’s how it was always done, or will always be done. The computational media is putting the question to us or, rather, putting us to the question.

I discussed this issue with university colleagues who are of the opinion that solving quadratic equations by hand is a valuable and necessary skill because it is used a lot in calculus. Well carving letters in rocks was a necessary and valued skill before paper was invented, yet only  a very few people know how to carve letters into marble now.

You see my point?  Computational media is forcing us, like it or not, to think about what mathematical skills we value and why. There’s no escaping it. So, if you are troubled … go away and deny it’s happening for a while, at least until you get really angry, and then we can move on to bargaining.

Be careful out there – it’s  a rapidly changing world, as Bob Dylan so poignantly noted.

The changing face of mathematics

Posted by: Gary Ernest Davis on: December 15, 2009

In this post I want to talk about 3 things:

  1. The old face of mathematical practices, stemming from Pythagoras.
  2. The pain  the old practices have brought to too many students.
  3. The new light that is dawning in mathematical practice.

1. Listen up, Pythagoras is talking!

Pythagoras was born on the Greek island of Samos, about 2576 years ago. The MacTutor history site has more details on his life.

Pythagoras is possibly responsible for the name “mathematics” which comes from the Greek “mathema” – the lesson.  Followers of Pythagoras had to undergo an apprenticeship in which they sat in total silence, listening to Pythagoras from behind a veil or screen. At this stage the apprentices were not known as mathematicians, but as acousmaticians – students who sat and listened.

Pythagoras is often regarded as the father of mathematics, and modern day mathematicians often see themselves as directly descended, intellectually, from Pythagoras: “We are all the children of Pythagoras, after all, who said that nature is nothing but numbers.”  Dennis Overbye.

Mathematics teaching – expounding “the lesson” – has largely followed the model of Pythagoras for over 25  centuries: prepare a lesson in detail and expound it, more or less clearly, to the students.

To some extent, the role of the teacher as the source of mathematical knowledge has been replaced by text book authors.  Classroom teachers K-20 are often mere interpreters of text book material, reduced to setting exercises from the text, trying, often desperately, to give some sense of why this material is being covered at this time, and what it has to do with anything.

2. Fear and loathing

The Pythagorean model is a model of teaching and learning that is largely authoritarian. At its best, an inspiring teacher can help students mind and spirits soar. At its worst it can bring about learned helplessness, fear, loathing, terror, and lifelong hatred for anything quantitative.

Consider the following expressions of hatred and stress, culled from Twitter posts:

  • I OFFICALLY hate #math forever.
  • #WHATSUBJECTYOUHATE #Math
  • SMH! SEE AM TRYING BUT #MATH I HATE IT
  • e o #math achando que eu só sei fazer miojo (and the # math thinking I only know how to make Hamburger Helper)
  • o #math, me abandonou hoje! -‘ (the math, I gave up today! – ‘)
  • Wah… #math di hr ke2… Cukup menegangkan☺ (Well … # math in 2nd hr … Stressful enough ☺)
  • Should i stop studying?, i mean what’s the point if i cant understand a damn thing. #math
  • #math really blows

Mathematics anxiety is a major problems, particularly among prospective elementary teachers.

What is the origin of such hated and anxiety? Is every subject like this? Do students hate and fear language studies, geography, music, art like this? No, they do not. Mathematics is an outlier in terms of the number of students who experience fear, hatred and anxiety in mathematics classes.

Fear and hatred of mathematics stem in large part from the authoritarian teacher as all-knowing expert, a view of mathematics teaching that fits so comfortably in the Pythagorean tradition.

This fear and hatred is made worse by a process of inter-generational abuse in which some frightened, insecure elementary teachers pass on their own fears to their young students.

Secondary and tertiary teachers might be less fearful of mathematics, and less scared of seeming ignorant, but in the main they perpetuate an authoritarian view of mathematics, descended from the Pythagorean lesson.

This is a horrible situation, and it needs to stop now!

3. A new day is dawning

Mathematical practice, and mathematics teaching, are changing, and a new, more democratic, social, collaborative and cooperative, way of doing mathematics is on the rise. It is still in its early stages, and hasn’t gone viral yet. But I predict it will, and soon.

Digital technology and brilliant mathematicians and mathematics teachers who are “on”, and divorced from the authoritarian expert attitudes of the past, are driving this change.

Prominent among mathematicians with a cooperative, collaborative, open attitude to mathematics are Terry Tao and Timothy Gowers.  Both these guys are Fields Medalists, so they have nothing to prove to anyone. But there have been lots of Fields Medalists before them who have not adopted their open attitude to mathematics.  These two mathematicians have the intellectual and emotional DNA and live in an appropriate time to push forward a new way of thinking about, doing, and learning mathematics.

Terry Tao (left) and Timothy Gowers (right)

Terry has a blog on which he discusses many aspects of mathematics, including his current research. Some of this is hard reading – no kidding, since this guy is truly one of the mathematical greats. What you can see on Terry’s blog, even if the mathematics seems overwhelmingly advanced, is how open and collaborative is his approach. Take a look at his posts and see how he opens up his thoughts, his ideas, his conjectures, and – most importantly – his ways of working and thinking. He is a mathematical hero of our times. His like has never been seen in the world before.

Tim Gowers, an equally accomplished mathematician,  has a blog on which he too discusses , ideas, thoughts, conjectures, and – like Terry Tao – exposes his ways of thinking and working. Tim has pushed the collaborative nature of mathematics further than anyone with his massively collaborative mathematics project.

So there’s hope, a new light. Top mathematicians, as good as the world has seen, are adopting an open, collaborative approach to mathematical thinking.

How about teaching in school, colleges and universities, where ugly attitudes to mathematics are learned? What’s happening there?

Here’s a selection of mathematics educators who seem to have adopted, either instinctively or deliberately, an open, democratic and collaborative approach to teaching and learning mathematics:

John Faig is a middle school mathematics teacher in Connecticut. He has a blog on which he posts about educational reform, largely driven by advances in technology. He states that: “Educators have to be willing to grow, take risks and think outside the box if they are going to embrace the tools of the future.”

_______________________

Glenn Kenyon teaches grade 8 at The San Francisco School. Glenn has a blog on which he discusses his ongoing quest for deep and meaningful mathematical engagement with his students.

_______________________

Milton Ramirez manages Education and Tech, and has a blog on which he discusses a wide range of educational and technology issues, from an open and collaborative perspective.

_______________________

Robert Talbot is an Associate Professor of Mathematics and Computing Science at Franklin College in Franklin, Indiana. Robert maintains a blog on which he details his interactive approach to teaching and learning mathematics.

_______________________

You, the reader, will know many more brilliant teachers who are changing mathematics teaching and learning in positive, open, democratic, collaborative ways. Please share them in the comments.

The message

The message has 3 parts:

  1. The old authoritarian face of mathematics is on its way out.
  2. The pain, hatred and anxiety experienced by so many students, and prospective teachers, might soon be a thing of the past.
  3. A new light is dawning on an open, democratic, collaborative way of engaging with mathematics.