2013-04-15

Village Voice on CUNY

Here's a very nice cover story from NYC's alternative newspaper, the Village Voice, basically on the subject of my math teaching job at a CUNY community college (and more generally, community colleges across the country):

http://www.villagevoice.com/2013-04-03/news/system-failure-the-collapse-of-public-education/

Some highlights:
  • Enrollment at CUNY community colleges is up 33% in the past 5 years
  • CUNY has seen a 40% drop in per-student funding from the state in the last 20 years.
  • 80% of NYC public school grads who enroll in CUNY need remedial-level instruction
  • Just 14% of public school grads pass the CUNY algebra placement exam
  • Only 20% of remedially-placed students have advanced to a for-credit class 2 years later
  • Only 1 in 4 remedially-placed earn any degree after 6 years.

Regarding NYC public high school statistics: "The numbers are 'better'—there are more graduates—and yet, in an endless loop of absurdity, these students get to college only to be told they haven't finished high school."

Regarding NYC's Harry Truman High School: "Truman currently boasts an A grade from the city. Yet only 10 percent of its graduates are able to enter CUNY without remediation."

Regarding a new pre-matriculation START program which takes small classes and gives detailed basic math instruction: "That process sounds an awful lot like what we used to think of as 'teaching.'"

2013-03-04

Everyday LCMs

Here's an exercise that I'm planning to use in my remedial arithmetic class in the near future. The question is: For each of the following number ranges, state (i) the LCM (least common multiple), (ii) some everyday examples that use that LCM, and (iii) an explanation of why that number is convenient.

(a) {1, 2, 3}.
LCM is 6. Examples: Six-pack of soda, beer, donuts, etc. Convenient because you can divide them evenly whether you have one, two, or three people.

(b) {1, 2, 3, 4}.
LCM is 12 (a dozen). Examples: 12-pack of beer, dozen eggs, hours on a clock, etc. Convenient because you can divide them evenly among either one, two, three, or four people (or dishes or periods).

(c) {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}.
LCM is 60. (And see next exercise.)

(d) {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6}
LCM is also 60. Examples: 60 seconds in a minute, 60 minutes in an hour, 360 degrees in a circle (6×60), etc. Convenient because you can divide them evenly into one, two, three, four, five, or six periods, as desired. (See also: Babylonian numerals.)


2013-02-13

Explaining Proportions

A common basic math exercise is to set up and solve a proportion (equivalence of two ratios, i.e., fractions), often in the context of some word problem. The funny thing I recently discovered (updating lecture notes for the spring term) is how there's usually a complete absence of explanation on why you're doing this, or justification for why it makes sense to do so. In fact, I flat-out couldn't find any explanation for the procedure in any of the resources that I have available to me at the moment. Here are some examples:
Writing proportions is a powerful tool for solving problems in almost every field, including business, chemistry, biology, health sciences, and engineering, as well as in daily life. Given a specified ratio (or rate) of two quantities, a proportion can be used to determine an unknown quantity. [Elayn Martin-Gay, Prealgebra & Introductory Algebra, 3rd Edition]

We can use proportions to solve applied problems by expressing a ratio in two ways, as shown below. For example, suppose that it takes 8 gal of gas to drive for 120 mi, and we want to determine how much will be required to drive for 550 mi. If we assume that the car uses gas at the same rate throughout the trip, the ratios are the same, and we can write a proportion. [Marvin Bittinger, Intermediate Algebra, 9th Edition]

Proportions are typically used when you want to solve for an unknown. Let's look back to our car example. In the last section we found we could drive 120 miles on 4 gallons of gas. We want to find out how many miles we could drive on 10 gallons of gas. This information is displayed in the table below. The value we want to determine is represented by an x in the table above. We can find this value by setting up a proportion. This is shown on the right. [Syracuse University Mathematics Tutorial, retrieved 2/13/13 -- the first of several Google searches I looked at]
In each case (and there were numerous others), that is the entirety of the explanation of why you'd want to set things up in a proportion. To my mind, each of them are extremely sketchy. And like my own lecture notes up until recently, they have a tendency to start off with a sample problem first; they say something like, "take this and set up a proportion like so", then go through the solving steps. But I've become highly sensitized to that fact that if I can't start out with a simple explanation as to why the mechanics of a certain procedure make sense (in this case, setting up the equation a certain way), then that's an indication that I don't fully understand what I need to answer questions on the subject, and need to rectify the situation.

Here's how I put it in my brief lecture notes nowadays -- Problems involving a constant rate can be set up as a proportion. For example: If 2 boxes of cereal cost $10, then how much do 6 boxes cost? One way of looking at it is this: The cost of one box is 10/2 = 5 dollars, so the cost of six boxes must be 5∙6 = 30 dollars. But another way of putting it is that, if we turn both of these into divisions, then the result is the same; i.e., 10/2 = 5 and 30/6 = 5. Therefore we could set up the original problem as a proportion, being careful to line up like units, e.g.: 10/2 = x/6 [dollars/boxes] → 60 = 2x [cross-multiply] → 30 = x [divide by 2]. And again we see that the total cost is $30. 


Observations: The "constant rate" here is specifically the price point of $5 per box of cereal, which is a reasonable and common-sense assumption we're making in the solution, that the price-per-box is the same for the two transactions (barring some kind of bulk discount, say). But note that the proportion method is not the only way we could solve this problem, and in fact it has some very notable disadvantages: (a) we don't ever see the actual "constant rate" itself in the calculation ($5 per box in the example above), and (b) in the intermediary step it produces a much larger number than anything that existed in the original problem (the 60).

So for me, I frankly find the proportions method pretty unintuitive, and in my own work I rarely turn to it as a first choice in solving strategy. Particularly if I have a calculator or computer available, then I find it easier to do the divide-first-and-multiply-second method, as given initially above (and this strikes my students as far more understandable, i.e., actually seeing the constant rate price-point). Or alternatively, you could divide the box numbers first (6/2 = 3), and then intuit that the dollar amounts would have to be increased by the same factor, i.e., a product of 10∙3 = 30 in the given example (again, dealing with smaller and mentally-manipulable numbers along the way).

That said, the proportions method does indeed have some specific advantages. Ones I can think of immediately are: (a) it encapsulates the entire problem into a neat, concise, and attractively symmetric piece of equation writing; and (b) if you're working by hand, and there's going to be decimals in the final answer, then the decimal work is minimized and only appears in the very last division step (as opposed to dealing with it twice, in my divide-and-then-multiply method). This latter feature is of course devalued the more that cheap computation devices become ubiquitous, and is similar in that regard to a lot of other methods which trade off a large intermediary value so as to delay working with cranky divisions, fractions, and decimals (for example: the "calculating formula" for standard deviation, etc.). Perhaps, then, the proportions method is already something of a legacy dinosaur in that regard; I know that for my own work, I find more utility in actually seeing the constant rate I'm dealing with itself identified in the middle of the workflow.

Can you think of any other advantages to the proportions method for these types of elementary problems?


2013-02-02

Graphing Mistake

You would not believe how often I see this mistake in a basic algebra class:


2012-11-05

Follow-Up on Elections

Tomorrow, of course, are the elections here in the USA for President and other elected positions. One month ago I posted "Bungled Election Probability", where I griped about the common test-question gaffe of thinking that the preference ratio among voters will be the same as the probability of winning an election.

An excellent case study on that: Nate Silver's been getting some major attention recently with his very nice "Five Thirty Eight" blog at the New York Times, where he uses sophisticated statistical analyses to track the likely election outcome. There are numerous graphs and charts which nicely highlight the difference between the two measurements (accessed today, Nov-5): 








2012-10-18

Proofs of Distributing Exponents and Radicals

In my introductory algebra classes these days, I've switched to providing actual proofs for major principles after about the halfway point in the class. As usual, the point of this is (a) to prepare students for what real math classes are like, and (b) provide insight into why things work as they do.

What I was distressed to find yesterday is that you actually can't find any proofs for the pretty rudimentary notions of the fundamental rule (as I call it) or distribution of exponents or radicals (over multiplication or division), even for just integer powers. Not anywhere online on a Google search. Not in any math text in any of my bookcases at home.

So this in turn caused me to have weird dreams and wake up at 5am all pissed off over that fact, scribbling stuff on note paper to make up the gap, in classic MadMath style. Just in case anyone else is ever searching for the same thing, I'll present the distribution proofs below. We assume the usual properties of commuting, associating, and distributing multiplication and addition (which for integers can be proven from the Peano axioms).

Definition of Exponents: For positive integers n, a^n = a*a*...a [n times]. For negative integers, a^(-n) = 1/a^n. For the zero power, a^0 = 1.

Theorem: Exponents distribute over multiplication. That is: (ab)^n = a^n * b^n for any integer n.

Proof: For positive powers, (ab)^n = (ab)(ab)...(ab) [n times] = (a*a*...a)(b*b*...b) [by commuting & associating] = a^n * b^n [definition of exponents]. For negative powers, (ab)^(-n) = 1/(ab)^n [definition of negative exponent] = 1/(a^n * b^n) [positive exponents distribute] = 1/a^n * 1/b^n [definition of multiplying fractions] = a^(-n) * b(-n). For the zero power, (ab)^0 = 1 = 1*1 = a^0 * b^0 [definition of zero power].

Definition of Radicals: Square root √a means a positive number x such that x^2 = a.

Theorem: Radicals distribute over multiplication. That is: √(ab) = √a√b for any positive a, b.

Proof: Let x = √a, which means x^2 = a [definition of square root]. Let y = √b, which means y^2 = b [definition of square root]. Note that √(x^2 * y^2) = xy because (xy)^2 = x^2 * y^2 [distribution of exponents], satisfying the definition of square root. So √(ab) = √(x^2 * y^2) = xy = √a√b [substituting in each step].

[Note: Obviously I've skipped cube roots and Nth roots in the foregoing, but they're easily expanded from the above.]

Questions: Did I get those right (e.g., would it be more complete to use induction for the exponents proof)? Do you think they're illuminating for basic algebra students? And more importantly -- Can you find any place online that I missed or in any textbook that presents proofs for the preceding?


2012-10-16

Quaternions Anniversary

Today in 1843 William Rowan Hamilton invented quaternions (a way of using 4-dimensional numbers to concisely encode 3-dimensional positions) as he walked across Brougham Bridge in Dublin, carving them into the stone there to make sure he didn’t forget later. Begorah, that’s 132 years ago!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quaternions