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Showing 1 to 15 of 48 results
DeCiccio, Albert; Kenny, Tammy; Lippacher, Linda; Flanary, Barry – New England Journal of Higher Education, 2011
At Southern Vermont College (SVC) and at the nation's other colleges and universities, Anatomy and Physiology I (A&PI) is the gateway course into healthcare careers. Disturbingly, at SVC and elsewhere, many first-year students interested in healthcare careers do not succeed in this course. They withdraw from the course or the institution, or their…
Descriptors: First Generation College Students, College Freshmen, Physiology, Anatomy
Chapman, Olive – International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2004
This paper reports on teachers? practical knowledge [PK] about peer interactions [PI] in learning mathematics. The focus is on high school teachers who consistently engaged students PI in their teaching. Data consisted of interviews and classroom observations. Findings indicate that these teachers have PK of students? roles in PI and learning…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Secondary School Teachers, High School Students, Peer Relationship
Scott, Paul – Australian Mathematics Teacher, 2008
The number Pi (approximately 3.14159) is defined to be the ratio C/d of the circumference (C) to the diameter (d) of any given circle. In particular, Pi measures the circumference of a circle of diameter d = 1. Historically, the Greek mathematician Archimedes found good approximations for Pi by inscribing and circumscribing many-sided polygons…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Numbers, Mathematics Instruction, Equations (Mathematics)
Scott, Paul – Australian Mathematics Teacher, 2008
One of the best known numbers in mathematics is the number denoted by the symbol [pi]. This column describes activities that teachers can utilize to encourage students to explore the use of [pi] in one of the simplest of geometric figures: the circle.
Descriptors: Number Concepts, Mathematical Concepts, Teaching Methods, Mathematics Instruction
Dion, Peter; Ho, Anthony – Australian Senior Mathematics Journal, 2012
For at least 2000 years people have been trying to calculate the value of [pi], the ratio of the circumference to the diameter of a circle. People know that [pi] is an irrational number; its decimal representation goes on forever. Early methods were geometric, involving the use of inscribed and circumscribed polygons of a circle. However, real…
Descriptors: Computers, Teaching Methods, Geometric Concepts, Programming
Daire, Sandra Arguelles – Mathematics Teacher, 2010
Celebrating mathematics should be a yearlong event in which students in mathematics classes of all levels engage in mathematics activities and competitions that will encourage growth in mathematical knowledge, enthusiasm for the subject, and collaboration among students of different abilities and backgrounds. Pi Day and Pi Week festivities--a good…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Mathematics Activities, Mathematics Instruction, Creative Teaching
Watkins, Jessica; Mazur, Eric – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2013
In this paper we present results relating undergraduate student retention in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) majors to the use of Peer Instruction (PI) in an introductory physics course at a highly selective research institution. We compare the percentages of students who switch out of a STEM major after taking a physics…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, STEM Education, Academic Persistence, Majors (Students)
Lucas, Adam – PRIMUS, 2009
In my Calculus classes I encourage my students to actively reflect on course material, to work collaboratively, and to generate diverse solutions to questions. To facilitate this I use peer instruction (PI), a structured questioning process, and i-clickers, a radio frequency classroom response system enabling students to vote anonymously. This…
Descriptors: Student Participation, Calculus, Educational Technology, Teaching Methods
Denny, J. K. – College Mathematics Journal, 2012
Using continued fraction expansions, we can approximate constants, such as pi and e, using an appropriate integer n raised to the power x[superscript 1/x], x a suitable rational. We review continued fractions and give an algorithm for producing these approximations.
Descriptors: College Mathematics, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Computation
Brown, Natalie; Watson, Jane; Wright, Suzie – Australian Mathematics Teacher, 2011
The activities suggested in this article are intended for use with lower secondary school students. The "Australian Curriculum: Mathematics" states that students in lower secondary school should "investigate the relationship between features of circles such as circumference, area, radius and diameter" and "use formulas to solve problems involving…
Descriptors: Middle School Teachers, Middle School Students, Rural Schools, Teaching Methods
Dempsey, Michael – Mathematics Teacher, 2009
If students are in an advanced mathematics class, then at some point they enjoyed mathematics and looked forward to learning and practicing it. There is no reason that this passion and enjoyment should ever be lost because the subject becomes more difficult or rigorous. This author, who teaches advanced precalculus to high school juniors,…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, High School Students, Secondary School Mathematics, Teaching Methods
Linn, Stacy L.; Neal, David K. – Mathematics Teacher, 2006
This article employs the Archimedean method of estimating the value of pi within an inscribed pentagon. We show how to write these approximations in terms of the golden ration.
Descriptors: Geometry, Mathematics, Mathematical Concepts, Computation
Awtrey, Chad – PRIMUS, 2013
This article discusses a writing project that offers students the opportunity to solve one of the most famous geometric problems of Greek antiquity; namely, the impossibility of trisecting the angle [pi]/3. Along the way, students study the history of Greek geometry problems as well as the life and achievements of Carl Friedrich Gauss. Included is…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, College Mathematics, Undergraduate Students, Teaching Methods
Shibley, Ivan A., Jr.; Amaral, Katie E.; Aurentz, David J.; McCaully, Ronald J. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2010
A variety of approaches to the concept of oxidation and reduction appear in organic textbooks. The method proposed here is different than most published approaches. The oxidation state is calculated by totaling the number of heterogeneous atoms, [pi]-bonds, and rings. A comparison of the oxidation states of reactant and product determine what type…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Organic Chemistry, Scientific Concepts, Courses
Papadopoulos, Ioannis – Science & Education, 2014
This paper describes a classroom experiment where students use techniques found in the history of mathematics to learn about an important mathematical idea. More precisely, sixth graders in a primary school follow Archimedes's method of exhaustion in order to compute the number p. Working in a computer environment, students inscribe and…
Descriptors: History, Grade 6, Elementary School Science, Computer Uses in Education

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