Day |
Date |
Activity |
Assignment (due one week from assignment date, unless otherwise stated) |
Tue |
8/23 |
Welcome: Birthday Problem and a card trick. |
Homework:
- Read the short on-line article "From Fish to Infinity" for next time. (Make sure to view the Sesame Street video!)
- Your extra-credit assignment, should you choose to accept it, concerns the card trick (The Ice Cream Trick) that we saw in class:
- Take about a quarter of a deck of cards.
- Ask the volunteer what kind of ice cream they like.
- Give them "a scoop" by
- counting out one card for each letter in the name of their ice cream;
- then covering with "toppings" (the rest of the cards dropped on top).
- Repeat two more times, for a total of three scoops.
- Magically tell them the card that's on top of their sundae. (By
the way, there's always something that the magician isn't telling you....)
Your mission:
- How does the trick work?
- Does it always work (for all flavors of ice cream)?
- What is the secret to success?
Write up your answers and turn them in before class if you want credit.
Of course you will ultimately try this on your friends, and astound and amaze
them! Maybe you can win some money??
|
Thu | 8/25 |
Day 2: Primitive counting |
Homework (due Thursday, 9/1):
- Do the reading on "The Birthday Problem", and then try the following problem: There are some people on an elevator. Suppose you bet your buddy
that two people on the elevator have a common birth day-of-the-week (I
was born on Saturday -- do you know what day of the week you were born
on?).
- How many people in the elevator would guarantee that you win?
- What's the fewest number of people on the elevator that would give
you the advantage over your friend? You might create an experiment to
test your guess, and report the results of your experiment....
- For the following use the method of "primitive counting" described
in class (day 2):
- Turn the following into the appropriate string of 1s and
0s (drawing the tree for me is best):
- 32
- 63
- 97
- Turn the following strings of 1s and 0s into the appropriate
number of sheep (again, drawing the tree for me is best):
- 101010
- 1010101
- 10110001
|
Tue | 8/30 |
Day 3: Babylonian Mathematics |
Homework (due Tuesday, 9/6):
- Write the following numbers in the Babylonian number
system:
- 57
- 222
- 817
- 9432
- 14449
- Translate the following tablet, and explain its purpose:
- Extra credit: write a one-page story about the kid who created the
Babylonian clay tablet nines table we studied, and about how the tablet
ended up in our hands today. Complete fiction appreciated. (I'll post
these, and we'll have a contest -- the winner(s) will win "get out of
homework free cards" as well).
|
Thu | 9/1 |
Day 4: Mayan Math |
Homework (due Thursday, 9/8):
- Write the following numbers in the Mayan number system:
- 57
- 222
- 817
- 7581
- 9432
- 79420
- Complete your Mayan lunar calendar and hand it in. Please show
some work for the calculations -- no work, little credit.
|
Tue | 9/6 |
Day 5: The Great Fraudini |
Please read the following
So the way that these readings will work is to fill in
some details on what we discuss in class, and I'll
expect you to have read them for additional
information.
There will be some questions on the tests that refer
to these readings. Feel free to bring up things that
you have read during our class time.
Homework (due Tue, 9/13):
- Use Fraudini's trick to write the following numbers as sums of
powers of 2 (you'll need some additional powers of 2):
- 31
- 57
- 129
- 222
- 817
- Compare your answers to those obtained by writing these numbers out using primitive counting.
|
Thu | 9/8 |
Day 6 |
YangHui's triangle
For next time, visit the Babylonian stories, and decide which is best. Then we'll vote!
Homework, to turn in Thursday, 9/15, on your handout,
- Complete a version of the triangle using our numbers (i.e. translate this triangle), and
- Write the next row of Yanghui's triangle, using the notation of the bamboo counting rods. Use the patterns we discover in class to figure out what row comes next. Include an explanation of how you chose to represent any numbers that haven't already appeared in the table.
|
Tue | 9/13 |
Day 7 |
Fibonacci Nim
Homework (for Tuesday, 9/20):
- Suppose you are about to begin a game of Fibonacci
nim. You start with 50 sticks. What's your first move?
- Suppose you are about to begin a game of Fibonacci
nim. You start with 100 sticks. What's your first move?
- Suppose you are about to begin a game of Fibonacci
nim. You start with 500 sticks. What's your first move?
- Suppose you begin a game of 15 sticks by taking 2; your
friend takes 4; what's your next move, that will lead to
victory provided you know the strategy?
|
Thu | 9/15 |
Day 8 |
Fibonacci Again: no new assignment prior to your test, except to read about how plants count. Please read this New York Times article: The
Venus Flytrap, a Plant That Can Count (really
primitive counting....)
|
Tue | 9/20 |
Day 9 |
Review |
Thu | 9/22 |
Day 10 |
Exam 1 |
Tue | 9/27 |
Day 11 |
Golden Rectangles
Homework (due 10/4):
- Measure 5 different rectangles around the house that look like
they might be golden. Calculate their ratios, and see how close
they come to being golden.
- Make a truly beautiful artistic Fibonacci spiral. For example
you can do it graphically, by using square pictures of friends,
family, landscapes, etc. of increasing size.
We'll have a competition for most beautiful spiral.
|
Thu | 9/29 |
Day 12: Pascal's Triangle |
First, some readings (found here -- view each image separately for easier reading):
- Background History of "Pascal"'s triangle
- Properties of "Pascal"'s triangle
Homework (due 10/6) -- counting things.
- Use Pascal's triangle to answer these questions:
- In how many different ways can you put 5 friends into 2 different
vehicles for a trip to the graduation party, where 2 friends
go in one car, and 3 friends go in the other?
- In how many different ways can you put 5 friends into 2 different
vehicles for a trip to the graduation party (assuming either
car could take all)?
- How many different ways can you choose 3 candy bars from 6
different candy bars?
- Complete your "Leibniz honeycomb" to hand in. That is, continue to
extend Pascal's triangle until it covers the complete hexagonal sheet
of paper.
|
Tue | 10/4 |
Day 13: Egyptian Multiplication |
Homework (due 10/11): Demonstrate Egyptian multiplication by multiplying (write
out the table, and check your work):
- 13*34
- 23*79
- 81*123
- 255*256
|
Thu | 10/6 |
Day 14 |
Egyptian Division |
Tue | 10/11 |
Day 15: Egyptian Division |
Please read this short summary of number systems (including Egyptian)
Homework (due 10/13): Demonstrate Egyptian division in two ways:
- Demonstrate Egyptian division by dividing:
Try these using the same sort of "doubling/halving" table that
we use for multiplication.
- Demonstrate Egyptian division by dividing:
Try these using the unit fractions table method, and Fraudini's
trick (writing a number as a sum of distinct powers of 2).
|
Thu | 10/13 |
Day 16: Symmetry |
Homework (due Tuesday, 10/25):
- Please read this short chapter from a favorite old textbook: Mathematics: a Human Endeavor, by Harold Jacobs.
- Do the problems on the four pages of the
handout from class. If a problem says something like "on sheet F1-2", don't worry about it.
- For extra credit, submit two pictures of yourself -- one of your
"left face", and one of your "right face", as in this
article. Is one good? Is one evil?
|
Tue | 10/18 |
Day free |
Fall Break |
Thu | 10/20 |
Day 17: Platonic solids |
Homework:
To hand in (due Thursday, 10/27):
- In your own words, explain why no Platonic solid has
- hexagonal faces
- octagonal faces
You should use at least 100 words -- maybe even a diagram. This
is not a "short answer" problem!
- Find an example of a company's logo which involves
Platonic solids (don't use those you find using these
resources, but they'll get you started):
- Logos!
- (explain how this one is related to Platonic solids)
- Draw 2-dimensional projections of each of the Platonic
solids. That is, a realistic view of a Platonic solid on 2-dimensional
paper. Try your hardest to do this well!
Here is an example for a cube:
Now you do the rest....
- For each of the Platonic solids, compute the following:
where F is the number of faces, E the number of edges, and
V the number of vertices. What do you discover?
- Find a soccer ball and try the same thing ()
on that: what do you discover?
|
Tue | 10/25 |
Day 18: Graphs |
Reading for next time:
- The Enemy of My Enemy (complete graphs)
- Untangling the Web (directed graphs)
- Group Think (complete, directed graphs)
|
Thu | 10/27 |
Day 19: Graphs |
Homework (due Thursday, 11/10):
- Draw the complete graphs with 6 and 7 vertices. How many edges
are there for each? Can you figure out a formula for the number
of edges of a complete graph with n vertices?
- Draw all the distinctly different simple graphs with five
vertices (There are a lot! How many?). Use symmetry
as much as you can to avoid double counting them. Can
you see any patterns in how they're created? Which are
duals to each other?
- Create "floor plans" of a house that has an Euler path,
and one that doesn't. Explain why they do or don't.
- Give two examples of balanced and two examples of
unbalanced graphs with four people in them (see "The
Enemy of my Enemy is my Friend").
|
Tue | 11/1 |
Day 20 |
Please read Recycling Topology, and a history
of the recycling symbol.
|
Thu | 11/3 |
Day 21 |
Exam 2 |
Tue | 11/8 |
Day free |
Election Day |
Thu | 11/10 |
Day 22: Bands and Links |
Please read a history
of the recycling symbol
Homework (due Thursday, 11/17):
- Draw by hand a mobius band, and highlight the edge
in the drawing. What object does the edge create?
- Draw by hand a twice-twisted band, and highlight
the edges in the drawing. What object does the edge create?
- Find a logo with a mobius band theme. Draw it on your paper, or
print it off, with URL or reference.
|
Tue | 11/15 |
Day 23: Links and Knots |
Reading for next time: Knots: a handout for
math circles
Homework (due Tuesday, 11/22):
- Draw by hand, and well, all four links we've now encountered:
- The unlink
- The Hopf link
- The Solomon's knot (actually a link)
- The Borromean rings
and all three torus knots:
- The unknot
- The trefoil
- The cinquefoil
You will be judged on correctness, and neatness.
Note:
Do not write "I can't draw!" on your paper. I get that all the
time, and I don't care. I'm not much of an artist either, but if I
spend the time, I can do a good job. You can, too. You need to draw
carefully, and well; so find a way to do it!
|
Thu | 11/17 |
Day 24: Identifying knots |
Homework (due 11/29):
|
Tue | 11/22 |
Day 25: Even more Knots |
|
Thu | 11/24 |
Thanksgiving |
|
Tue | 11/29 |
Day 26: Fractals |
Homework (due Tuesday, 12/6):
- Try these problems.
- Create your own examples of
- a stick fractal, and
- an area fractal.
You'll need to
- Define the simple rule (e.g. how does a stick turn into other sticks?)
- Apply the rule at least twice, so that we can begin to see "the world within the world"
|
Thu | 12/1 |
Day 27 |
Fractals |
Tue | 12/6 |
Day 28 |
Logo Day |
Thu | 12/8 |
Day 29 |
Review |