Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Report of the Strasbourg Meeting
- Selected Papers
- Mathematics and the Computer Revolution
- Living with a New Mathematical Species
- Checking Mathematics with the Aid of a Computer
- On the Mathematical Basis of Computer Science
- The Mathematics of Computer Algebra
- Mathematical Education in the Computer Age
- A Fundamental Course in Higher Mathematics Incorporating Discrete and Continuous Themes
- Graphic Insight into Calculus and Differential Equations
- Calculus and the Computer. The Interplay of Discrete Numerical Methods and Calculus in the Education of Users of Mathematics: Considerations and Experiences
- Computer-based Symbolic Mathematics for Discovery
Graphic Insight into Calculus and Differential Equations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 April 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Report of the Strasbourg Meeting
- Selected Papers
- Mathematics and the Computer Revolution
- Living with a New Mathematical Species
- Checking Mathematics with the Aid of a Computer
- On the Mathematical Basis of Computer Science
- The Mathematics of Computer Algebra
- Mathematical Education in the Computer Age
- A Fundamental Course in Higher Mathematics Incorporating Discrete and Continuous Themes
- Graphic Insight into Calculus and Differential Equations
- Calculus and the Computer. The Interplay of Discrete Numerical Methods and Calculus in the Education of Users of Mathematics: Considerations and Experiences
- Computer-based Symbolic Mathematics for Discovery
Summary
The human brain is powerfully equipped to process visual information. By using computer graphics it is possible to tap this power to help students gain a greater understanding of many mathematical concepts. Furthermore, dynamic representations of mathematical processes furnish a degree of psychological reality that enables the mind to manipulate them in a far more fruitful way than could ever be achieved starting from static text and pictures in a book. Add to this the possibility of student exploration using prepared software and the sum total is a potent new force in the mathematics curriculum.
In this paper we report on the development of interactive high resolution graphics approaches at different levels of teaching calculus and differential equations. The first author has been concentrating on the calculus in the U.K. [Tall 1985] and the second is working with John H. Hubbard in the U.S.A. on differential equations [Hubbard & West 1985], (later referred to as [T] and [H&W] respectively). We are particularly grateful to Professor Hubbard for his assistance in the preparation of this article.
Others have pioneered a computer approach to these topics, particularly [Artigue & Gautheron 1983] who used computer graphics to build up pictures of solutions of autonomous systems of differential equations and [Sanchez et al. 1983] who emphasized a qualitative approach to the theory. A suitable qualitative approach can lean to an insightful understanding of the formal quantitative theory. The major advance in our work is the interactive nature of the prepared software, enabling students to explore the ideas and develop their own conceptualizations.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Influence of Computers and Informatics on Mathematics and its TeachingProceedings From a Symposium Held in Strasbourg, France in March 1985 and Sponsored by the International Commission on Mathematical Instruction, pp. 107 - 119Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1986
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