Difference between revisions of "Cedars Math"

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(Links to various things)
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*The Zooming Scratch Paper Page is at [https://docs.google.com/drawings/d/1mfuy8BLaIAYxYBG9tvY25upqMSbBfTxQo6BU49ix8HU/edit https://docs.google.com/drawings/d/1mfuy8BLaIAYxYBG9tvY25upqMSbBfTxQo6BU49ix8HU/edit].
 
*The Zooming Scratch Paper Page is at [https://docs.google.com/drawings/d/1mfuy8BLaIAYxYBG9tvY25upqMSbBfTxQo6BU49ix8HU/edit https://docs.google.com/drawings/d/1mfuy8BLaIAYxYBG9tvY25upqMSbBfTxQo6BU49ix8HU/edit].
  
[[Cedars Math:Handouts Handouts]] and [[Cedars Math: Words]]
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[[Cedars Math:Handouts|List of Handouts]] and [[Cedars Math:Words|List of Words]]
  
 
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==Handouts==
 
==Handouts==
 
*[http://www.rasmusen.org/special/Cedars_School/03.01a_How_to_Multiply_5_by_15_handout.pdf  "How to Solve It: Ways to Compute 5x15"]
 
*[http://www.rasmusen.org/special/Cedars_School/03.01a_How_to_Multiply_5_by_15_handout.pdf  "How to Solve It: Ways to Compute 5x15"]

Revision as of 11:43, 19 January 2022

Links to various things

  • An online Python compiler that can import the matplotlib module is at codabrainy.com.

List of Handouts and List of Words


Handouts

  • The "All Odd Numbers Are Prime" joke
  • The Python code by Professor Connell to test the Polya Conjecture.

Words

  • Alpha and Beta
  • Amicus
  • Amiable
  • Century
  • Copyright.
  • Digression
  • Endless loop.
  • Expendable
  • Imperative
  • Lemma
  • Millenium
  • Obsolete.
  • Premise
  • Psychology
  • Shilling.
  • Syllogism
  • Theorem.

Proverbs and Phrases

  • "When I was a boy of fourteen, my father was so ignorant I could hardly stand to have the old man around. But when I got to be twenty-one, I was astonished at how much he had learned in seven years." Mark Twain, "Old Times on the Mississippi," Atlantic Monthly, 1874.
  • "A pint's a pound the world around." Thus, a pint has 16 ounces, and so does a pound.
  • "Venite Adoremus": Come and let's adore, or Come let us adore him.
  • "Veni, Vidi , Vici": I came, I saw, I conquered, in Latin. Julius Caesar said this.
  • "Per centum": for each 100, in Latin.
  • "e.g.": "exempli gratia", "for example", "as a free example", from Latin.

Chapter 1: Whole Numbers

1.1 Counting

1.2 Addition

1.3 Subtraction

1.4 Multiplication and Division

1.5 Long Division

Lesson 6, Friday. Order of operations, exponents

  • Test 1, (arithmetic, writing numbers in words).

Lesson 7, Wednesday. Exponents, neatness

Lesson 8, Friday. Graphics.

Lesson 9, Monday. Word problems

  • Homework 9 (word problems). Remember also to ask your parents what is necessary for salvation, and, in particular, why just deciding to believe is not enough. The key verse is "Thou believest that there is one God; thou doest well: the devils also believe, and tremble." James 2:19.
  • Here is a good blog post on prayer flags and prayer wheels, with gorgeous photographs if the Himalaya Mountains. Someone came up with the idea of the "prayer wagon": drawings here and here. Relatedly, the parable of Lazarus and the Rich Man (Luke) came up in class.
  • WORDS: Amiable, endless loop.
  • "When I was a boy of fourteen, my father was so ignorant I could hardly stand to have the old man around. But when I got to be twenty-one, I was astonished at how much he had learned in seven years." Mark Twain, "Old Times on the Mississippi," Atlantic Monthly, 1874.
  print("Buddhist  code.")
  x = 4
  item=1
  while x<6:
  print("Glory to God in the highest!",item)
  item = item +1
  print ("The End.") 
  • Steps in solving word problems: 1. Figure out what the question is and what kind of number is supposed to be the answer. 2. Figure out which numbers in the question are relevant--- some numbers might well be irrelevant to getting to the answer. 3. Figure out what techniques you are going to need, e.g., addition, division, Python coding, looking up something on the Internet.