Interactive Learning in Calculus and Differential Equations with
Applications
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this picture for a description of how it was generated
The Mathematics Department at Indiana University of Pennsylvania (IUP)
established a computerized learning environment, consisting of a
classroom with 31 Macintosh Centris 650s and a laboratory with 12
Macintosh LCs, all equipped with
Mathematica. Mathematica's notebook
feature enables science students to actively learn calculus and
differential equations with guided discovery and exploration. The
project was funded through a
National Science Foudation Instrumentation
and Laboratory Improvement grant, number DUE-9351896. IUP's
project has several significant attributes.
- The Mathematics Department is fully implementing this curriculum
in all sections of its science calculus sequence and in the two-semester
differential equations sequence.
- Eleven faculty, comprising approximately one third of IUP's
mathematics faculty, are coinvestigators.
- The curricular revisions are being coordinated with the science
departments at IUP, who are also integrating active learning and
technology in their courses. This collaboration, based on common
pedagogical goals and software, will bring more scientific applications
into mathematics courses and strengthen the use of mathematics in
science courses.
- All students in the Mathematics Department are involved.
Mathematics and Applied Mathematics majors are required to take
Differential Equations, and Mathematics Education majors have a unit
devoted to the project in the teacher preparation course, Computers and
Calculators in Secondary Mathematics.
Check back later at this location for more Mathematica notebooks relating to
calculus, ordinary differential equations, and partial differential
equations. Some of the topics covered are:
In order to disseminate these Mathematica notebooks, one of the PIs in
this grant wrote a program, mma2html, to convert
Mathmematica notebooks to HTML documents. This program is available
to the public.
Presentations:
- "Mathematica in the Classroom", Francisco Alarcon and Charles
Bertness, Lock Haven University, February 21, 1994.
- "IUP's Mathematica Network", Rebecca Stoudt, poster session on "Computer Laboratories in
Mathematics Education", American Mathematical Society/Mathematical
Association of America Joint Meeting, Cincinnati, Ohio, January 1994.
- "Restructuring the First Differential Equations Course for Mathematics
and Science Majors using Mathematica", Francisco Alarcon, in the MAA
session "New Methods for Teaching Ordinary Differential Equations",
American Mathematical Society/Mathematical Association of America Joint
Meeting, Cincinnati, Ohio, January 15, 1994.
Francisco Alarcon,
Don Balenovich,
Charles Bertness,
Gerald Buriok,
Dan Burkett,
Arlo Davis,
H. Edward Donley,
Gary Stoudt,
Rebecca Stoudt
Related Topics
Go up to Departmental Projects
hedonley@grove.iup.edu