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If maths equals tedium: a response to an article in the TES October 2002. Join a Mathsnet discussion forum.

Reviews
FX Draw 3
for adding mathematical diagrams to your documents
Coincidences, Chaos and All That Jazz
review of new maths book
Absorb Mathematics
courseware from Crocodile Clips
TI-84 Plus Silver Edition
the latest graphical calculator from Texas Instruments
TI-Smartview
the software that puts your TI calculator onto your interactive whiteboard
Geometer's Sketchpad 4
dynamic geometry software for exploring mathematics
WebEQ 3
tools for putting dynamic math on the Web
Data handling with SURVEY
DERIVE, by Bernhard Kutzler
LOGOTILE, tesselation microworld
SUPERLOGO, by Alan Sturgess

AS/A2 resources
MathsDISC
- a CD-ROM resource for AS/A2 exam preparation
Specimen Questions for AS/A2
from Curriculum Press
it's Pure Maths
self assessment tests

What is P(M|C)
where M="has a maths degree", C="is a stand-up comedian

What is mathematics?
an open question...

The trouble with maths
a response to an article in the Guardian October 2002

If maths equals tedium
a response to an article in the TES October 2002

Pressure points
teachers' concerns about the new ASA2 A-levels.

The death of distance

Interactive mathematics online for school and home
A paper on a vision for Online mathematics education delivered at ICME 9 in Japan.

What is half of three quarters?
The Chief Inspector for schools replies...

Mathematics in the Last Frontier
An article from Alaska, where native students fly to school in tiny single propeller airplanes...

Is A-Level Maths getting easier?
Are standards falling? Are Modular A-Levels less demanding and easier to pass?

Fraction of the benefits
As the Internet revolution continues, its rate of growth alone would be a job for any mathematician.

Puzzling thoughts
line through intersectionsTwo circles - an interactive exploration into interactive geometry and beyond: algebra, coordinate geometry and complex numbers. 1, 2, 3, 4 - four digits that DWARFED the universe - What is the largest number you can make using the digits 1, 2, 3 and 4, the four mathematical signs, +, -, *, ÷, brackets and the decimal point? - from MicroMath

Recommended puzzle books - from Martin Gardner, Douglas Hofstadter, David Wells, Keith Devlin, Rudy Rucker, Boris Kordemsky, Ivars Peterson, John Allen Paulos, H.E.Dudeney, Sam Loyd, Simon Singh. and others.

Astounding!:
eip+ 1=0. What are the most astounding facts accessible to school pupils?
Can time be metricised?: why do we cope with 7, 12, 24, 60, 52, 365, 366 and 3600 - a brief comment by Zaini Ismail. Numbers in Words: What are the largest and smallest numbers that you can find expressed in words in which all the letters are different? - a puzzle from the 1960's dusted off and reconsidered.


Archive
An archive of all newsletters sent out to subscribers is kept at newsletterMathsNet newsletter archive

mepRead the diary of one school's attempt to introduce new teaching methods: a straightforward and honest account of the experiences encountered by the pupils and staff involved - MEP Project



Using Software

Growing dandelions on a TI-83 / EL9600. A statistical simulation of a random process
Distribution models with a TI-82 by David Cassell, Hewett School, Norwich
All you need is... a cheap, small, portable computer - but is the Texas Instruments TI-92 the answer?
Logo Fractals - How to use logo to produce fractals like Sierpinski's gasket
Fractal Landscapes Generator - by Felix Golubov.
A spreadsheet's largest number - what is the largest number your spreadsheet can display - and why?


And finally
 
"Can you do addition?" the White Queen asked. "What's one and one and one and one and one and one and one and one and one and one?"
"I don't know," said Alice. "I lost count."

Through the Looking Glass, Lewis Carroll


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