practical mathematics
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

167
(FIVE YEARS 9)

H-INDEX

6
(FIVE YEARS 0)

Author(s):  
Lovneesh Sharma, Et. al.

The rapid technological modernization in civil engineering is diligentlyconnected to the interdependenceamongst mathematics and civil engineering. This demands civil professionals be more competent and trustworthy in their mathematical and engineering abilities. This paper reviews the tendencies of engineering complications that involvemathematical-oriented fundamentals. Introductions to the civil engineers at the place of workproposeunderstandings of the nature of complications in the actualbackground and an examination of the mathematical-oriented fundamentals in cracking these difficulties. The findings recommendthat the mathematicalinformative endeavours assimilatetrustworthy problem-solving understandings for civil engineering scholars. Functioning research is one of the modernsubdivisions of practical mathematics. Due to the extensive applicability and substantialusefulness, its expansion became significant, the business revolution and the spectacular growth of the calculationprocedure had animportant role. The operative research deals with the resilience of afinestconclusion as a symbol of the defrayal of deterministic and stochastic depictionsorganized for the learning of monetary andorganizationalspectacles. From a rationalmethodology, the development of the elaboration of a conclusion is edged by numerous decisional prototypes, as well as the eminence quodictating the settlement commissioning a result is measured by the volume, erection and excellence of the existingdata. Subsequently, the supervisors may use mathematical prototypes of optimization which are supportive for captivating a conclusion under the conditions of reliability, which means all importantessentials are known, as following: Decisional imitation; Decisional board; thepractice of global utility. In most of the subjectsacknowledged, it is assetobserving that the use of mathematics is extensively applied in civil and structural engineering complications. The uncontaminated mathematical connotations seem to be subliminallysecreted and entrenched behind the ‘civil and structural’ of the complications, but it remains appropriate to know whereverdiagnostic results originated from. Therefore, it can beaccomplished that the mathematics-oriented acutethoughtfulfundamentals are suggestivelyrequired to crackseveral civil engineering places of work problems.


Author(s):  
Rashmi Sharma, Et. al.

The rapid technological modernization in civil engineering is diligentlyconnected to the inte: rdependenceamongst mathematics and civil engineering. This demands civil professionals be more competent and trustworthy in their mathematical and engineering abilities. This paper reviews the tendencies of engineering complications that involvemathematical-oriented fundamentals. Introductions to the civil engineers at the place of workproposeunderstandings of the nature of complications in the actualbackground and an examination of the mathematical-oriented fundamentals in cracking these difficulties. The findings recommendthat the mathematicalinformative endeavours assimilatetrustworthy problem-solving understandings for civil engineering scholars. Functioning research is one of the modernsubdivisions of practical mathematics. Due to the extensive applicability and substantialusefulness, its expansion became significant, the business revolution and the spectacular growth of the calculationprocedure had animportant role. The operative research deals with the resilience of afinestconclusion as a symbol of the defrayal of deterministic and stochastic depictionsorganized for the learning of monetary andorganizationalspectacles. From a rationalmethodology, the development of the elaboration of a conclusion is edged by numerous decisional prototypes, as well as the eminence quodictating the settlement commissioning a result is measured by the volume, erection and excellence of the existingdata. Subsequently, the supervisors may use mathematical prototypes of optimization which are supportive for captivating a conclusion under the conditions of reliability, which means all importantessentials are known, as following: Decisional imitation; Decisional board; thepractice of global utility. In most of the subjectsacknowledged, it is assetobserving that the use of mathematics is extensively applied in civil and structural engineering complications. The uncontaminated mathematical connotations seem to be subliminallysecreted and entrenched behind the ‘civil and structural’ of the complications, but it remains appropriate to know whereverdiagnostic results originated from. Therefore, it can beaccomplished that the mathematics-oriented acutethoughtfulfundamentals are suggestivelyrequired to crackseveral civil engineering places of work problems.


2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (4) ◽  
pp. 328-359
Author(s):  
Cesare Pastorino

Abstract Numerous early modern experimentalists, including Galileo Galilei, Francis Bacon and Thomas Harriot, viewed one seemingly humble principle – that at a given volume, different substances can be identified by their particular weight, or specific gravity – as a fundamental key to the understanding of nature in general. Johannes Kepler’s Messekunst Archimedis of 1616 contains a striking summary of the experimental research on specific gravities in the long sixteenth-century. Counting himself amongst an extensive list of authors interested in this problem, Kepler mentions not only natural philosophers or mathematicians interested in Archimedes. His account surprisingly includes humanists, instrument makers, antiquarians and assayers. Received histories of specific gravities often focus on antecedents of modern disciplinary concepts and methodologies, where instead, Kepler’s account suggests the existence of a heterogeneous group of early modern experts involved in experiments on the quantification of matter, at the intersection between the history of science, practical mathematics and the humanities.


Author(s):  
Rune Johan Krumsvik ◽  
Øystein Olav Skaar

Research shows that for decades, there have been attempts to implement information and communication technology (ICT) in schools, but it has had a weak uptake among teachers thus far. One of the reasons for this lack of integration is that teachers perceive ICT as an additional load on their everyday practices that would increase the complexity of their roles. Teachers are therefore often cautious and sceptical about ICT implementation because it is often not properly attached to deeply entrenched school structure. Adaptive learning tools have provided new opportunities to facilitate this integration. Adaptive learning tools are expected to contribute to the customization and personalization of pupil learning by continually calibrating and adjusting pupils’ learning activities to their skill and competence levels. However, it is important to discuss whether adaptive learning tools need to be sufficiently anchored in the curriculum, in formative assessment, in adaptive education, and in homework to achieve their potential. In this way, we can obtain an understanding of how a systematic implementation of adaptive learning tools influences the learning outcomes, learning environment, and motivation of pupils in school, when such tools are attached to the deeply entrenched structures in school. In such implementation processes it seems like we need to reconsider the value of homework to achieve, for example, sufficient volume training and root learning with adaptive learning tools, thus freeing up time for practical mathematics and deep learning at school. Importantly, this requires a digital competence among teachers, where the critical factor is the teacher’s ability to create a teaching doctrine in which technology use is justified by didactic choices.


BJHS Themes ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 111-129
Author(s):  
Boris Jardine

AbstractEarly modern books about mathematical instruments are typically well illustrated and contain detailed instructions on how to make and use the tools they describe. Readers approached these texts with a desire to extract information – and sometimes even to extract illustrations which could be repurposed as working instruments. To focus on practical approaches to these texts is to bring the category of ‘making’ to the fore. But here care needs to be taken about who could make what, about the rhetoric of craft, and about the technique of working with diagrams and images. I argue that we should read claims about making instruments cautiously, but that, conversely, we should be inquisitive and open-minded when it comes to the potential uses of printed diagrams in acquiring skill and knowledge: these could be worked on directly, or cut out or copied and turned into working instruments. Books were sites of mathematical practice, and in certain disciplines this was central to learning through doing.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 203-214
Author(s):  
Kiki Nia Sania Effendi ◽  
Zulkardi Zulkardi ◽  
Ratu Ilma Indra Putri ◽  
Poppy Yaniawati

School Literacy Movement, one of the government's efforts to optimize the ability of students in terms of literacy, needs support from every circle; one of them is from researches in the educational field. This research aims to develop reading texts in a futsal context that will be presented in students’ worksheet with valid and practical criteria that will have a potential effect in mathematics learning. This research is using the design research method with a development studies type that consists of three main steps, such as preliminary, prototyping, and assessment with an evaluation plot formative study that used in a prototyping step, including the self-evaluation, expert review and one-to-one, small group, and field test. The research subjects are the students in 7th grade in one of Junior High School in Karawang. There are some steps taken in the data collection process, such as documentation, walkthrough, questionnaire, test, and interview. According to the data analysis, it can be concluded that this research has been producing a product in the form of thirteen reading the text for School Literacy Movement invalid and practical mathematics learning that will have a potential effect for the students’ learning result in the mathematics learning process.


Author(s):  
Mihnea Dobre

This chapter explores the intellectual development of Jacques Rohault—although not considered one of the leading figures of the early modern period, well known among historians of science. It attempts to evaluate Rohault’s Cartesianism and to present it in a more nuanced manner than it is usually illustrated in the literature. Focusing on his mature work, published only one year before his death in 1672, but also referring to his earlier activities in Paris and to the publication of his posthumous works, the chapter argues that his “Cartesianism” came rather late in his thinking, while his early activity concerns mathematics and mechanics. The reading endorsed in this chapter opens a fresh perspective on Rohault’s experimentalism, suggesting a transition from practical mathematics to Cartesian natural philosophy.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document