Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- On the teaching of mathematics as a service subject
- What mathematics should be taught to students in physical sciences, engineering, …?
- Mathematics as a service subject – Why?
- Teaching first-year students
- Teaching mathematics to engineering students utilising innovative teaching methods
- Discrete mathematics: some personal thoughts
- Mathematical education for engineering students
- Some reflections about the teaching of mathematics in engineering schools
- Teaching mathematics as a service subject
- A Final Statement
- List of Participants
- Contents of Selected Papers on the Teaching of Mathematics as a Service Subject
Teaching mathematics as a service subject
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 April 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- On the teaching of mathematics as a service subject
- What mathematics should be taught to students in physical sciences, engineering, …?
- Mathematics as a service subject – Why?
- Teaching first-year students
- Teaching mathematics to engineering students utilising innovative teaching methods
- Discrete mathematics: some personal thoughts
- Mathematical education for engineering students
- Some reflections about the teaching of mathematics in engineering schools
- Teaching mathematics as a service subject
- A Final Statement
- List of Participants
- Contents of Selected Papers on the Teaching of Mathematics as a Service Subject
Summary
Mathematics has served science and commerce for thousands of years. Yet the attraction of mathematics to mathematicians has frequently been the pure beauty of the subject without regard for its applications. Hence, for many teachers who first found mathematics magnetic for its own sake, the acts of teaching and having to justify the service function of their courses is often a challenge. Even now, many American graduate students in mathematics are exposed only to the relationship of mathematics to physics. Their graduate training does not require even a nodding acquaintance with statistics, operations (operational) research, model building, numerical analysis or simulation techniques. Since those students who are trained in the most abstract mathematics are the most likely to be teaching in the nation's colleges and universities, American undergraduates face a ridiculous irrelevancy in the mathematics classroom.
In most American colleges and universities today incoming students can choose a first mathematics course from
remedial mathematics – intermediate algebra
finite mathematics – usually for business students
liberal arts mathematics – “math for poets”
precalculus – functions (algebraic and transcendental)
technical mathematics – for the trades (two year colleges)
statistics – for social science, business, economics and health sciences
short calculus – for non math and science majors
calculus for mathematics, science and engineering three or four semester sequence in which advanced placement is possible
discrete mathematics – for computer science and mathematics students
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Mathematics as a Service Subject , pp. 75 - 89Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1988