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Giving meaning to mathematics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2016

A. G. Howson*
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics, The University, Southampton SO9 5NH

Extract

This article is based on students’ remarks about the introduction of matrices and linear transformations; remarks which provide interesting support to those recorded by M. L. Cornelius [1] in a recent Gazette. However, the purpose of the article is not merely to record students’ opinions, but to consider what implications such responses have for us as teachers.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Mathematical Association 1974

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References

1. Cornelius, M. L., The transition from school to university mathematics, Mathl. Gaz. LVI, 207218 (No. 397, October 1972).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2. Griffiths, H. B. and Howson, A. G., Mathematics: society and curricula. Cambridge University Press (1974).Google Scholar
3. Fletcher, T. J., A heuristic approach to matrices, Educ. Stud. Math. 1, 166180 (1968).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
4. Fletcher, T. J., Linear algebra through its applications. Van Nostrana Reinhold (1972).Google Scholar
5. Quoted in Glaeser, G., Mathématiques pour l’ élève professeur. Hermann (1971).Google Scholar
6. Thom, R., Modern mathematics: does it exist?, in Developments in mathematical education (ed. Howson, A. G.). Cambridge University Press (1973).Google Scholar