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19 - Protractors in the Classroom: An Historical Perspective

from IV - History of Mathematics and Pedagogy

Amy Ackerberg-Hastings
Affiliation:
Anne Arundel Community College
Amy Shell-Gellasch
Affiliation:
Beloit College
Dick Jardine
Affiliation:
Keene State College
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Summary

Introduction

The view of mathematics presented in the school supplies aisles of discount stores revolves around concrete aids: flash cards, rulers, protractors, graph paper, and the like. These inexpensive objects, although snapped up by the general public, are often completely foreign to the daily lives of contemporary mathematicians and mathematics educators. Meanwhile, parents, students, and teachers might assume their classroom tools have some sort of eternal existence outside of historical context. However, beneath surface appearances, there are links between mathematical teaching aids and professional mathematics. The history of mathematics can reveal such commonalties. For example, at the turn of the twentieth century, E. H. Moore required students to prepare graphs on squared paper, easing computation and revealing the ever-present relationship between abstract principles and concrete applications, when he advocated a “laboratory method” of teaching mathematics. [19] [33, pp. 318–319, 327] Yet, the connection between Moore, whose primary reputation was as a research mathematician, and the ubiquitous graph paper of today's elementary mathematics classroom is no longer recognized by many teachers and mathematicians. Similarly, the lowly protractor has a history that transcends abstract mathematics, applied sciences, and mathematical pedagogy and that deserves to be more widely known. Aspects of this story may assist those teachers who are trying to communicate mathematical ideas to students who may not have a background in abstract reasoning but who do have protractors wedged in their backpacks. Therefore, the purpose of this chapter is to provide an overview of the history of the protractor, incorporating suggestions for applying this story to classroom activities at a variety of academic levels.

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Chapter
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From Calculus to Computers
Using the Last 200 Years of Mathematics History in the Classroom
, pp. 217 - 228
Publisher: Mathematical Association of America
Print publication year: 2005

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