Teaching Mathematics with a Historical Perspective

Harvard Extension School

MATH E-320

Section 1

CRN 17533

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The difficulty of both learning and teaching math is evident in its history. The struggle of early research mathematicians who developed and formalized a topic parallels the struggle of students and teachers in the modern classroom. Students learning about the concept of limits and series undergo a similar process as the pioneers of calculus did when they developed the subject. Archimedes, Zeno, Cavalieri, Newton, Leibniz, and Cauchy had to find or invent structure. This struggle goes on today, as new flavors of calculus are developed and studied. Each week, this course considers a different math subject and gives an overview as well as discusses some core results in that area.

Instructor Info

Kyle Alexander Botkin, ALM

Teacher, Mathematics, Fremont County School District #2


Meeting Info

Th 6:00pm - 8:00pm (8/31 - 12/19)

Participation Option: Online Asynchronous or Online Synchronous

In online asynchronous courses, you are not required to attend class at a particular time. Instead you can complete the course work on your own schedule each week.

Deadlines

Last day to register:

Prerequisites

Single variable calculus is helpful.

Notes

This course meets via web conference. Students may attend at the scheduled meeting time or watch recorded sessions asynchronously. Recorded sessions are typically available within a few hours of the end of class and no later than the following business day. See minimum technology requirements.

All Sections of this Course

CRN Section # Participation Option(s) Instructor Section Status Meets Term Dates
17533 1 Online Asynchronous, Online Synchronous Kyle Botkin Open Th 6:00pm - 8:00pm
Aug 30 to Dec 18