String, Straightedge and Shadow

String, Straightedge and Shadow

by Julia E. Diggins
String, Straightedge and Shadow

String, Straightedge and Shadow

by Julia E. Diggins

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$6.99 

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Overview

In this beautifully illustrated classic reader, Julia E. Diggins masterfully recreates the story of geometry. Using three simple tools — the string, the straightedge, and the shadow — early mathematicians discovered the basic principles and constructions of elementary geometry.

This book reveals how these discoveries related to the ancient civilizations of Mesopotamia, Egypt, and Greece. Diggins weaves this story from archeological and historical records, and the legends of the major mathematicians of the time. By reconstructing events as they might have happened, Diggins enables the attentive reader to follow the pattern of reasoning that led to an ingenious proof of the Pythagorean theorem, an appreciation of the significance of the Golden Mean in art and architecture, and the construction of the five regular solids. You will learn how the knowledge and wisdom of so many cultures shaped our civilization today.

String, Straightedge, and Shadow is a must-read for middle school students or for parents helping their children through their first geometry course. It is popular with teachers and parents who use Jamie York's Making Math Meaningful™ curriculum books.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940161365410
Publisher: Jamie York Press Inc
Publication date: 12/13/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 14 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Julia E. Diggins, who taught mathematics for many years in Washington, D.C., completed her under-graduate work in mathematics at Trinity College in Washington, and then attended the Catholic University of America, where she received an M.A. in psychology.

While teaching mathematics in junior high school, she was awarded grants by the National Science Foundation to attend courses at Rutgers University, Boston College, and the University of Maryland, where she worked with members of the Maryland University Mathematics Project on the preparation of a new curriculum. Subsequently she began to devote herself entirely to teaching “modern” mathematics for elementary school teachers at the University of Maryland.

Julia Diggins died in 1987, leaving her husband, William J. Madden, and nephew, Peter S. Diggins.
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