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So Matt, considering it's a Prec-calc class should I assume that the teacher has asked a question that requires your solution?
If there is gravity... x = x0 + v0t + (1/2)gt2Plugging in numbers (assuming fired from the surface of teh Earth)... 768 = 0 + 256 * t - 1/2 32 t2 => t2 - 16t + 48 = 0Using the quadratic equation we get the answers of 4 and 12 seconds.
A Pre-Calculus teacher would be expecting them to use a graphing utility to find the local max and local min (for the cubic function).
Do graphing calculators actually do algebraic solutions now and give absolute mins/maxes now or provide answers with radicals?
The projectile will be 768 ft from ground at t = 4s and t 12s, in the first when going up, secondly when going down.
Most of what we used to do in math class is done on a calculator now. The focus of education has switched to applications and technology, rather than theory and procedure. I'm still old school, so I try to have a bit of both. We need students to know how the technology gets its answers, so they can use appropriate problem-solving techniques when technology fails. However, we also need to teach them how to use technology to their advantage, otherwise we are handicapping them in a digital world. That balance is hard to achieve, though, especially with standardized testing.
Quote from: YourMathTeacher on December 01, 2013, 02:56:16 PMMost of what we used to do in math class is done on a calculator now. The focus of education has switched to applications and technology, rather than theory and procedure. I'm still old school, so I try to have a bit of both. We need students to know how the technology gets its answers, so they can use appropriate problem-solving techniques when technology fails. However, we also need to teach them how to use technology to their advantage, otherwise we are handicapping them in a digital world. That balance is hard to achieve, though, especially with standardized testing. This reminded me of something my Second Year Circuits Prof said, it went something like: One day your calculator will give you an answer and it will be wrong and you will need to know why.
This reminds me something one of the TAs told me after I was having trouble with my code: "If Matlab isn't smart enough to solve [the differential equation] try Mathematica."Then again, I'm pretty terrible at theory. For multivariable we were doing delta epsilon proofs. I do not know what those are, but I did them via memorization .