ISEN-ASTC-L is a service of the Association of Science-Technology Centers
Incorporated, a worldwide network of science museums and related institutions.
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Two museums I can think of off hand have incorporated math as part of
their exhibits and programs: The DuPage Children's Museum which has a math
exhibit and an on-line math page called "Aunty Math"
http://www.dupagechildrensmuseum.org/aunty/index.html
and the Brooklyn Botanic Garden which incorporates math exercises into
it's Children's Gardening program to show (as I recall) math as part of
everyday life as it relates to gardening.) http://www.bbg.org
If you're interested in pursuing who's using math in museums, you might
look to Botanic Gardens/Arboreta.
As for the failure of New Math...I was taught New Math in school. I have
lots of ideas regarding its failure, many tied in to the increasing
availability of computers, the sophistication of their operating systems,
and the absolute insanity of trying to teach 9 year-olds to think in
binary terms. Come on, who's idea was it to teach 3rd graders set theory
anyway? I can still multiply complex sets but have absolutely no
application for it in the real world. Geometry I use, adding strings of
binary numbers...never!
Regards,
Diane "anti rote-memorization" Gutenkauf
On Mon, 30 May 2005 20:36:12 -0700, Wayne Watson
<[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>ISEN-ASTC-L is a service of the Association of Science-Technology Centers
>Incorporated, a worldwide network of science museums and related
institutions.
>**************************************************************************
***
>
>Yes, what did go wrong? I believe that got rolling in the 70s but
somewhere a
>long the line went out of style. Did something replace it?
>
>Do museums get concerned about math? I'm not even sure the Exploratorium
in San
>Francisco pays much attention to it. Of course, there's the Mathematica
exhibit
>that stil can be found in a few places around the U.S. that was created
in the
>60s, but that's the biggest effort that I know about or can recall.
>--
> Wayne T. Watson (Watson Adventures, Prop., Nevada City, CA)
> (121.015 Deg. W, 39.262 Deg. N) GMT-8 hr std. time)
> Obz Site: 39° 15' 7" N, 121° 2' 32" W, 2700 feet
>
> "The easiest way to refold a road map is differently."
> --Jones's Rule of the Road
>
> Web Page: <home.earthlink.net/~mtnviews>
>
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