Incorporating the Mathematical Achievements of Women and Minorities into
Schools:
NCCTM Centroid Columns and Classroom Activity Sheets
Incorporating the
Mathematical Achievements of Women and Minority Mathematicians into
Classrooms accepted into the MAA Notes book proposal on Using Recent
History
Hearing the Shape of a Drum
African Mathematician Muhammad and his Magic Squares
Hypatia, the First Known Woman Mathematician
David Blackwell and Game Theory
Thomas Fuller and his Calculation Ability
Florence Nightingale, the Passionate Statistician
Marjorie Lee Browne: North Carolina Educator
NCCTM Centroid Column on Hearing the Shape of a Drum
with Andrew Nestler,
NCCTM Centroid, Volume 28, Number 1, Winter 2001, p. 11 - 15.
Includes a description of research showing that incorporating the
mathematical achievements of women and minorities into school classrooms
is beneficial to ALL students, and ways to include ideas related to
the research of Carolyn Gordon and Kate Okikiolu into classrooms.
Activity Sheets
by
Dr. Sarah J. Greenwald, greenwaldsj@appstate.edu
Thomas Fuller and his Calculation Ability
with Amy Ksir and Larry Shirley, Volume 30, Number 1,
Spring 2004, pp. 15-19.
html version of the column and worksheets
Microsoft Word version of the column
and worksheets
Solutions
Florence Nightingale, the Passionate Statistician
with Jill Richie, Volume 30, Number 2,
Fall 2004, pp. 13-21.
PDF of the column
PDF of Activity Sheet: Florence Nightingale's
Polar Area Diagrams
Solutions
Marjorie Lee Browne: North Carolina Educator
with Vicky Klima and Katie Mawhinney.
PDF of the column
and worksheet