Skip to main content

Home/ SUNY Online Teaching Community Resources/ Group items matching "math" in title, tags, annotations or url

Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or url

Sort By: Relevance | Date Filter: All | Bookmarks | Topics Simple Middle
alexandra m. pickett

Graphmatica - 0 views

  •  
    Graphmatica is an equation plotter which supports five types of planar graphs (including polar, parametric, logarithmic, inequalites and limited implicit plots), plots planar vector fields and solutions of the corresponding differential equations, unlimited graphs on screen at once, saving setup information and lists of equations, flexible grid labeling, lock-on coordinate cursor and several ways to resize the grid. Its calculus options include symbolic differentiation, drawing of tangent lines, and numerical integration (you use a mouse to select points and areas). Offers on-line help and demonstration files. grmat36d.zip is the DOS version (3.60), grmat16w.zip is the Microsoft Windows 3.1 version (1.60), and grmat16n.zip is the 32 bit or win32 version (1.60). This is a fully functional shareware package.
alexandra m. pickett

LiveMath™ Software Products - 0 views

  •  
    Teachers can make live, interactive web pages with LiveMath inside for their students. Students may interact with these web pages using the FREE LiveMath Plug-In. Teachers may also develop exams that are typeset beautiful and LIVE! LiveMath also works with Course Management Systems or use our LiveMath Board to easily create communication forums for your students. If you need a little web space to help you get going, LiveMath Storage is available for you to upload your LiveMath notebooks for web page usage.
alexandra m. pickett

MathPad - 0 views

  •  
    "MathPad is a general purpose graphing scientific calculator for the Macintosh. It uses text worksheets rather than simulating buttons on a hand held calculator. This live scratchpad interface allows you to see and edit your entire calculation. Formulas can be entered directly and different values can be plugged in for easy "what if" calculating."
alexandra m. pickett

MathGV Function Plotting Software - 0 views

  •  
    MathGV(tm) is a Mathematical function graphing software program for Windows XP, 2003 and Vista. It can plot 2 dimensional, parametric, polar, and 3 dimension functions. MathGV contains no spyware, adware or similar problematic features.
alexandra m. pickett

Wolfram Mathematica: Home Page - 0 views

  •  
    From simple calculator operations to large-scale programming and interactive document preparation, Mathematica is the tool of choice at the frontiers of scientific research, in engineering analysis and modeling, in technical education from high school to graduate school, and wherever quantitative methods are used. Whether you need a sophisticated calculator or an integrated technical programming environment, Mathematica provides you with a complete solution. You can perform a single task - like analyzing data or solving a tricky differential equation - or develop an entire solution, prototype, or application.
danfeinberg

e-Tutor - Graphing Calculator - 0 views

  •  
    online graphing calculator
alexandra m. pickett

State of Washington to Offer Online Materials, Instead of Textbooks, for 2-Year Colleges - Technology - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 0 views

  • If the course designers feel that the best instructional materials are online versions of traditional textbooks, that's fine. Or they can use a smorgasbord of teaching modules and exercises developed by other open-learning projects, such as those created by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Carnegie Mellon University. Interactive-learning Web sites and even instructional videos on YouTube are also perfectly acceptable resources.
  • Traditional textbook publishers, which now promote e-textbooks, aren't the solution, insisted David Lippman, who teaches math at Pierce College and is a self-confessed open-source purist. "I find the publishers' online offerings nothing more than the old ancillaries they've always offered bundled up in a proprietary system," he said.
  • Maybe we collectively need a Sociology 101 textbook (with all of the supplemental materials included). Ohio (or Washington or Texas or Florida) releases an RFP for the creation of a "Sociology 101" textbook. Maybe you win the bid ... maybe Pearson wins the bid. The difference is, the publisher does not own the copyright - the State of Ohio owns the copyright - and chooses to share that textbook with everyone with a CC BY license. Everyone can now use / modify the open textbook, Ohio has saved a bunch of money for its students, so did other states / countries, and the publisher still had an income stream.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • What is most important is that we collectively get to high quality, multi-format (digital web, mobile, print-on-demand), accessible, affordable educational instructional materials. Creating and maintaining those materials is expensive, and no one is going to do it for free - nor should they. What I'm suggesting is higher education teaches roughly the same top 100 highest enrolled courses... the same can be said of K-12. As such, there is an historical opportunity to share - using creative commons licensing - the digital courses and textbooks we all need. Yes - we all teach / build courses slightly differently ... and open licensing allows anyone to make changes to fit local needs.
« First ‹ Previous 61 - 79 of 79
Showing 20 items per page