http://www.parenttoo...2BD0050569A5318
Oh my.
I found other suggestions on this site, such as watching movies with math in them. The Da Vinci Code, for example. Good grief. A Beautiful Mind was also suggested. A better movie than the idiotic The Da Vinci Code but I don't really see it as helping a youngster get a feel for math. I liked Proof. (The 2005 American film, not the earlier, and different, Australian one that I haven't seen.)
Here is from the Wik about the movie Proof:
Quote
In 2006, mathematician Daniel Ullman wrote: "Of [the first] three films, Proof is the one that most realistically illustrates the world of mathematics and mathematicians." Timothy Gowers of the University of Cambridge, a Fields Medalist, and Paul Sally of the University of Chicago, acted as mathematical consultants,[4] but Ullman praised the director too: "Madden should be credited with capturing the feeling of the mathematical world."[5] He also called Proof: "richer and deeper, simultaneously both funnier and more serious, than either A Beautiful Mind or Good Will Hunting."[5]
I liked Good Will Hunting, but I liked it for lines such as "I have to see about a girl", not for the portrayal of mathematics.
And by the way. The School Board, like the county in general, is pretty conservative. More contards than libtards by far.
It seems to me that kids need how to think and to plan. Some math, at least some arithmetic, arises naturally. When we were 12 Denny Bloom and I road our bikes to an amusement park on Lake Minnetonka, west of Minneapolis, from where we lived in St. Paul. Math was hardly the high point of our planning, but we did have to figure out how far it was and how long it would take. Kids should learn to handle money early on. Obviously this is important, and some math can arise. Suppose a kid is given some (probably not total) control over which clothing to purchase, subject to budget limitations.
As we get further on, science can be involved. Archimedes might or might not have said Eureka (probably not, see https://www.scientif...tion-archimede/ ) but the general idea of buoyancy and the associated calculation might be of interest.
Scientific American was a big deal for me, but so was Hot Rod. In fact the latter brought up issues such s torque, horsepower and acceleration, among many other things.
Math is where you find it, but it seems we should start with providing kids with an interesting environment. They, many of them, are apt to take it from there.