
Saturday, August 16, 2014
Sin
Dr. Stefano Bertozzi's speech given at the 2014 convocation for Fountain Valley School of Colorado evoked many solutions as to fixing our world. I thought he did an excellent job of conveying his message through metaphors and real life experiences. The main concept outlined throughout his "send off" to the graduating class was to give to this world as much as you take. Of course, as he noted, as a teenager one takes substantially more than giving, but that is only because they have yet to begin their actual life.

Out of all of the nations in this world, Americans are specifically notorious for being consumers. We take your food, we take your jobs, we take your home, we take everything we can if it is lucrative and beneficial to us. I perceived Bertozzi's message as moving and motivational. He highlighted the atrocities in third world nations and how they could use assistance desperately, while making his audience question their greed. By listening to this I had doubts about my own morals and I began to think of the good I have contributed to this world-- i already know I am "that person" who literally eats more than she brings! In order to move forward, we need to be more conscientious of our surroundings and stop being so selfish, and I think carrying on that advice was Bertozzi's principle purpose of addressing high school students.

Thursday, May 1, 2014
The Quadratic Function

Not only is the quadratic extremely helpful and used in abundance in math class, but it is pertinent in daily life as well- especially in sports. Any ball thrown up into the air will follow the trajectory of a parabola, which of course is the parent function of x squared. In order to find the height, time, or speed of a throw, you must use the quadratic function. This can be used in any sport such as tennis, soccer, football, etc, and a lot in architecture. In addition to these uses, the quadratic function can be applied when calculating the area of an object or finding the profits a company makes, like in this example:
- Unit Sales = 70,000 - 200P
- Sales in Dollars = Units × Price = (70,000 - 200P) × P = 70,000P - 200P2
- Costs = 700,000 + 110 x (70,000 - 200P) = 700,000 + 7,700,000 - 22,000P = 8,400,000 - 22,000P
- Profit = Sales-Costs = 70,000P - 200P2 - (8,400,000 - 22,000P) = -200P2 + 92,000P - 8,400,000
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ReHwNtoRMrY
A video bringing the quadratic formula to life.
Thursday, April 3, 2014
Tesselations
http://mathforum.org/sum95/suzanne/whattess.html
Monday, February 17, 2014
Pascal's Triangle
In the 10th century, hundreds of years before the birth of Blaise Pascal, Indian mathematicians utilized the triangle in addition to Middle Eastern. Following the Iranian mathematician, Omar Khayyam, a Chinese mathematician used it and discovered how the triangle provided coefficients for expanding (a+b) to a certain degree which is an imperative fact to be aware of when in high-school math class. 
There is a plethora of different patterns which can be made by shading in specific numbers on Pascal's Triangle. Whether you shade in odd numbers, even numbers, multiples of 6, or multiples of 11, you are bound to see a trend within the patterns. Blaise Pascal, who was a French mathematician, was a sickly child and lived from 1623-1662, and obviously, the triangle was named after him. Even though Pascal receives the majority of credit for this mathematical gem (for it is named after him), other people from other nations such as China, India, Western countries, and Iran discovered it long before.
Aside from Pascal's triangle, Blaise discovered the first digital calculator, the Pascaline. His calculator was not very popular amongst the people, for it could only perform addition. He created this device in order to make his father's job involving finances to be easier. His father was a major influence on his life considering he was home-schooled by him and grew up with no mother. Not only was Pascal a math guru, but he was a philosopher as well and he laid the foundations for theories of probability.
"Small minds are concerned with the extraordinary, great minds the ordinary"- B.P.
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