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The innovative volume seeks to broaden the scope of research on
mathematical problem solving in different educational environments.
It brings together contributions not only from leading researchers,
but also highlights collaborations with younger researchers to
broadly explore mathematical problem-solving across many fields:
mathematics education, psychology of education, technology
education, mathematics popularization, and more. The volume's three
major themes-technology, creativity, and affect-represent key
issues that are crucially embedded in the activity of problem
solving in mathematics teaching and learning, both within the
school setting and beyond the school. Through the book's new
pedagogical perspectives on these themes, it advances the field of
research towards a more comprehensive approach on mathematical
problem solving. Broadening the Scope of Research on Mathematical
Problem Solving will prove to be a valuable resource for
researchers and teachers interested in mathematical problem
solving, as well as researchers and teachers interested in
technology, creativity, and affect.
The people of Lokas village, in the land of Gravick, have been
at war with their neighbors for generations. Just when peace seems
to be finally settling over them they are once again under attack,
from an enemy long considered myth.
Shatala, the power hungry empress of Zutar, will stop at nothing
to bring Gravick and other rebellious lands back under her empire's
rule. After striking a deal with the Circle of Five, a powerful
group of mages, she can finally see her plans coming to
fruition.
For Lars, son of the greatest Lokan warrior, his world is about
to change in ways he can not yet understand. This new threat is
just one of many that are coming to his people, and is more
powerful than he can possibly imagine.
Towns and cities are destroyed, their people slaughtered and
scattered, blood running freely in the streets. For Lars and his
people, considered primitive by many, time is short.
An ancient weapon, its purpose and use long forgotten, is all
the people of Lokas have at their disposal to counter this new
threat. To wield it they will need the help of others, many of whom
they once called enemies.
In 1861, brothers Daniel and Pressley Boyd left their farm in
Abbeville County, South Carolina to join the Confederate army.
William, Thomas and Andrew soon followed, along with brother-in-law
Fenton Hall. During the Civil War, they collectively fought in
almost every theater of the conflict and saw firsthand every aspect
of soldier life--from death and illness to friendly fire and
desertion. By war's end only Daniel survived. Based on their
extensive personal correspondence, this updated edition includes 30
never before published letters, along with new research revealing
additional family background and undiscovered information about the
fates of the Boyd brothers and other family members.
This book contributes to both mathematical problem solving and the
communication of mathematics by students, and the role of personal
and home technologies in learning beyond school. It does this by
reporting on major results and implications of the Problem@Web
project that investigated youngsters' mathematical problem solving
and, in particular, their use of digital technologies in tackling,
and communicating the results of their problem solving, in
environments beyond school. The book has two focuses: Mathematical
problem solving skills and strategies, forms of representing and
expressing mathematical thinking, technological-based solutions;
and students and teachers perspectives on mathematics learning,
especially school compared to beyond-school mathematics.
Essays on the York Mystery Plays, uniting voices from the scholarly
world with the York community that has assumed responsibility for
their production today. The York Play of Corpus Christi, also known
as the York Cycle, has been central to the study of early English
theatre for over a century and a touchstone for the revival of
medieval dramatic practice for over fifty years. But these two
endeavours... have often found little common ground. This volume
therefore accomplishes something very important. It brings together
scholars of medieval English drama and places them in dialogue with
experienced practtitioners from the community. Together, they share
a common commitment to understanding how performances matter to the
communities that produce them, and how plays intersect with other
public activities. CAROL SYMES, Professor of History, University of
Illinois at Urbana. This volume provides a wealth of new insights
into the performance of mystery plays in medieval York and their
modern revival. It utilises both academic study, and the practical
experience of those who now produce the cycle within York itself on
wagons in the street, in an approximation of their original
performance. A number of topics are covered. The manuscript is
linked to Richard III; the Masons are introduced as non-guildsmen
in an enterprise assumed to be guild-specific; families, not just
male heads of households, are shown to be important to the dramatic
narrative; and cognitive theory elucidates performance past and
present.Recent productions are discussed in lively detail by those
directly responsible for them, leading to analyses of performances
in Israel, Spain, and Australia, not all of them of a predictable
kind, which offer further angles on the medieval dramatic
tradition. Professor Margaret Rogerson teaches in the Department of
English at the University of Sydney. Contributors: Margaret
Rogerson, Keith Jones, Richard Beadle, Sheila K. Christie,Mike
Tyler, Jill Stevenson, Elenid Davies, Ben Pugh, Peter Brown, Tony
Wright, Steve Bielby, Emma Cunningham, Alan Heaven, Linda Ali, Paul
Toy, Gweno Williams, John Merrylees, David Richmond, Alexandra F.
Johnston, Sharon Aronson-Lehavi, Pamela M. King
This book presents current perspectives on theoretical and
empirical issues related to the teaching and learning of geometry
at secondary schools. It contains chapters contributing to three
main areas. A first set of chapters examines mathematical,
epistemological, and curricular perspectives. A second set of
chapters presents studies on geometry instruction and teacher
knowledge, and a third set of chapters offers studies on geometry
thinking and learning. Specific research topics addressed also
include teaching practice, learning trajectories, learning
difficulties, technological resources, instructional design,
assessments, textbook analyses, and teacher education in geometry.
Geometry remains an essential and critical topic in school
mathematics. As they learn geometry, students develop essential
mathematical thinking and visualization skills and learn a language
that helps them relate to and interact with the physical world.
Geometry has traditionally been included as a subject of study in
secondary mathematics curricula, but it has also featured as a
resource in out-of-school problem solving, and has been connected
to various human activities such as sports, games, and artwork.
Furthermore, geometry often plays a role in teacher preparation,
undergraduate mathematics, and at the workplace. New technologies,
including dynamic geometry software, computer-assisted design
software, and geometric positioning systems, have provided more
resources for teachers to design environments and tasks in which
students can learn and use geometry. In this context, research on
the teaching and learning of geometry will continue to be a key
element on the research agendas of mathematics educators, as
researchers continue to look for ways to enhance student learning
and to understand student thinking and teachers' decision making.
This book contributes to both mathematical problem solving and the
communication of mathematics by students, and the role of personal
and home technologies in learning beyond school. It does this by
reporting on major results and implications of the Problem@Web
project that investigated youngsters' mathematical problem solving
and, in particular, their use of digital technologies in tackling,
and communicating the results of their problem solving, in
environments beyond school. The book has two focuses: Mathematical
problem solving skills and strategies, forms of representing and
expressing mathematical thinking, technological-based solutions;
and students and teachers perspectives on mathematics learning,
especially school compared to beyond-school mathematics.
Most real-world spectrum analysis problems involve the computation
of the real-data discrete Fourier transform (DFT), a unitary
transform that maps elements N of the linear space of real-valued
N-tuples, R , to elements of its complex-valued N counterpart, C ,
and when carried out in hardware it is conventionally achieved via
a real-from-complex strategy using a complex-data version of the
fast Fourier transform (FFT), the generic name given to the class
of fast algorithms used for the ef?cient computation of the DFT.
Such algorithms are typically derived by explo- ing the property of
symmetry, whether it exists just in the transform kernel or, in
certain circumstances, in the input data and/or output data as
well. In order to make effective use of a complex-data FFT,
however, via the chosen real-from-complex N strategy, the input
data to the DFT must ?rst be converted from elements of R to N
elements of C . The reason for choosing the computational domain of
real-data problems such N N as this to be C , rather than R , is
due in part to the fact that computing equ- ment manufacturers have
invested so heavily in producing digital signal processing (DSP)
devices built around the design of the complex-data fast multiplier
and accumulator (MAC), an arithmetic unit ideally suited to the
implementation of the complex-data radix-2 butter?y, the
computational unit used by the familiar class of recursive radix-2
FFT algorithms.
Big ideas in the mathematics curriculum for older school students,
especially those that are hard to learn and hard to teach, are
covered in this book. It will be a first port of call for research
about teaching big ideas for students from 9-19 and also has
implications for a wider range of students. These are the ideas
that really matter, that students get stuck on, and that can be
obstacles to future learning. It shows how students learn, why they
sometimes get things wrong, and the strengths and pitfalls of
various teaching approaches. Contemporary high-profile topics like
modelling are included. The authors are experienced teachers,
researchers and mathematics educators, and many teachers and
researchers have been involved in the thinking behind this book,
funded by the Nuffield Foundation. An associated website, hosted by
the Nuffield Foundation, summarises the key messages in the book
and connects them to examples of classroom tasks that address
important learning issues about particular mathematical ideas.
Lyrically inventive, ekphrastic poems that interrogate art, race,
and humanity's dark history. These poems stress the weight of what
it means to speak from and in an already "known" world. In this
debut collection from Keith Jones, the opening poems tarry with and
think alongside the paintings of Cy Twombly. If Twombly is a
painter of the Middle Sea, this song series conjures the longue
duree of the Middle Passage. The poems then turn to resituate a
"you" and "I" in a world, our world, disfigured by false and
deathly approximations of the "human." Perched on the jagged-edge
of how many known and unknown catastrophes, how do we remake,
rethink, reimagine, repair in language and act our relations to one
another and to the earth? In the thinking and feeling of these
poems, the great recursive swirling arcs of Twombly's painterly
line recur and intersect. Beyond the materiality of Twombly's
paint, beyond the materiality of the poem, we arrive at a profound
place of thought, a kind of state, perhaps a republic of many
worlds, alive to all our relations and how much they matter.
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Sudek and Sculpture (Hardcover)
Hana Buddeus; Translated by Hana Logan, Keith Jones, Barbora Stefanova
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R1,355
Discovery Miles 13 550
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Smart, strategic inventory management delivers competitive
advantage, yet Inventory Turn trends suggest that little seems to
change. Sustainable improvement through increasing control of
systems and processes generates savings that can, in turn, be
invested in growth initiatives. Inventory is not something that
just concerns planning, production and finance. By working to
better understand and control their inventory-related processes,
everyone can drive improvements that will harness inventory's
potential to become a source of sustainable competitive advantage.
Unlike other guides to inventory management, this book is not only
aimed at planners or inventory managers, but details the impact,
both direct and indirect, that all functions have on inventory. It
is rich in practical tools that can be clearly implemented,
including a detailed purchasing strategy and guide to error
management. It is also rich in best-practice cases that further
show how to implement these methodologies in a real-world context.
This book is essential reading for any manager or executive looking
to boost their organisation's competitive advantage, as well as
students of inventory management, production and operations
management.
Christopher Jenson just wants to write the great American novel,
but he suffers from an infernal case of writer's block. To make
ends meet, he offers loss prevention services as Christina Jenner
or Christopher Jenson, depending upon the needs of his clients. As
Christina, he assists cheapskate Franklin Benton to unravel a host
of mysterious activities in his family business. Desperate for
income, he agrees as Christopher to prove Miriam Smithers'
suspicions that her husband, Bob, was murdered. Her shady behavior
makes her the prime suspect, particularly when she discloses that
she will receive a massive insurance payout if Bob was murdered.
Will Christopher/Christina be Miriam's next victim if she is the
killer? His investigations overlap as he scrambles to keep
Christina's identity separate from Christopher's persona. He might
need both identities to save him from a relentless killer.
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Mayan Key (Paperback)
Keith Jones
bundle available
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R418
R375
Discovery Miles 3 750
Save R43 (10%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Russell Palmer's adventure in the Yucatan Peninsula continues as he
strives to recover the valuable Mayan Key to extend time beyond
December 27, 2012. Retrieving the key proves more difficult than he
could ever imagine. Multiple obstacles pit Palmer against greedy
local authorities, brutal opportunists, and cryptic Mayan myths.
His confidant, police officer Gabriela Reynoso, finds herself
entangled in Palmer's quest when her family is threatened. Palmer
and Reynoso race to an ancient Maya settlement in Belize to locate
and solve obscure clues carved in stone by the Maya centuries ago.
Will Palmer survive this triumvirate of doom?
This book presents current perspectives on theoretical and
empirical issues related to the teaching and learning of geometry
at secondary schools. It contains chapters contributing to three
main areas. A first set of chapters examines mathematical,
epistemological, and curricular perspectives. A second set of
chapters presents studies on geometry instruction and teacher
knowledge, and a third set of chapters offers studies on geometry
thinking and learning. Specific research topics addressed also
include teaching practice, learning trajectories, learning
difficulties, technological resources, instructional design,
assessments, textbook analyses, and teacher education in geometry.
Geometry remains an essential and critical topic in school
mathematics. As they learn geometry, students develop essential
mathematical thinking and visualization skills and learn a language
that helps them relate to and interact with the physical world.
Geometry has traditionally been included as a subject of study in
secondary mathematics curricula, but it has also featured as a
resource in out-of-school problem solving, and has been connected
to various human activities such as sports, games, and artwork.
Furthermore, geometry often plays a role in teacher preparation,
undergraduate mathematics, and at the workplace. New technologies,
including dynamic geometry software, computer-assisted design
software, and geometric positioning systems, have provided more
resources for teachers to design environments and tasks in which
students can learn and use geometry. In this context, research on
the teaching and learning of geometry will continue to be a key
element on the research agendas of mathematics educators, as
researchers continue to look for ways to enhance student learning
and to understand student thinking and teachers' decision making.
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