MATH
MATH
MATH
Modern World
MATHEMATICS IN THE
MODERN WORLD
PREPARED BY: EDELYN C. QUIRINO, LPT
NAME: DATE:
COURSE & YEAR: SCORE:_____/_____
DEADLINE: SEPTEMBER 6, 2021
Objectives:
Lesson
Mathematics in Counting
Mathematics in Nature
From rainbows, river meanders, and shadows to spider webs, honeycombs, and the markings
on animal coats, the visible world is full of patterns that can be described mathematically. Such
readily observable phenomena suggest that the beauty of nature is revealed by mathematics and
the beauty of mathematics is revealed in nature. (Adam, 2011)
For instance, the sequence 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, …, called the Fibonacci sequence, can be
found in many natural patterns like in pineapples, sunflowers, nautilus, and pine cones.
Activities
A. Determine the pattern and find the missing terms in each of the following sequences.
1.2, 5, 10, 17, ___, 37, ___, 65, ___, ___, ___, 145, …
2.___, 8, ___, 64, ___, 216, 343, …
3.1, 1, 1, 3, 5, 9, 17, 31, ___, ___, ___, …
4.30, 22, 14, ___, ___, -10, -18, ___, …
5.3, 7, 15, 31, 63, ___, ___, ___, …
C. Discuss briefly the mathematics present or used in each of the following aspects of human
life.
6.Information and communication
8.Physical beauty
9.Biology
12. Transportation
D. Make a report about certain patterns (e.g., Fibonacci numbers in fruits, vegetables, flowers, or
plants) observe or present in your locality.
Objectives:
Lesson
Mathematical Language and Symbols
People all around the world speak different languages. A simple thought is difficult to
comprehend if presented in a language that you do not understand. Similarly, people frequently
have trouble understanding mathematical ideas, not necessarily because the ideas are difficult, but
because they are being presented in a foreign language – the language of mathematics. Yes,
mathematics is also a special kind of language. In fact, it is a universal language shared by all
human beings regardless of race, gender, or culture. The language of mathematics makes it easy
to express the kinds of thoughts that mathematicians like to express. It is
1. Precise (able to make very fine distinctions);
2. Concise (able to say things briefly); and
3. Powerful (able to express complex thoughts with relative ease).
However, instead of writing sentences with words, mathematical sentences are written with
numbers and symbols. Mathematics uses many symbols. Below are some examples of commonly
used symbols:
The ten digits Hindu-Arabic numerals: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
Symbols for operations: +, -, *, /
Symbols that represent values: x, y, z, w, etc.
Other special symbols: =, <, ≤ ,>, ≥, %, π , e ,etc.
Like other languages, mathematics has its vocabulary (the words), and its rule for combining
these words into complete thoughts (the sentences). It is also the notion of nouns, sentences and
verbs. In English, nouns are used to name things we want to talk about (like people, places, and
things); whereas sentences are used to state complete thoughts.
An expression is the mathematical analogue of an English noun; it is a correct
arrangement of mathematical symbols used to represent a mathematical object of interest. An
expression does not state a complete thought; in particular, it does not make sense to ask if an
expression is true or false.
The following are examples of types of expressions in mathematics (commonly referred to as
mathematical objects):
1. Numbers 4. Ordered pair, ordered, triple
2. Sets 5. Matrices
3. Functions 6. Vectors
A mathematical sentence is the analogue of an English sentence; it is a correct arrangement
of mathematical symbols that expresses a complete thought. It makes sense to ask about the truth
of a sentence: Is it true? Is it sometimes true/sometimes false?
Example: ‘3 + 4’ is an expression while ‘3 + 4 = 7’ is a sentence.
The mathematical sentence ‘3 + 4 = 7’ expresses a complete thought. In addition, it makes
sense to ask: “Is 3 + 4 = 7 true? On the other hand, ‘3 + 4’ is does not state a complete thought. It
also doesn’t make sense to ask: Is ‘3 + 4’ true? Is ‘3 + 4’ false?
A. Translate each of the following phrases into a mathematical expression. Use as few variables
as possible.
1. The sum of a number and 6 ____________________
2. The product of two numbers ____________________
3. The product of a number and – 1 ____________________
4. Three times the sum of two numbers ____________________
5. One-half a number ____________________
6. Eight more than a number ____________________
7. A number, plus 8 ____________________
8. Eight less than a number ____________________
9. A number, less 8 ____________________
10. The square of a number ____________________
4. The fraction of work done by a man who can finish a job in three days
5. The percentage of alcohol in a mixture formed by combining 1.5 liters of pure water
Objectives:
Lesson
Problem-Solving and Reasoning
Problem solving has been an integral part of the mathematics curriculum that must be taught
alongside the various mathematical concepts and skills that are so necessary for success in school
and in real life afterwards. Most occupations require good problem solving skills. This section aims
at helping you become a better problem solver and to show that problem solving can be enjoyable
experience.
In cognitive psychology, the term problem solving refers to the mental process that people go
through to discover, analyse, and solve problems. Hungarian mathematician George Polya (1877-
1985) defined it as an act to find a way out of difficulty, find a way around an obstacle, find a way
where none is known, and attain a desired end that is not immediately attainable by direct means.
Problem solving involves all of the steps in the problem process, including the discovery of
the problem, the decision to tackle the issue, understanding the problem, researching the available
options and taking to achieve your goals.
2. Guess and Check. Often referred to as “trial and error”, it is important to recognize that an
error really isn’t a mistake at all. It helps to guide the problem solver to the next attempt at the
answer. The following are the essential features of the guess and check strategy:
Make an “educated” guess at the solution
Check the guess against the conditions of the problem
Use the information obtained in checking to make a better guess
Continue this procedure until the correct answer is obtained
Example 1:
Maria went to her grandfather’s farm. Her grandfather has chickens and goats on his
farm. She asked him how many chickens and how many goats his farm has. He told her that
his animals has 26 heads and 68 legs and from that information she could calculate the
number of chickens and the number of goats. If you were Maria, how would you solve the
problem?
Solution:
3. Make a diagram. Drawing a diagram is the most common problem solving strategy. Very
often, a problem solver needs to draw a diagram just to understand the meaning of the
problem. The diagram represents the problem in a way we can see it, understand it, and think
about it while looking for the next step. When you draw a diagram, you organize information
spatially, which then allows the visual part of your brain to become more involved in the
problem-solving process.
Example 1:
A frog fell down an abandoned well which was 21 meters deep. The frog found it difficult to
jump up the mud coated walls. It started its long jump up the well at six a.m. It took it 15 minutes
to jump 3 meters because the walls were so slippery. At the end of every 15 minute period it
rested for 5 minutes while it sadly slipped down one meter. It continued on at the same rate. At
what time did it finally reach the top of the well?
Solution:
This problem can be approached in a number of ways. We can draw a time line with 1 cm
marks. One centimetre represents 1 meter the frog jumps or slips. Drawing the line will help the
student to visualize the problem.
4. Make a List. Making a list is a systematic method of organizing information in rows and/or
columns. By putting given information in an organized list, you can clearly analyse this
information and then solve the problem by completing the list. It should be emphasized that one
should make a systematic list. By making a systematic list, one will see every possible
combination.
Example 1:
A baseball team won two out of their last four games. In how many different orders
could they have two wins and two losses in four games (Aufmann, Lockwood, Nation, & Clegg,
2013)?
Solution:
a.WWLL (start with two wins) d. LWWL ( start with one loss)
b.WLWL (start with one win) e. LWLW
c.WLLW f. LLWW (start with two losses)
5. Look for a Pattern. This strategy entails looking for patterns in the data in order to solve the
problem, that is, the solver looks for items or numbers that are repeated, or a series of events
that repeat. This can be used to solve many math problems and can be used in combination
with other strategies, including make a table, make a list, or simplify the problem.
Example 1:
In the song “The Twelve Days of Christmas,” a person receives a set of gifts each day
for 12 days. On the first day, she received one gift – a partridge in a pear tree. On the second
day, she received two turtle doves and another partridge in a pear tree – a total of three new
gifts. On the third day, she received a new gift (three French hens) plus the gifts given on the
second day, for a total of six new gifts. This continues for 12 days. How many gifts did she
receive on the 12th day?
Solution:
Day No. of gifts received
1 1
2 1+2=3
3 1+2+3=6
4 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 = 10
5 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 5 = 15
: :
12 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + … + 12 = 78
th
Hence, she received 78 gifts on the 12 day.
6. Divide and Conquer. If a problem can’t be solved right away, divide it into parts, and solve
one part at a time. A problem which at first seems difficult becomes easier if you divide it into
parts and solve one part at a time.
Solution:
We divide the solution into parts.
a.Find the volume of red paint in the original mixture:
25% of 20 L is 5 l of red paint
b.Find the total volume of red paint:
4 L + 5 L = 9 L of red paint
7. Solve a Simpler Problem. Sometimes you can find the answer to a problem by solving
another problem that has simpler numbers or fewer case. To use this strategy, first use a
simpler or more familiar case of the problems. Then use the same concepts and relationships to
solve the original problem.
Example 1:
What is the remainder when
6 * 6 * 6 *6 *6 *6 *6 *6 *6 *6 *6 *6 *6 *6 *6 *6 *6 *6 *6 *6 *6 *6 *6 * is divided by 5?
Solution:
There is a pattern. The remainder is 1 when 6 is divided by 5. So, if the given product
is divided by 5, the remainder will also be 1.
8. Act it out. Act out the problem by trying to do what the people or things in a problem do. This
strategy works because you are actually doing the problem.
Example 1:
Three missionaries and three cannibals wish to cross a river. There is a boat that can
carry up three people, and either missionaries or cannibals can operate the boat. However, it is
never permissible for the cannibals to outnumber the missionaries either in the boat or on the
shore. How are the cannibals and missionaries going to get to other side?
Solution:
This can be solved by acting out the problem in class. The three missionaries and
three cannibals may be played by selected students. The solution is left as an exercise.
9. Adopting a Different Point of view. Sometimes, a problem can be solved in a more efficient
and interesting manner if we approach it from a different point of view. That is, instead of
considering the problem in the most direct and obvious manner, a different approach may yield
the answer quickly and more efficiently. It also might reveal some interesting reasoning.
1. Seb went to the car dealer to buy a car. He wanted the same car that his girlfriend Vivian had
bought the day before, which had a sticker price of Php750, 000. The salesman said he
could give a discount and offered Seb a significantly reduced price. But Seb knew that Vivian
had received a 30% discount, and the salesman was offering him only a 20% discount.
When he pointed out that his friend had received a 30% discount the day before, the
salesman took another 10% off the
20% discounted price. Seb was satisfied with the new price and bought the car, thinking he
had paid the same price as Vivian. Was he right? Did they both pay the same price?
Objectives:
Lesson
Polya’s Problem Solving Strategy
Polya (1957) identified four basic principles on a problem solving.
1. Understanding the problem 3. Carrying out the plan
2. Devising a plan 4. Looking back
Polya’s four basic steps appear simple. To become a good problem solver, it helps to examine
each of these steps and determine what is involved.
Step 1: Understand the Problem. This seems so obvious that it is often not even mentioned, yet
students are often confused in their efforts to solve problems simply because they don’t
understand it fully, or even in part. To help you focus on understanding the problem, consider
the following questions.
Do you understand all the words used in stating the problem?
What are you asked to find or show? What are the data? What is the condition?
Can you restate the problem in your own words?
Is there enough information to enable you to find a solution?
Step 2: Devise a Plan: Polya mentioned that there are many reasonable ways to solve
problems. The skill at choosing an appropriate strategy is best learned by solving many
problems. Some common strategies/heuristics were discussed above. You will find choosing
a strategy increasingly easy. In addition, consider the following suggestions.
Find the connection between the data and the unknown. You may be obliged to
consider auxiliary problems if an immediate connection cannot be found. You should
obtain eventually a plan of the solution.
Have you seen it before? Or have you seen the same problem in a slightly different
form?
Do you know a related problem? Do you know a theorem that could be useful?
Look at the unknown! Try to think of a familiar problem having the same or a similar
unknown.
Here is a problem related to yours and solved before. Could you use its method?
Should you introduce some auxiliary element in order to make its use possible?
Step 3: Carrying out the plan. This step is usually easier than devising the plan. In general, all
you need is care and patience, given that you have the necessary skills. Persist with the plan
that you have chosen. If it continues not to work, discard it and choose another. Work
carefully by checking each step. Can you see clearly that the step is correct? Can you prove
that it is correct?
Activity
Ryan numbered his miniature race car collection according to the following rules:
1. It has to be a 3-digit number
2. The digit in the hundreds place is less than 3
3. The digit in the tens place is greater than 7
4. The digit in the ones place is odd
Objectives:
Lesson
Mathematical Reasoning
All problem solving whether in mathematics or daily life, involves reasoning, but there are
some problems for which special approaches are very effective. These problems generally present
several facts that can be used together to reach a conclusion. Combining reasoning skills with
other strategies, such as drawing a diagram or making a table, will help us find the desired
solution. By using logical reasoning, we can make a reasonable estimate, thereby eliminating many
incorrect possibilities. We use deductive thinking when we solve a problem by eliminating
possibilities. By eliminating possibilities to solve a problem, kwe are eventually left with the answer
to a problem.
Inductive Reasoning
Inductive reasoning is the process of reaching a general conclusion by examining specific
examples.
When you examine a list of numbers and predict the next number in the list according to
some pattern you have observed, you are using inductive reasoning. The conclusion formed by
using inductive reasoning is often called a conjecture, since it may or may not be correct.
Example 1:
Use inductive reasoning to predict the next number in each item.
1. 2, 8, 14, 20, ___
Solution:
1. Each successive number is 6 larger than the preceding number. Thus we expect that the
next number in the list is 6 larger than 26, which is 32.
Example 2:
Each of the following statements uses inductive reasoning.
1. Every sports car I have ever seen is red. Thus, all sports cars are red.
2. The coin I pulled from the bag is a 5-peso coin. Another 5-peso coin is drawn from the
bag. A third coin from the bag is again a 5-peso coin. Therefore, all the coins in the bag
are 5-peso coins.
Deductive Reasoning
Deductive reasoning is the process of reaching a conclusion by applying general
assumptions, procedures, or principles. It is a basic form of valid reasoning. Deductive reasoning,
or deduction, starts out with general statement, or hypothesis, and examines the possibilities to
Solution:
Let n be the original number
Multiply the number by 4 : 4n
Add 8 to the product : 4n + 8
Divide the result by 2 : (4n + 8)/2 = 2n + 4
Subtract : 2n + 4 – 5 = 2n – 1
The solution started with n and ended with 2n – 1. This implies that the procedure
given in this example produces a number that is one less than twice the original number.
Deductive reasoning and inductive reasoning often move in opposite directions: where
the former tends to go from general premises to specific conclusions, the latter often goes
the other way – from specific examples to general conclusions. Deductive reasoning
implies logical certainty while inductive reasoning gives reasonable probability.
Logic Puzzles
A logic puzzle is derived from the mathematics field of deduction. It can be solved by
using deductive reasoning and by organizing the data in a given situation. A logic puzzle is
basically a description of an event or any situation. Using the clues provided, one has to
piece together what actually happened. This involves clear and logical thinking, hence the
term “logic” puzzles.
Examples 1:
Three musicians appeared at a concert. Their last names were Benton, Lanier,
and Rosario. Each plays only one of the following instruments: guitar, piano, or
saxophone.
1. Benton and the guitar player arrived at the concert together
2. The saxophone player performed before Benton
3. Rosario wished the guitar player good luck
Solution:
The solution can be summarized using a chart. From Clue 1, Benton is not the
guitarist. We mark X1 (this means “ruled out by clue 1”), in the guitar column of
Benton’s row. From clue 2, Benton does not play saxophone, hence he must be the
Activities
Adam, J.A. (2011). Mathematics in Nature: Modelling Patterns in the Natural World.
Princeton: Princeton University Press. Retrieved January 4, 2018, from Project
MUSE database
Anderson, D.R., Sweeney, D. J. & Williams, T.A., An introduction to management
science: Quantitative approaches to decision making. 13 th Edition. South-western
Publisher
Annenberg Foundation. (2017). Teacher’s Lab: Patterns in Mathematics. Retrieved
January 4, 2018, from Annenberg Learner:
https://www.learner.org/teacherlab/math/patterns/index.html
Auffman, R. N., Lockwood, J.S., Nation, R. D., &Clegg, D. K., (2013). Mathematical
excursions (Third ed.). USA: Brooks/Cole, Cengage Learning
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mathematics miselleny and puzzles. https://www..cut-the-
knot.org/arithmetic/role.shtml. Accessed 04 January 2018
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https://nrich.mathsorg/2148
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http://www.onemathematicalcat.org
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Hall/CRC.
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Gallian, J.A., (2010). Contemporary Abstract Algebra. (7 th ed.) CA, USA.
Harary, F. (1969). Graph theory. USA. Addisson-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc.
Hill, R.M., (2018). Introduction to number theory. World scientific publishing Europe Ltd
Hillier, F. & Lieberman, G. (2015). Introduction to operations research. 10 th Edition.
McGraw-Hill Higher Education
Hom, E.J., (2013, August 15). What is mathematics. Retrieved October 2017, from Live
Science: https://www.livescience.com/38936-mathematical.html
Liptschutz, S., (1998). Shaum’s outline of set theory and related topics. (2 nd ed.). USA:
The MCGraw-Hill Companies, Ic.
Mendelson, E. (1997) Introduction to mathematical Logic (4 th Ed.). New York: Chapman
& Hall
Nocon, R.C., & Nocon E.G., (2016). Essential mathematics for the modern world.
Quezon City: C & E Publishing, Inc.
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(2nd ed). USA: The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Pellikaan, R., Wu, X.-W., Bulygin, S., & Jurrius, R. (2015). Error-correcting codes (to be
published) Cambridge University Press
Polya, G. (1957). How to solve it. (2nd ed). Princeton University Press
Rosen, K.H. (n.d.). Applications of discrete mathematics – chapter 5. At & T
Laboratories. Retrieved January 2018, from
highered.mheducation.com/sites/dl/free/0073383090/299355/Apps_Ch5.pdf