Wednesday, September 20, 2023

The Dishes Problem

My though process (without algebra): 

At first, I took an initial 4 people and considered how many dishes they'd get in total. This came out to be 1 meat dish (1 for each 4), 1 and 1/3 broth dishes (1 for each 3) and 2 rice dishes which altogether was 4 and 1/3 dishes for 4 people. Since it's more tedious to work with fractions, I multiplied everything by 3 to get 13 dishes for 12 people. From there, I simply found multiples of 13 until I reached 65 dishes total. Since 13x5 = 65, then 12x5 = 60. Thus, there were 60 guests. 

I think it is a good idea to include problems from different cultures because lots of people grow up with a very western view of math, but math didn't just come from only Greece/Europe. Other countries and cultures (such as the Chinese, Indians, and Muslims) were also developing their own mathematics and mathematical techniques. 

I thought the story was nice to have because it makes the imagery much more concrete/vivid than if the problem were to be replaced with more abstract shapes or objects. Plus, I believe it's more interesting and engaging if the topic has some relevance to the students in some way, so that math problems don't feel "lifeless" with purely numbers and symbols. 

2 comments:

  1. Hi Lisa, recognizing the contributions of diverse cultures (such as the Chinese, Indians, and Muslims) to the development of mathematics is crucial. Examples of Chinese Remainder Theorem, the concept of 0 and decimal system in Indian Mathematics, and the introduction of algebra in Islamic mathematics...Thank you for bringing up this point!

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    1. Yes! I learned about the contributions of other cultures and civilizations from a math history course I took during my undergrad and became very interested in it. It would be great for students to also learn these things too if it fits with the BC curriculum!

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