eric76 wrote:
SweetTooth wrote:
eric76 wrote:
ruveyn wrote:
Arran wrote:
Does anybody have any experience with the Unified Modern Mathematics course from the 1960s and 70s that is based on set theory?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secondary_ ... ment_Study
Download the books in pdf form from
http://eric.ed.gov/?q=unified+modern+mathematicsThat approach to teaching mathematics turned out to be a failure. Ramping the kiddies up on set theory before they developed mathematical maturity and intuition turned out to be a bust.
ruveyn
In other words, it is better to learn the basic foundations before progressing on to abstractions? I would completely agree with that.
Without a solid grasp of the foundations, it seems like it would be really tough to grasp the abstract because one would not really understand the reasons for the abstract.
Set theory
is the foundation of mathematics.
Yes and no. It's the foundation for real mathematics, but it is not the foundation that young students need to worry much about to learn their simple arithmetic. The foundations for learning mathematics are the very concrete type of mathematics found in arithmetic and then expand into more and more abstractions.
Yes, in that sense I think I agree with you.
The reason that I say "I think", is because for me personally mathematics would have been a lot more appealing in school if it had been presented using abstractions. Here in my country it is presented in a very concrete way, using many examples from everyday life. To me this obscured the structure that lies underneath and it made me dislike mathematics quite a bit. Only later, in university, did I fall in love.