Geometry by Construction:

£23.99

Geometry by Construction:

Object Creation and Problem-Solving in Euclidean and Non-Euclidean Geometries

Teaching of a specific subject Non-Euclidean geometry

Author: Michael McDaniel

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Language: English

Published by: Universal Publishers

Published on: 1st February 2015

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 6 Mb

ISBN: 9781627340953


Target Audience

College geometry students, professors interested in undergraduate research and secondary geometry teachers will find three rich environments in this textbook.

Content Overview

The first chapter contains many of the standards of Euclidean college geometry. The second and third chapters introduce non-Euclidean models where some Euclidean rules hold and others do not.

Approach and Methodology

With emphases on constructions and proofs, the reader is encouraged to create the objects under investigation and verify the results with reasoning. Since both models of “bent” spaces exist in Euclidean geometry, the reader gains facility with Euclidean moves through the whole book, even while exploring non-Euclidean spaces.

Purpose and Philosophy

The book itself is meant to be unpacked, expanded and taken further, just like the problems it contains. Geometry by Construction challenges its readers to participate in the creation of mathematics. The questions span the spectrum from easy to newly-published research and so are appropriate for a variety of students and teachers.

Applications and Audience

From differentiation in a high school course through college classes and into summer research, any interested geometer will find compelling material. Teachers and professors might especially appreciate the way constructions provide open-ended questions which resist internet searches for solutions. College students should find the five refereed results from undergraduates like themselves encouraging.

Encouragement and Exploration

The active reader joins the mathematical tradition of a laboratory being a notebook plus a compass and ruler (or a dynamic geometry program on a computer.) New ideas await exploration and here are examples!

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