t hearts Rick to pieces
Mal ,'Shindig'
What Happens in Natter 35 Stays in Natter 35
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I thought that was number theory, though.
I guess I should know this stuff, huh? I'm pretty bad at taxonomy, to be honest with you. Maybe History of Math will help with that?
Connie, my dad has one that I don't think he uses anymore. Want me to see if he wants to sell?
Certainly, I'd be very grateful. I have to stop making elephant jokes about Hubby now.
Number Theory is more concretely about numbers and how they behave while Abstract Algebra deals with elements that have certain properties that may or may not be illustrable with numbers. Most of what I remember from Number Theory had to do with primes, but I didn't have a very good professor.
And History of Math helps with a lot of things, I found.
We've got a good thunderstorm going, power threatening to go out, and I am alone in the office. Good thing the computer is on an UPS.
This is the day that never ends. My cranky goes to eleven. Look, right across the board, eleven, eleven, eleven and...
Someone will be over right away to take care of that.
Can you see if Danny Masterson is available?
outside, not as hot or sticky as I feared.
ita, Best Buy and Circuit City have them online, so I assume they'd have them in store also.
Timelies! Aaand that's about all I got. "Not bad for a Monday" is about all today has going for it.
At least the instant summer has abated slightly. I just can't deal with summer when it gets dropped on me like an anvil. Especially when I'm trying to get a whirlwind trip to Maine in, so I'm stuck for 5 hours in my car w/out ac.
Abstract algebra is things having to do with properties of groups and rings and fields, and stuff related to that.
From looking at those requirements, it looks like what they're requiring for each level is that you know one level higher than what you'd probably be teaching, and that you know the subjects that are the more abstract concepts behind the more concrete things you'd be teaching.
My 7th grade Algebra teacher didn't know algebra. Period. I'm a little dubious about her basic arithmatic skills as well.
Luckily, she had been assigned a student teacher who had a Masters in math and was a good teacher to boot. When the student teacher left, it went downhill. My dad basically taught me and a couple friends the second half of the year.
The result of the stupid teacher was that the lot of us were not allowed-no exceptions- to take the next level at the high school when we got there (I'm blanking on a year of school but I remember the consequences, )but instead had to take a sort of halfwaybetween level. Taught by someone who knew math but could not teach to save his life. Once again, my dad taught me, but I'd get yelled at in class for solving the problems not using the same methods (style, not content) that were being taught. The whole thing apparently freaked me out such that I would bomb tests regularly. It took a couple years to quit that.
So. point. Um, teachers not knowing the subject they teach=bad. Teachers who know the subject but cannot teach=bad. Or something.