▲ | amluto 3 days ago | |||||||
I agree with your point in general, but I do find myself actually using trigonometry for fairly basic real-world purposes more often than one might expect. For example: how big of a piece of material fits in a particular position if it’s not parallel or perpendicular to the stuff around it? If a rope supports a load in the middle, how much tension does the rope need? How much of an angle should be cut into a door to comfortably clear the jamb? (If you’ve never contemplated this before: a door with a rectangular cross-section will have less clearance to the jamb when almost closed than when fully closed.) | ||||||||
▲ | Terr_ 3 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
> If a rope supports a load Rambling off-topic, but I remember being very impressed at how a uniform hanging rope makes a catenary [0] shape which is related to making strong structural arches. So maybe if the students were somewhere where the class could design and make an igloo... :p | ||||||||
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▲ | lovehashbrowns 3 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
I think for me personally although I don’t use maths often enough in any practical sense, the one thing I think has stopped me progressing in life how I feel I want to has been my lack of maths knowledge. I don’t mean in a career sense but in an enjoyment sense. I watched a video about proving that the square root of two is irrational and that made me irrationally happy, and I’d love to keep going but a lot of the maths in other proofs or concepts gets absolutely insane. I don’t know how to express that to kids learning maths for the first time, though. It also almost feels like the world of math is so vast there’s something for everyone to enjoy casually. That feels like a video game analogy to me with all the different genres built around basic fundamental concepts. |