Hello!
I’m Professor Nguyen (pronounced ‘win’). As chair of the Math Dept I’d like to welcome all of you to Rowan. I enjoyed meeting many of you already at orientation in June. Hopefully I’ll get to meet the rest of you at another orientation for new math majors that the Math Dept will be hosting in early October. Look out for an announcement in September.
It’s great to see many of you already posting to this blog. I hope more of you will post soon.
You are all part of a Math Learning Community which will help you to settle into Rowan, become part of the Math Dept family, and make life-long friends. In fact, I met my best friend from college (many years ago) when we both sat down next to each other at orientation and found out that we both played 2nd singles on our high school tennis team. Naturally we began playing tennis together and our friendship took off from then. So let everyone know about your interests.
You are welcome to stop by my office at any time to chat or if you’re having problems of any kind. I’m in the corner office (228H) when you enter the Math Dept on the second floor of Robinson Building. If you haven’t visited the Math Dept website at http://www.rowan.edu/colleges/las/departments/math/, I highly recommend that you do so. You can find a lot of information about your dept there.
Enjoy the rest of your summer and have a great start at Rowan in Sept!
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Monday, June 15, 2009
Introduce yourself
You are encouraged to use the comments to this post to introduce yourself to the approximately 60 or so new Rowan University freshman math majors and to the faculty in the math department.
Wolfram|Alpha and Mathematica
In May 2009 Wolfram|Alpha was released. It describes itself as a computational knowledge engine. Among the many things it does, its mathematical abilities are very useful. It can function like an incredibly souped up graphing calculator (although comparing it to a graphing calculator is like comparing Google to a paper telephone directory). Queries can be written informally such as "sin(x^2) from -2 to 3" or "integral of x+log(x)" (note that it will even show all steps of the computation) or "10th prime number". Not only does it do such basic computations, it also has an immense library of much more advanced abilities in higher mathematics, statistics, and applied sciences. It even provides easy access to real numerical data. Since it is free and works anywhere on any modern internet browser I expect that it will revolutionize both the teaching and practice of mathematics at all levels. I encourage you to spend some time playing with Wolfram|Alpha. It is an exciting time to be doing mathematics.
Wolfram|Alpha takes short one line queries. For more detailed programming, Rowan University has a student license for Mathematica. Once you have your student account and email, Rowan University students can download Mathematica for Students from Rowan's password protected website www.rowan.edu/download for Macs or Windows. Once installed on your own computer you will have to register and get your personal password using your Rowan email address as instructed. Mathematica is used in many math courses at Rowan. Wolfram|Alpha can save its output in Mathematica format and formal Mathematica syntax can be used in Wolfram|Alpha.
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
Some remarkable math
It is best to start with some good math.
It is true that 2p-2 is always a whole multiple of p for any prime number p. For example if p=5 then 25-2 = 32-2 = 30 = 6 times 5 which is a multiple of 5. Similarly if p=7 then 27-2 = 128-2 = 126 = 18 times 7 which is a multiple of 7. However if we take the nonprime p=6 we get 26-2 = 64-2 = 62 which is not a multiple of 6.
Question 1: Does this work if we replace 2 by other integers such as 3? (In which case we would we would be asking whether 3p-3 is a multiple of p.)
Questions 2: We know that the result does not hold for the nonprime p=6. But could there be any nonprime p for which this works?
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Welcome to the math learning community blog.
It is intended as an information and discussion site for the program. The program is designed for 2009-2010 Rowan University freshman math majors.
For more information on the Math learning community contact one of the following Rowan University Mathematics department faculty members:
Dr. Ron Czochor, czochor@rowan.edu
Dr. Christopher Simons, simons@rowan.edu
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