midifile said:
See. i just think that is all bullshit. In the real world you will never have to do things like find integrate things using substitution, carry out inductions, use imaginary numbers and crap like that unless you do advanced maths in uni or engineering (in which case you go to university for 4 years).
Well, I guess I was talking from my point of view, (I'm doing engineering/science at uni). The course is there to prepare you for the real world and its problems, if you are doing the course, but don't think you will ever need it then the course should not change for you.
[offtopic]
I think that we learn maths at school to facilitate other studies. For example in my year 12 IT major project I needed (or moreso wanted) to know a method of describing a number of points on a sphere, where each point is the same distance from neibouring points on the sphere. Now they never taught me this, but hopefully they can teach students the skills needed to solve new problems such as this one, that they have never encountered before.
HSC maths, should be about teaching students how to solve new problems that they have never seen before, not problems that they have seen before. (then again, I guess they are doing this, as calculus and the other topics are the basics of so many other parts of maths.)
[/offtopic]
midifile said:
And I do agree that worked solutions are important. Like when i was learning conics and a question asked to prove that AP was equal to BP I would try and work out the distances of each and end up with these long points and shit, and then when i looked at the worked answers I realised that you could do it with the midpoint formula. I get that it is important to try and work out the answer to a question by yourself, but in 4unit you could be doing the question the complete wrong way (and even if you get the right answer in the end) in a 4 unit test you are pushed for time and dont want to waste any of it writing out a kabillion lines of working.
In that particular case, you would be better of having had a go yourself first, and learn't my having a go first, then realizing other methods(though to be honest I have no idea what you are talking about, i dropped out of 4u before I got to conics.). I can see though how the solutions would be handy, (they allow you to see a "better method" of solution, so long as you only resort to them
after you have had a go.)
Let me revert to an old proverb I borrowed from someone,
"At first babies are spoon fed. But they grow out of it!"
So I guess a little spoon feeding of the solutions when you are still learning is needed. But the earlier you can feed yourself, the better, as you can't be spoon fed forever.