SteamKing said:
In my personal experience, my algebra classes (starting in 8th grade, mind you) hit linear systems early, with 2 equations in 2 unknowns.
I also find teaching and/or learning a math subject by manipulating the buttons on a calculator to be alarming and disheartening at once. What do you do if you lose the calculator, or it quits working? Your understanding of a subject should never be tied that intimately to one device. The calculator should be an aid to crunching the numbers, nothing else, IMO.
I understand the logic of your point about the calculator not working or being lost. But seriously, think about the inverse of your logic for a moment (not criticizing you, just saying)... What do you do if you're in the field, and you need to calculate some crazy physics formula, and you don't have a pen and paper, but instead a calculator? What if you're
in space, orbiting around Earth in the space station, and you don't have a pen and a piece of paper even? Are you
really going to be able to create several 5 by 5 matrices and multiply them by each other, all in your head? Are you
really going to be able to differentiate and do integrals (I say do because I have no understanding of Calculus because I haven't taken it) without a pen and paper? Furthermore, after being out of college for 5+ years and being an engineer or physicist, are you going to be top notch at solving those matrices and doing all of the hardcore math when you've been using a calculator for 5+ years? I think
not having a calculator is worse in most practical scenarios than relying on one, just to be perfectly honest.
However, if we're talking about getting the concepts down, I completely understand the reasons behind why a student shouldn't have a calculator to do all of the work for them. If they never learn it by hand, how can they know what they're doing?
Dr. Courtney said:
Thanks for bringing this to my attention.
Uhhh, you're welcome I guess? :P
Dr. Courtney said:
...I like to allow the use of calculators/computer programs so that the students can focus more time and energy on word problems and applications rather than on additional weeks of solving them by hand every time.
This is
exactly what I'm getting at. Sure, it's great to do it by hand, but it takes an incredible amount of time, and you can also make mistakes
very easily by solving matrices by hand. I know this because I am learning them now, and I have slight dyslexia, so it is a little bit unfair. However, a calculator does not have dyslexia, and will compute the matrices and the calculations at an exponentially faster rate than my mind and my hands writing them on paper can. P.S.: To those that will say 'if you have dyslexia you can still make mistakes on the calculator and mix up the numbers.' Blah blah blah, heard it all before. Yes, I know this. The key to getting the problem right is to double check the work you're doing. Before hitting the enter button, I go through and check over what I'm inputting and compare it to what has to be done.