The truth is, students who aren't planning careers in science (including social sciences) or engineering are learning math for reasons that don't often have a lot to do with what they will need to know later in life. They are learning math because someone hopes it will help them learn to think more clearly, because someone thinks it is beautiful, to keep their options open in case they discover a passion for physics or chemistry, or because the skills they are learning would have been useful when they made their way into the curriculum. In fact, these reasons also play a big role in what particular math is taught even to students who will go on to be scientists and engineers.[3]
This complicated web of reasoning means that the question "Why are we learning this?" isn't a question that can really be answered with mathematics, or even with the applications of mathematics, as tempting as those answers are. The answer to that question, most of the time, is historical, about the growth of mathematics as a discipline, about the development of applications of mathematics over time, and about the influences and opinions of the various people and groups who have shaped educational policy and the idea of the educated citizen.
Right now, I'm investigating the question "Why do so many of us learn calculus?" When I was in high school, calculus had a privileged position in my mind, and in the minds of my family and others around me, as the pinnacle of mathematical achievement. In college, it was the course sequence that came first in the mathematics major, a prerequisite for a wide variety of math courses (few of which explicitly referred to anything learned in calculus classes) as well as for courses in other disciplines which drew directly on the subject matter of calculus. I want to know what gives this particular subject matter its central role in the transition from high school mathematics to college mathematics. Could some other course or sequence of courses do that job as well, or is calculus inevitable?
I'm starting in the 1950s, motivated by this clue
One of the contributions of the New Math movement was the introduction of calculus courses at the high school level.
from David Klein's "A Brief History of American K-12 Mathematics Education in the 20th Century," which also places the New Math movement as lasting from the early 1950s through the late 1960s.[4] The next post in this series will deal with articles published in the American Mathematical Monthly in the early 1950s, in particular those that describe the contemporary math curriculum and those that propose changes to the curriculum in the high schools and the first years of college.
- http://blog.mrmeyer.com/?p=8483
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logistic_function#In_ecology:_modeling_population_growth
- At this level, the motivations for learning integral calculus are clear, but the motivations for learning integration by partial fractions (for example) are not! A real function that arose from physics or engineering just might be possible to integrate symbolically using partial fractions, but even if it were the process would likely be messy enough that a reasonable person would hand it off to a computer algebra system to deal with.
- http://www.csun.edu/~vcmth00m/AHistory.html