We accept that some people are born with a talent for music or art or athletics. But what about mathematics? Asks Science Daily. Do some of us just arrive in the world with better math skills than others? It seems we do, at least according to the results of a study by a team of Johns Hopkins University psychologists
David Sousa Provides Educators with Math-Friendly Instructional Strategies
Highly respected author and researcher David Sousa explains the latest neuroscientific findings in practical, understandable terms, and discusses the impact this information has for teaching math at all grade levels.
teams of geologists, hydrologists, geomorphologists, engineers and other researchers will visit the site and observe, measure, record and analyze.
The challenge then becomes making that abstract data accessible and understandable to the public, some of whom are wondering why they weren't warned, to government planners reconsidering land-use policies, and to politicians who are being asked to account for decisions made over decades.
The agency has spent years not just building complex mathematical models but testing how different material flows at a facility in central Oregon where it operates a 300-foot-long slide flume.
When Iverson visited the slide zone during the first week after the event, he saw affirmation that lab work and modeling could yield real-world results.