Saturday, October 24, 2009

The American Math Challenge!




Here's a free math challenge open to all students ages 9-14! 

The American Math Challenge is an online math challenge or "competition" where students aged 9-14 from across America can compete in a safe, multiplayer game environment.

This is from the same folks that brought you World Math Day back in March!

Students will have the task of answering as many correct questions as they can in 60 second mental arithmetic challenges LIVE, against other students. Or, they can also solve questions based on the national curriculum at their own pace.

Why would you take part?

It's about having fun with math. In fact, there's a good chance your students/children will love it.

It's absolutely free. Nothing to lose if you participate. In fact, during the practice week you can find out if your kids like it or not.

If your children or students really get into it, they can vastly improve their mental arithmetic and basic facts.

Week 1: Nov. 2-8 is Practice week

Week 2: Nov. 9-16 is the actual American Math Challenge

Register at http://www.americanmathchallenge.com/


H/T Maria Miller at Homeschool Math Blog.

Magic Leap Frog Math!




In keeping with the post earlier this week about the Fibonacci sequence, here's some math magic you can try to astound your friends!  This is from Mudd Math Fun Facts from the web site hosted by Harvey Mudd College Math Department.

Give your friend a card with ten blank lines, numbered 1 through 10. Have your friend think of two numbers between 1 and 20 and write them down on the first 2 lines of the card. Now in each of the successive lines, have your friend write the sum of the previous two lines. For instance, in line 3, write the sum of lines 1 and 2. In line 4, write the sum of lines 2 and 3, etc. until finally in line 10, your friend has written the sum of lines 8 and 9.

Ask your friend to total the numbers. If you've practiced the Multiplication by 11 Fun Fact, you'll be able to tell your friend the total faster than she can add the numbers (because the total will be just 11 times the number in line 7). Also, you can announce the quotient of line 10 divided by line 9... to 2 decimal places, it will be 1.61!

Let's do an example. Suppose your friend tells gives you the numbers 3 and 7. Her card will then have these numbers:

1.7

2.3

3.10

4.13

5.23

6.36

7.59

8.95

9.154

10.249

The total is 649 (which is just 11 times 59, do this in your head with the Multiplication by 11 Fun Fact.

The quotient 249/154 is 1.61 (to 2 decimal places). Presentation Suggestions:

Write down the quotient 1.61 on another card, and place it in an envelope before the start of your magic trick. Then you can have your friend open that envelope after she has computed the quotient.


The Math Behind the Fact:

The trick works for the following reason. If the number X is in line 1, and the number Y is in line 2, then the number X+Y will be in line 3, the number (X+Y)+Y=(X+2Y) will be in line 4, and so on. Continuing, you will find that line 7 contains (5X+8Y), line 9 contains (21X+34Y), and line 10 contains (55X+88Y), which is indeed just 11 times line 7.

For the ratio of line 10 divided by line 9, we appeal to a property of "adding fractions badly": for positive numbers A, B, C, D where (A/B) < (C/D), it is a neat fact that the fraction you get by "adding badly": (A+C)/(B+D), must lie in between the values (A/B) and (C/D). So the ratio (55X+88Y)/(21X+34Y) must lie in between (55X/21X)=1.615... and (88Y/34Y)=1.619...

An even more stunning fact is that if you continue this leapfrog procedure with many more lines, then the ratio of successive lines will approach the golden ratio: 1.6180339... (If you know some linear algebra, this follows because the leapfrog procedure can be written as a 2-dimensional linear system of equations, and the largest eigenvalue of this system happens to be the golden ratio.)

This magic trick may be found in the delightful book in the reference.
How to Cite this Page:   Su, Francis E., et al. "Leapfrog Addition." Mudd Math Fun Facts. http://www.math.hmc.edu/funfacts.

Reference:  A. Benjamin and M. Shermer, Secrets of Mental Math, Three Rivers Press, 2006.