My #math Mastodon peeps. These days school doesn't emphasize teaching logic and proofs, like they did when I took plane geometry which was really about proof and not really about triangles and such.
Does anyone have suggestions for modern resources I could assign my kids to do beginning proofs? One kid is studying calculus in 7th grade the other is in more normal speed, studying basic algebra. I'd just like to give them maybe a problem a week to prove something but in a thoughtful way.
It doesn't have to be plane geometry but if it was that'd be fine too. I'm imagining a workbook with example problems and then do one for yourself... Or some such thing. Obviously you also need some axioms and some basic theorems. That's why geometry is usually used. The axioms and theorems are not too abstract.
@dlakelan
Euclidean Geometry is great to start out with because the theorems and axioms tie in observation with operation from the get-go. The reasoning behind establishing the theorems and axioms is important to grasp even before you attempt all the abstract rules in algebra.
Having a grasp of what constitutes a valid theorem or axiom prepares a student to grasp how to discern from valid equivalents/operations from false equivalencies--which underscores how important proofs are AND checking your work before you hand it it AND understanding why an instructor insists that you "show your work".
@dlakelan
Now that I've put some more thought into it, it seems to me that the classical method of teaching math really leaves out too much of the visualization of what it is a solver is trying to do, and that's also part of the problem people have with word problems.
One begins with arithmetic but there are pictures of apples or oranges or other things to convey a picture of what exactly is going on. And it's a language that describes relationships--I don't recall a math teacher I ever had that taught it as a language. Once I figured that part out, it became easier to translate word problems in English into Mathese.