Reading And Writing In Mathematics?  The Math Book Club For Undergraduate Mathematics Courses

 

Mika Munakata, Montclair State University

 

I propose to present an assignment that I implemented in my liberal arts mathematics course—The Development of Mathematics—this past spring semester.  The course provides an overview of significant mathematical ideas that have shaped the history of mathematics.  As a course that satisfied the General Education Requirement (GER) at Montclair State University, it has a writing requirement of 2000 words.  The assignment described below is my attempt to incorporate both writing and reading into a mathematics course.

 

The assignment is called the Math Book Club.  The objective of the assignment is to expose students to books about mathematics with the hope that they would come to appreciate some of the significant events that have taken place in the history of mathematics.  I was inspired to develop this assignment because I wanted to come up with an alternative to the traditional “book report” format that typifies this kind of assignment. 

 

Students are given a list of six books.  They have a week to learn more about each of these books (at the bookstore or on the Internet) and submit a list of their top three choices.  The following are the six books that were on the list for this past semester:  Zero:  The Biography of a Dangerous Idea by Charles Seife, Euclid’s Window by Leonard Mlodinow, Chaos:  Making a New Science by James Gleick, A Tour of the Calculus by David Berlinski, and The Golden Ratio by Mario Livio.  Based on their choices, students are assigned to a group of four so that all six books are represented in the class.  The assignment takes place over the course of one month; the book clubs meet once a week, for 30 minutes during class.  The students are given a pacing schedule for each book, which identifies the sections of the books that are to be covered for each of the four meetings.

 

Each student is assigned two roles for the book club—host and scribe.  The roles rotate among the members of the groups so that there is a host and a scribe for each of the four meetings.  The host is responsible for generating a list of thoughtful discussion questions about the predetermined section of the book and bringing copies of the questions for the other members.  There is no minimum number of questions, but the questions should sustain a conversation for at least 30 minutes.  To create an atmosphere conducive to an authentic book club, the host is also asked to bring a treat for the rest of the group.  (I provide the coffee and tea.)  As scribe, students are responsible for writing a summary of the discussion that takes place.  These summaries are in the form of papers, and are collected the following week.  Students earn three grades for the book club assignment.  The first is a participation grade.  Assuming that all members are present for each of the meetings, each member receives the same grade, based on the group’s level of involvement in the discussions.  The other two grades—for the discussion questions and the summaries—are assigned on an individual basis. 

 

This assignment not only exposes students to books about mathematics they probably would not pick up otherwise, but it also asks them to consider, reflect upon, and write about aspects of mathematics that are typically neglected in traditional mathematics courses.  For the presentation, I will provide student testimonials that describe their reactions to the assignment.