Celebrate Pi Day with Trig Substitution! 🥧📐Make March 14th meaningful and mathematically delicious with this Pi Day Calculus Integration Worksheet! This engaging activity helps students practice trigonometric substitution while celebrating everyone’s favorite irrational number. Students will work through one integral that naturally leads to π, using trigonometric substitutions, trigonometric identities, and formulas to simplify expressions and evaluate a definite integral. The problem is d
Is There a Pi in My Cookie? PDF handout takes your students through a fun discovery journey to find the value of pi, as they learn about: diametercircumferenceratioaveragemathematical constantStudents can be placed in a group of four or individually complete this Pi Day activity. I also input the whole class measurements into a Google Sheet and then average everything out at the end of the activity. Although some students' errors will make the rounding a little off, students are amazed to see
Why choose this Google Form? It has the same 13 reading comprehension questions from my other resource Fractals: Hunting for Hidden Dimensions (Short Answers) but in a multiple choice format. Each question has 5 choices. Time-saving: Auto-grading allows for immediate scoring of results, saving the time and effort of manual grading. You can keep or delete the 3 SEL short answer questions at the end as you wish.
Last Lecture: Proof of the Euler’s IdentityThis is the lesson I give on the last day of the Calculus AB section in early April of each year. If you're teaching the BC section, this lesson is perfect for introducing the Taylor and Maclaurin series. The solutions to all exercises as part of the proof are worked out.
Looking for a Valentine's Day activity for AP Calculus? Who Knows the Size of My Heart? is a ready to use worksheet that covers Function EquationsRiemann SumsArea Between CurvesVolume by Cylindrical ShellsIncludes all answers!
ObjectiveIn this lesson, students use uncooked spaghetti and string to measure various heights on the unit circle and create the graph of the f(x)=sinx. Students will be able to see why the graph of the sine is a wave as they trace the y values around the unit circle, and understand how the unit circle is related to the sine function f(x)=sinx. Materials Needed The unit circle (see third page of this lesson) yarn Sharpie penSpaghetti uncooked (~5)tape/glue graph paper
Helpful hints I've collected from the years of being an AP Reader scoring calculus exams in Kansas City, Missouri. I use this slide a few days before the May AP Calculus AB/BC exam as a reminder to my students to maximize their FRQ score.
Are you fascinated by the intricacies of fractals and the hidden dimensions they reveal? Look no further! As see on YouTube video, " Fractals: Hunting for Hidden Dimensions" (55 mins), delves deep into the mathematical concepts behind fractals and explores their stunning visual representations. From the Mandelbrot set to Julia sets, student will learn a lot! Don't miss out on this opportunity to expand your students' minds and check for understanding by using this Google Form (13 comprehensio
6th - 12th, Adult Education, Higher Education
Earth Sciences, Engineering, Math
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