The trail of the month December comes from the Czech Republic. Adéla Pantělejevová created the trail named “Olomouc centrum (jednodušší)” in the city center of Olomouc, the sixth largest city in the Czech Republic in the east of the country, while working on her thesis at Palacký University Olomouc. The trail can be accessed via the MCM app using the code 795612. It is available on the web portal here.

In total there are seven tasks, designed directly on the prominent buildings of the old town. So while walking the trail, you also get to know the most beautiful sides of Olomouc. You will find a short interview with Adéla on the trail and her experiences with MathCityMap below. Enjoy reading!

 


How did you come across the MathCityMap project?

Once our wonderful teacher Dr. Lenka Juklová arranged a lecture by Dr. Soňa Čeretková, which was about MCM (Soňa Čeretková is working on the MCM project in Slovakia) and I became very interested in this topic. During the lecture we had a chance to do a mathtrail around the faculty and I thought it would make a great topic for my thesis, since it had not been done in the Czech Republic yet. Dr. Juklová even suggested this topic to me so I am currently working on it under the supervision of Dr. Patrik Peška at the Palacký University Olomouc.

 


Please describe your Mathtrail.

This particular trail is designed mainly for primary school children. It was created as part of my thesis. Most of the existing trails are designed for high schoolers, however, I wanted to create a trail for younger learners too. It is very playful, fun, and intends to show how math can be connected to other school subjects and be found anywhere, in this case in the Upper Square in Olomouc. Although my studies are focused mainly on high school mathematics, I tutor also younger children and since several of them live around the center of Olmouc I wanted them to enjoy maths through MathCityMap aswell. I also implemented the pirate theme in my lessons, which should make the whole trail more interesting for children.

 


How do you use MCM and why?

My goal is to show teachers how to make mathematics interesting and fun, how to use the modern technology which is available for us, and moreover to show students that mobile phones and the internet don’t have to be used only for playing games or buying clothes online, but that they can be also helpful for looking up information, educating themselves, etc.. Furthermore, I recommended these trails to my friends and classmates, who are mostly secondary school teachers and high school teachers. Some of them had already started using it in their classes or it served them as a template for creating their own trails. One of my friends is now using MCM even in his physics classes.

My friend and I are currently trying to collect some task ideas for creating a template, which could be used in a lot of different places. What we have prepared so far can be soon used in other cities. I’m very much looking forward to it.

 


Describe your favorite task of the trail. How can it be solved and what can students learn from it?

My favourite task of this trail is definitely “Orloj”. It is a task with several sub-tasks, in which you have to understand the meaning of each dial and determine the number and type of different ornaments.. Students get to practice hours, days, weeks, months of the year, zodiac signs, as well as orientation and location, basic arithmetic along with characters and occupations. This task is not just about mathematics, rather it also tests general knowledge of third grade students. In the task students have to choose their answers from a list of options, add numbers and names to blank spaces, etc.. So it is not like other tasks where their answers have to fall within a certain interval.

 

November’s Trail of the Month comes from the capital of the German state of Lower Saxony. The trainee teacher Franziska Hormann created the trail “Circles and bodies on the trail in Hanover”, which can be accessed in the MCM app under the code 386349. It is available in the web portal here.

On this mathtrail you will find a total of nine tasks implemented on the buildings and artistic sculptures of Hanover’s city center.

 

How did you come across the MathCityMap project?

As a former student at Goethe University, I was already able to get to know MCM during my studies in the module Upper School Didactics, where I also designed my first tasks. In Frankfurt, the app is widely used, so I was surprised that in Hanover, where I am currently completing my traineeship, there are only a few MCM trails and the project was hardly known among teachers or at our study seminar. However, my interest in sharing and spreading it in my home region was correspondingly great, especially since the beautiful old town of Hanover offers ample opportunities to apply mathematics…

 

Please describe your Mathtrail.

The Mathtrail is specially designed for the topic of circle and solid calculation, which is taught in the 10th grade in Lower Saxony. On a circular route through the old town past well-known places such as the New Town Hall, the Market Hall and Church or the Ballhof, students can apply their knowledge of the circumference and area of circles, surface area and volume of cylinders and spheres and test it on authentic problems.
The trail is particularly suitable at the end of the unit, when all the formulas are already known and the constructed tasks from the textbook have had their day. I myself tried it out as part of a project day with a 10th grade class, and since the topic is usually taught at the end of the school year in Lower Saxony, such a project day before the vacations is particularly worthwhile, on the one hand to do mathematics in the world around us at an extracurricular learning site, and on the other hand to offer an alternative to the annual movie watching in the last few weeks.

 

How do you use MCM and why?

Since I am still at the beginning of my professional life, I have so far only used MCM for this specific trail in the said 10th grade. In my opinion, MCM is especially (but not only) suitable for geometry topics, in which I will gladly use it again in other grades. On the one hand, as a teacher myself, it is a pleasure to design the tasks and to rediscover old familiar things with a different view. In addition, the possibility of publishing the paths means that other teachers can also benefit from the efforts. On the other hand, I feel it is important to experience mathematics in real-life contexts that are as authentic as possible, to become active myself and to have to puzzle. MCM can make all this possible with well-set tasks, where the groups have to coordinate and find heuristic strategies for calculating solutions together, which also promotes their ability to work in a team.
Last but not least, out-of-school learning venues are rare in the subject of mathematics. MCM makes it possible, regardless of the proximity to facilities such as the Mathematikum in Giessen, etc., to design an extracurricular learning venue that can be adapted to one’s own lessons with manageable effort and thus make mathematics experienceable in a different way.

 

Describe your favorite task of the trail. How can it be solved?

I believe that all tasks have their charm and sometimes require less and sometimes more modeling competence. I like the starting task of the trail with the Hase fountain, for example, because in the beautiful brick backdrop between the Old Town Hall and the Market Church, you first have to perceive this historic structure simplified as a cylinder and then come to the determination of the water volume via various paths, the circumference of the basin or the partly estimated radius, whereby the correct unit must not be neglected at the end. In this task you also have to have the courage to hold the folding rule properly in the water for once.
I like tasks where the solution is not immediately obvious and where you have to fiddle a bit without increasing frustration. That’s why the solution interval should not be too small, which I learned myself during the test.

Already in the last week, we reported on the opening of the MATHE.ENTDECKER trails around Stuttgart’s stock exchange. We are happy that the event was also reported in the Stuttgarter Zeitung at the 20.04.2018 and would like to share this article with you:

High school students on the math path

School students use a smartphone and corresponding app to solve practical tasks. Uli Meyer

Many people are wrong being confronted with the question of how big a person would be with a head the size of the sculpture of the thinker. Five meters? Or six? 24 students of Johann Philipp Palm School cannot rely on their feeling or a vague estimate. They have to calculate an exact result. The 11th graders of the Schorndorfer Wirtschaftsgymnasium start with measuring tape and calculator and begin their mathematical calculations. Incidentally, the human would be just over ten meters tall, which the students calculate with help of the app. Managing Director of Stuttgart’s stock exchange, Oliver Hans, and Matthias Ludwig and Simone Jablonski from the Goethe University Frankfurt watch the happenings, because the aspiring high school students are the first to complete the so-called math discovery trail. Around the stock exchange, Ludwig and Jablonski and their staff of the Institute for Didactics of Mathematics and Computer Science have created four such trails. They vary in difficulty and challenge different ages, like the steel wheel and 14 other tricky tasks. “The Math Trail idea is already old and was developed in 1984 in Australia. Our new approach is that we combine it with an app for smartphones, “says Ludwig about the new offer for schools, but also for the very private, individual use.

Together with Stiftung Rechnen, where Stuttgart’s stock exchange is a founding member, Ludwig’s institute has developed the MathCityMap platform. This website is translated in eleven languages, ​because it has become an international project with partners in several countries. “Worldwide, we have 600 trails with around 3000 individual tasks in the system,” says Ludwig. One encounters it “through creativity and through the world with eyes open”. A circumstance that is also important to Oliver Hans: “Mathematics surrounds us permanently in our daily lives.” Stiftung Rechen would like to interest people in mathematics, to reduce fear of contact and to convey joy in dealing with numbers. “Arithmetic is a cultural technique as well as reading”, Hans and Ludwig agree. Not all students were enthusiastic when they completed Stuttgart’s first math discovery trail. But for many, this practical application of mathematical tasks seems more interesting than a math lesson. Their teacher, Thomas Blum, watches his students with a smile on their faces as they study the steel wheel: “They must work out principles as to how they can come to a solution.” The learning effect is as great as the fun.

MathCityMap can be downloaded for free in App Stores.

Even in the summer holidays, MathCityMap is demanded. At the “Mathe Magie” exhibition in Kappeln, Iwan Gurjanow and Matthias Ludwig created various Mathtrails especially for the city of Kappeln. One can choose between the family trail and trails for different grades.

Rebecca Nordmann from “Schleiboten” wrote a wonderful text about the Mathtrail which expresses the mood in solving the tasks and which we want to share with you. We further want to thank for the photo taken by Rebecca Nordmann.

The MathCityMap project was presented at the ICTMT conference in Lyon (3 – 6 July 2017) by Iwan Gurjanow. The focus of the performance was on the MCM app and the different gamification modes (correct-false feedback, points, leaderboard) related to the intrinsic motivation. Further, the first results of the study conducted in June were presented. More on this topic will soon be available in the publications section.  

Mathtrail on the terrain of the ENS (École normal supérieure de Lyon)

In addition to the presentation there was also a Mathtrail in the garden of the ENS (meeting place) created by Prof. Dr. Christian Mercat (l’Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1). At the conference, the participants were given the opportunity to solve the Mathtrail exercises on their own. The best solutions were awarded a prize. Many participants tested the app with best weather and discussed about the tasks, which can often be solved in different ways. One example is the staircase shown below, in which the area of ​​the edge of the staircase was determined.

It was a successful conference and we are already looking forward to the next one: ICTMA in Cape Town (South Africa)!