Calculators Throw Teachers a Curve.

AuthorLee, Jennifer
PositionHigh school students use graphing calculators - Brief Article

Graphing calculators have taken high school math to a new level, forcing teachers to change the rules to keep up with the students

Like hundreds of thousands of other high school students, Greg Myers, 16, began using a graphing calculator in freshman algebra. Graphing calculators are sophisticated devices that can run small computer programs and draw the graph represented by complex equations in an instant. In the last few years, they have become mandatory in many high school math classes and can be used on the SAT and advanced placement exams and other standardized tests.

"I use graphing calculators all the time, and am a big enthusiast," Greg says. "In my math class last year, I was known as the expert on graphing calculators."

And like many of his high school peers, Greg has found another use for his calculator, a Texas Instruments TI-83. He has gone into business with his brother, Douglas, 17, writing 20 programs that can be fed into graphing calculators to help solve math problems in the SAT exam and SAT II subject tests.

"There is no work involved, you just run the program, plug in the known values, and watch your answers appear," they claim on their Web site. The brothers charge $35 for the programs and guarantee that a student's score will rise by 160 points or more. They haven't had many takers so far. "Right now, we don't take credit cards," Greg explains.

ONE-UPPING THE TEACHERS

Graphing calculators, which cost around $100, are lauded as the greatest innovation in math classrooms in a generation. Proponents say they lift students' confidence, cultivate their analytical skills, and make math more tangible. But they have also given students new ways to one-up their teachers and the rules. In response, adults have been forced to develop more sophisticated defenses, tests, and regulations.

Texas Instruments, which dominates the market for high school graphing calculators, estimates that one quarter to one half of all high school math students use graphing calculators.

"These calculators are handheld computers," says Ellen Hook of Norfolk, Virginia, who has been teaching high school math for 20 years. "They are marvelous. I can do more mathematics better now than I could 15 years ago. Students' critical thinking skills have changed."

APPRECIATING MATH'S ELEGANCE

Charles Sullivan, 15, of Georgetown, Texas, uses his calculator to explore the structure of triangles in trigonometry. The algorithms that compute the intricate relations...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT