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About Mathematical Ideas

  • Page ID
    108383
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    Written and Compiled by

    Helena Mirtova, Ph.D. and Andy D. Jones

    Mathematics Department, Prince George's Community College

    Mathematical Ideas was developed for the MAT 1130 Mathematical Ideas course at Prince George’s Community College as an open educational resource (OER). MAT 1130 is a general education course at Prince George's Community College.

    This course is a survey of contemporary mathematics useful for students in programs not requiring a mathematics course that emphasizes algebra, calculus, or statistics. It develops mathematical literacy using a variety of everyday problems which can be modeled and solved by quantitative means. Students apply formal logic to analyze reasoning, learn techniques to organize and analyze data using set theory and descriptive statistics, and evaluate chance using probability. Mathematics is also applied to personal finance and societal issues such as voting and apportionment. Technology is incorporated across all topics. This is a terminal course and does not prepare students for algebra, trigonometry, physical or life sciences, engineering, or business courses.

    This text addresses the basic ideas and content required by the course outcomes for MAT 1130:

    1. Analyze information with tools of set theory.
    2. Analyze validity of statements and arguments using formal logic.
    3. Apply appropriate formulas and technology to personal finances.
    4. Calculate basic and conditional probabilities, odds and expected values.
    5. Interpret quantitative data using descriptive statistics.
    6. Examine voting and apportionment methods.

    This text includes a collection of review exercises for each chapter. It has also been paired with practice exercises for each section in MyOpenMath.

    Although a major portion of Mathematical Ideas is original work by the authors, some parts were derived from other Open Education Resources licensed under CC BY- SA and CC BY-NC. These works have been adapted and revised. Links to the original works are shown throughout the text. A special thanks is offered to these authors:

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