Saturday, October 16, 2010

Dept. Meeting

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(C)Copyright 2010, C. Burke. All rights reserved.


To be fair ... I should've printed this on Monday.

But it's good to see Mick out of the Supply room.


Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Rescued!

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(C)Copyright 2010, C. Burke. All rights reserved.


Couldn't make this joke two months ago. Timing is everything.

EDIT: This strip was sighted on reddit.com. It was voted down to zero, of course.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Fun With Ten

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(C)Copyright 2010, C. Burke. All rights reserved.


I went to Comic-Con, but I didn't see Ben-10-10-10 -- or Rin-10-10-10, for that matter.
I did meet some webcomic people, which was fun.

FYI: I used 20-pt type for the "Ten. Ten. Ten." So the date is complete.

Remember: In the Archives, nobody can tell you're late.


Saturday, October 09, 2010

Putting the Cart Before the Meter

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(C)Copyright 2010, C. Burke. All rights reserved.


Never underestimate the depths I will plumb to find trivial metric references.
Besides, with the comic's title, it was either this or something about parking meters....

Hmmmmm .... parking meters ....


Thursday, October 07, 2010

The 0'Factor: Episode 12

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(C)Copyright 2010, C. Burke. All rights reserved.


Don't be Dis-ing Pluto. Doesn't make for divine comedy.

Tuesday, October 05, 2010

Interesting Venn Diagram about the British Isles

In case you've ever wondered the difference between England, Great Britain, the British Isles and the United Kingdom, here is an interesting Venn diagram I ran across explaining it:



Had they fiddled with the Irish dots just a little bit, it would fit geographically, as well.

ObMath Content: This diagram reminds me of the Quadrilaterals Venn diagram in that the intersection of U.K. and Ireland being Northern Ireland is similar to the intersection of a rectangle and a rhombus is a square. Whether Ireland is either rectangle or rhombus is left as an exercise for the reader.

Monday, October 04, 2010

Lucas Numbers

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(C)Copyright 2010, C. Burke. All rights reserved.


Not too long from now, at a theater near, near you ...

Sunday, October 03, 2010

Math Playground

So it was a really, really rainy Friday morning. Half of my class, the one with the smallest roster, was absent, and half of those attending were taking a makeup test from the day before. I needed to motivate the remaining students to learn something, and, frankly, needed to motivate myself because that wasn't exactly the most conducive environment for starting a new topic.

But this one classroom had a working Smart board. So I started googling math videos, looking for something in particular. Instead I found a game that gave me the following:


At first, I thought it was just a goofy game, and the students were going to give me strange looks and ignore it. WRONG! They ate it up. The smart, go-getter had pencil in hand and was working them out, but the girl in the back was responding almost as quickly. I can't remember the last time I saw her that engaged. (And I had her in a different class last semester.)

We went through all 10 questions of level one (like the first four above) and almost made it through level two (questions five and six, above).

The site, if you're curious, was mathplayground.com, and I found this under videos. Apparently, there was a video attached to this game (which I discovered today), but my school's server blocked it. It didn't matter to me because they were solving multi-step algebraic equations!

The only difference was that they were using popsicles and clocks instead of x and y.
I captured a few of them and edited the images to make an extra-credit worksheet. It's simple enough that I can make my own in the future.

And I probably will.

EDIT: If you're going to print out this picture to photocopy, you might want to load it into paint first and work on the coloring. Those gray rectangles turned black and made reading difficult -- especially considering that I used this as a substitute lesson, so I wasn't there to clarify anything.

Friday, October 01, 2010

100 Centimeters

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(C)Copyright 2010, C. Burke. All rights reserved.


Oh, yes. I did.

So, since I've used these two characters twice now, should I give them names?
Discuss.


Monday, September 27, 2010

Borrow

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(C)Copyright 2010, C. Burke. All rights reserved.


And this is after he made him carry one last week!

This cartoon was inspired in part by a comment from reddit's Math board. Unfortunately, I can't find where the comment is.


Friday, September 24, 2010

Series Premiere!

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(C)Copyright 2010, C. Burke. All rights reserved.


Can you put one over on two? Find out next week!

Monday, September 20, 2010

All Around

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(C)Copyright 2010, C. Burke. All rights reserved.


I thought about giving the circle an Italian accent and calling him, paesan. Then I thought better of it.

For more info on 22/7, see these.