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Need help with your math homework? Who ya gonna call? When mom, dad, your older sister, your best friend, and your next-door-neighbor can't help, these sites will be there for you.
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Pi is the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter. Regardless of the size of the circle, pi is always the same irrational number: approximately 3.14.
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If you can't make it to San Francisco's Exploratorium for the twentieth anniversary of the first Pi Day, you'll find lots here to inspire your own celebration.
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"For the sake of usefulness people often need to approximate pi. For many purposes you can use 3.14159, which is really pretty good, but if you want a better approximation you can use a computer to get it."
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Mr. Herte, a math teacher at Carle Place High School, in Carle Place, NY, says Pi Day "gives us the perfect springboard to allow our students to have fun while investigating mathematics concepts, being creative, and even a little silly."
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Eve Andersson is a Google engineer with a soft spot for pi. Her homage to pi includes a Pi Trivia Game consisting of twenty-five randomly chosen questions...
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"Besides being a center for teaching ideas and resources, we'll try to be your first stop for funny, smart, tongue-in-cheek tributes to the number pi."
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William Mueller (see Wmueller.com below) describes precalculus as the bridge between the math you know, such as arithmetic and algebra, and a wondrous, fertile land ahead: calculus.
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Practice makes perfect, and that's why math worksheets are an educational staple in the classroom and at home. Today's collection of math worksheets for grades one through nine, focuses on the print-it-out-and-work-on-it-with-a-pencil variety, but some of
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The world seems to be divided into two kinds of people. Those who think math is fun, and those who don't. Today's sites are designed to entertain the first group, and convert the second.
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What's seven times eight? How about eight times eight? Six times nine? I'd love to sit here all day but I think I have laundry to do. It's common knowledge that computers are very good at repetitive tasks. They simply never tire. Which makes them perfect
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Opportunities to teach math in a fun way surround us everyday. Here are some sites that use magic tricks, photographs and nature to explore the wonders of math. Enjoy!
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