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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Profs
perform math balancing act
Using meter sticks,
Central Oregon Community College Professors Jack McCown and Doug Nelson
offered a mathematical balancing act at the Thursday, October 24, Lunch
and Learn class at Sisters COCC.
Forty community education
students, in teams of four or five, were given several meter sticks and
asked to stack them on tables, one on top of another, yet extending each
successive meter stick to see how far off the table the final stick would
extend.
With classroom noise levels
reaching higher and higher decibel levels, the leading teams stretched
out their final stick to 114 centimeters (about 45 inches) off the table.
"It's nice to know the math
behind something simple," said Nelson. "This was an example of a cantilever
and a series of geometric steps where each successive stick is placed
approximately at the halfway point of the previous stick."
Next, the excited students
were given paper and scissors and told to cut out the largest hole possible
on their sheet of ordinary white typing paper. "Could you step through
the hole in your paper?" asked McCown. "How many people could fit through
your hole at the same time?"
Paul Bennett quickly snipped
away and got his head easily through the paper. Arnold Funai didn't think
he'd fit through his paper hole. Jim Smith was looking for legal size
paper. One student was seen stepping through a large green sheet of poster
paper.
McCown then demonstrated how
cuts could be made in an ordinary sheet of typing paper yielding up to
an 18-foot diameter and allowing a dozen people to fit through at one
time.
"You did as good today as
any second grade class," said Professor Nelson. |
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