This book is intended as a bridge between high school and college mathematics. The contents have been chosen to demonstrate the relationships among topics from the high school curriculum, including topics that may be part of a fourth year non-calculus mathematics course and first and second year college courses. As the title indicates, the common thread of this work is the linear function. The two parts of the book are devoted, in turn, to: the linear function of a real variable and the linear function of a 2-dimensional vector variable. A second common thread is the visualization of these functions as transformations of 1- or 2-dimensional Euclidean space. The topics, examples, and problems have all been chosen to encourage the integration of the major topics from the high school curriculum. Another feature of this book is that it includes proofs. Specifically, not the formal “two column proofs” often included in the study of geometry in high school, but the more informal, but nevertheless rigorous, step-by-step explanations of why what we believe to be true is indeed true. One of the common complaints of the colleges is that a large majority of incoming freshmen do not have algebra as a usable tool. In this book, algebra is seen to be an essential tool for the further study of mathematics. Algebraic skills are strengthened by constantly using algebra and by seeing the application of algebra in a variety of settings.
Table of Contents:
Preface.- Introduction.- The Geometry of the Euclidean Line.- Linear Difference Equations.- The Mathematics of Personal Finance.- Linear Functions in Business.- Research Projects.- Affine Geometry.- Matrix Algebra.- Euclidean Geometry.
About the Author :
Jennifer Edmond, Ph.D., received her Ph.D. from Syracuse University in 2018. Her research interests include combinatorics and graph theory, with a particular focus on carbon nanostructures. As a graduate fellow, she was one of the leaders of an NSF program for undergraduates at Syracuse University and the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts, where she led many of the program’s work sessions. Since completing her Ph.D., Dr. Edmond has built a successful tutoring program while raising her family.
Jack E. Graver, Ph.D., is a Professor in the Department of Mathematics at Syracuse University. He received his Ph.D. from Indiana University in1964, had a two a year Post Doc at Dartmouth College, and joined the faculty at Syracuse University in 1966. His early research areas were in set theory, mathematical programming, and graph theory. Dr. Graver's research interests include chemical graph theory, specifically in the structure of carbon molecules called fullerenes. Starting as a graduate student, Dr. Graver taught NSF summer workshops for high school teachers at Indiana University. He continued teaching summer and year-long teacher workshops at Syracuse University, the College of the Virgin Islands, and at the Shell Center in England.