Sound Stories. Sound Voices.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
You are on the KUOW archive site. Click here to go to our current site.

Getting Kids Interested In Math (Without Their Knowing)

Flickr Photo/Robbie Veldwijk

Cats have four legs. Dogs have four legs. So obviously, all animals have four legs.

Try out that reasoning on a kid, says mathematician Dan Finkel, to introduce them to the concept of mathematical play.

[asset-images[{"caption": "Dan Finkel holds a strawberry.", "fid": "39498", "style": "card_280", "uri": "public://201405/Dan-with-Strawberry-2-260x300.jpg", "attribution": "Credit math 4 love"}]]Wrong, the kids should say. What about people? And fish?

“Kids love to prove adults wrong,” Finkel, co-director of Math 4 Love, told KUOW’s Bill Radke. And math is about arguing against seeming truths – what comedian Stephen Colbert refers to as “truthiness.” These math games encourage youngsters to play with proofs.

There’s a sense that if “you’re not suffering, you’re not learning,” Finkel says. But the opposite is true, he said. “Even people doing the deepest mathematical research are people who have retained ability to play.”   

Year started with KUOW: 1985 – 1986, 1991 – 2004, 2012