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I am thinking of giving my high school students some pure maths projects to do. It is a lot easier to think of some interesting stats projects but not in pure maths. The students' maths background are weak, they might not really understand the relationship between integration and area finding. I am planning of giving a short project that could be done in 1-2 weeks time (for 1-2 pages long) that emphasises on conceptual understanding but if possible exciting and upon completing the projects students should feel more confident tackling more problems.

From my experience when I studied maths back then in high school, I preferred to understand the concepts first before trying to do any problems. But nowadays, I think it is a common phenomenon that students tend to jump straight into doing problems without bothering the purposes, motives, and relationships from one concept to the other. In other words, students are not interested in connecting the dots, they just want to do and pass the tests.

The topics that we are discussing now are: differential and integral calculus of trigonometric and logarithmic functions.

Here are some ideas that I have in mind:
1. Summarise different interpretations of derivatives (for example: geometric interpretation, algebraic interpretation, physical interpretation, etc)
2. Relate the idea of (definite) integration (continuous) and summation (discrete) and give some properties or equations which are very similar in both cases.
3. Summarise common trig identities and prove them. For example, $sin^2\theta+cos^2\theta=1$ can be proved using Pythagoras.

I would really appreciate if anyone could share some other ideas or examples which might be helpful in enhancing students' understanding of concepts, I have a very limited knowledge on the current research, maybe there are some exciting research topics which do not require tons of advanced maths. Many thanks!

user71346
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  • Can basic elementary number theory be handled by them? – Git Gud Mar 30 '14 at 11:55
  • @Git Gud: Some really basics stuff yeah I think, like divisibility, prime factorisation, gcd, etc.. But we don't want to go to far to something like Fermat's Little Theorem, Chinese Remainder Theorem etc. But I would like to know some ideas in elementary number theory which might be useful in some other occasions. Thanks! :) – user71346 Mar 30 '14 at 12:03
  • Good issues, but you can make the question better by asking a question! –  Mar 30 '14 at 12:19
  • @MattF.: Is asking for examples and ideas not appropriate here? I have made a minor edit, I am not sure if I have made my question clear. – user71346 Mar 30 '14 at 12:28
  • If your students are comfortable with trigonometry, a neat project idea would be to explore the basics of spherical trigonometry. It's a lost art. – David H Mar 30 '14 at 12:29
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    You've made your issues clear, but not in the form of a question. Putting it into a question, with a question mark, focuses the post and makes it easier for people to answer well. –  Mar 30 '14 at 12:47
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    Would something like asking them to provide primality certificates of some given prime numbers be feasible (i.e. I'm not asking about this particular question, but its character)? – dtldarek Mar 30 '14 at 13:29
  • Would asking them to solve a simple differential equation like $f+4f''=0$ be feasible (i.e. provide any $f$ which is a solution and $f \not\equiv 0$)? – dtldarek Mar 30 '14 at 13:41
  • Would asking them to find some fast-converging sequences like the one for square root be feasible? – dtldarek Mar 30 '14 at 13:52
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    http://www.ams.org/programs/students/high-school/emp-student-research – David Ebert Jun 04 '14 at 06:14
  • related, but calc focussed http://matheducators.stackexchange.com/questions/2185/what-are-some-good-final-project-prompts-for-a-calculus-class-where-they-have-t – WetlabStudent Jun 04 '14 at 18:14
  • these suggestion are awesome . and i also got a brief idea what to do in my maths exhibition –  Oct 09 '14 at 17:01
  • Why do you want them to do projects?
  • – guest Jan 25 '18 at 15:54
  • Since you say they are weak, I would pass on many of the research or harder ideas here.
  • – guest Jan 25 '18 at 15:54
  • What's wrong with stats project? At least it gets them using numbers and seeing a use to math in general.
  • – guest Jan 25 '18 at 15:55