Source Book for Teaching High School Math

$49.00

By Jamie York

Did you ever wish you had a resource book with all the most awe-inspiring math you could bring into the classroom…all the stuff that standard high school math textbooks never have time for?

Our Source Book for Teaching High School Math is Jamieʼs best work yet! It took Jamie York thirty years to develop his Waldorf high school math curriculum. As well as standard math topics, this book is packed with material to inspire you and your students beyond the current mainstream norm.

Our tried and tested Waldorf high school math curriculum prepares students not just for college, but also for life!

This Source Book for High School Math includes:

    • A math curriculum guideline for grades 9-12.
    • An essential resource for use with our grades 9-12 workbooks.
    • A generous mix of standard topics and little-known fascinating math gems.
    • Ideas for all of the Waldorf math “main lessons” in grades 9-12.
    • Includes an 11-page Introduction for the Teacher.
    • Includes an 5-page Grade-by-Grade Overview.

View sample pages from this book in PDF Format.

8.5′ x 11′, 235 pages, illustrated, Soft-cover.

ISBN 978-1-938210-19-8

Description

What is this book?  This book is intended both to help a new high school math teacher get started, and to serve as a resource for all high school math teachers.  It is packed with material that standard high school math textbooks never seem to have time for – great stuff that will help to inspire students.

Jamie emphasizes a healthy balance between developing skills and having mathematical experiences, and this source book is all about giving students those amazing mathematical experiences.

What are we preparing them for?  Certainly, any student graduating high school should be prepared for whatever step comes next in life.  For those who struggle the most with math in high school, I believe that math may be the most important part of their education – not because of the content they are learning, but because of the life lessons (e.g., how to persevere through difficulties, etc.). Other students have a talent for math and may plan on majoring in mathematics, engineering, or science in college.

All of our books (including this book and our workbooks) are written to meet the needs of all students.

Who can use this book?  Most of the author’s teaching experience is within the Waldorf school system.  Yet this source book can be effectively used by any teacher or homeschooling parent who wishes to teach meaningful, age-appropriate math.

The Source Book for Teaching High School Math includes:

Practical advice for teachers   •   Math curriculum overview   •   Al-Khwarizmiʼs algebra
Possibility and probability   •   Greek geometry main lesson   •   Amazing proofs (more than 50)
Handouts for students   •   Descriptive geometry   •   Euclidʼs Elements   •   Surveying
Sequences and series   •   Math and music   •   Descartes main lesson   •  
i as an exponent
Projective geometry   •   Calculus main lesson   •   Philosophy of math
… and much more!

Teachers’ Reviews:

I have been teaching math in Waldorf schools for 12 years, and in public schools for 3 years prior to that.   When I began my Waldorf training in 2005, I encountered Jamie York as a teacher and mentor.  Since that time, I feel I have been consistently enriched, challenged, and enticed as a math teacher through Jamie’s Source Book material.

This book is chock-full of amazing, invigorating mathematics.  Unlike modern math textbooks, Jamie writes and explains mathematical puzzles and problems just up to a certain “jumping off point”. Then he expects the teacher to actively engage with the material.  Time and time again, I have read a rich nugget in Jamie’s Source Book, which has led me to do further investigation on my own.  The joy of math is in discovery. Jamie’s work has allowed me, as a math teacher, to do just that.  In turn, I can create situations where my students also have the opportunity to create and discover mathematical wonder.

The High School Source Book contains an amazing array of material, and types of mathematics.  It begins  with some brief introductory commentary that is well worth reading (“Today’s Challenge”, “Thoughts on Teaching Math”, “Will our Students Be Prepared?” are a few subtitles). Then it is organized by grade level (9th-12th) based on Jamie’s experience and research of teaching these subjects.

In Waldorf schools, every attempt is made to teach subjects developmentally, i.e., the right topic at the right age. Math education has often been an exception to this approach. Even in Waldorf schools, it’s often thought to be OK to allow students to learn math at their “natural pace.”  This leads, for example, to teaching algebra to 6th graders in an intensive way. Yet, reading Jamie’s thoughts and working with his material has made me a believer that, for example, there is absolutely no rush to teach Cartesian coordinate graphing before late 10th grade (buy the book to read more, page 9).  Rather, Jamie advocates for introducing and working with a much wider range of mathematics than is normally attempted.  Examples include: Possibility and Probability, and Descriptive Geometry in 9th grade; Circle and Triangle Geometry, Mensuration, and Sequences and Series in 10th Grade; and Projective Geometry, Complex Numbers and Polarity in 11th and 12th grade.  Jamie has included sufficient challenge within each math area of study to keep the most advanced students joyfully engaged. At the same time, he allows the “regular” student to also experience the joy of mathematics without shutting down.

Jamie’s book includes an entire unit on Descartes and his geometry; another on Cantor, Hilbert, Russel, Gödel and modern mathematical philosophy; another on the development of Calculus.  It includes mathematics from Plato to Euclid to Archimedes, Al-Khwarizmi to Galileo to Newton and Liebniz. The whole gamut of human endeavor in mathematics is represented here.  In each new study, the goal is to engage one’s mind in the same mathematics that occupied the minds of the greatest mathematicians,  experiencing their same awe and wonder that they experienced!

Mathematics as an educational subject has been severely crippled by several onuses inappropriately placed upon it. It has been a litmus test for the “truly gifted” student. It has been an excuse to label and stratify students according to perceived natural ability.  It has been a discipline whose only justification is in service of engineering and technological achievements.  But, working with Jamie’s book reveals the truth. Math is an art form (possibly the most sublime art form ever invented), and it is to be practiced and enjoyed.

This High School Math Source Book is for the teacher of mathematics who has a true love of her/his subject matter. It is for the teacher who wants to continuously enhance his/her ability to transfer that love to her/his students. This Source Book will deliver for years and years to come, with new mathematical challenges to explore and enjoy!  I strongly recommend Jamie’s high school  math source book as an indispensible resource for all teachers of mathematics!
— Brian Gleichauf, high school math teacher

Additional information

Weight 1.7 lbs
Dimensions 11 × 8.5 × 0.5 in