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Home : Academic :
Maple for High School :
Course Materials
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Course Materials |
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Who knows best how instructors
are using Maple in the classroom but an instructor?
This collection of course lessons was written
by instructors and covers any mathematics-based
course imaginable. The best thing about these
lessons, other than the fact that they are
free, is that you can manipulate each lesson
to your liking. If you are not satisfied
with the structure of the lesson or if you
have found a function that conveys a concept
better than those presented, simply open
the worksheet in Maple and change it! |
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This
set of Maple lessons is designed for
Algebra I and II. Lessons include:
Primes and Factorization, Solving Linear
Equations, Functions and Graphcs, Absolute
Value Problems, and more. These lessons
were designed by Gregory Moore of Orange
Coast College.
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This
set of Maple lessons is designed for
high school Geometry. Lessons include:
Polygons and Stars, Axes of Symmetry,
the Golden Ratio, the Circumference
and Area of a Circle, and more. Gregory
Moore of Orange Coast College developed
these lessons
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This
set of Maple lessons is designed for
high school Trigonometry. Lessons include:
the Law of Cosines, Trig Identities,
Visualizing Inverse Trig Functions,
Polar Graphs of Trig expressions and
more. These lessons were designed by
Gregory Moore of Orange Coast College.
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This
set of Maple lessons is designed for
Precalculus. Lessons include: Long
Division of Polynomials, the Fundamental
Theorem of Algebra, Roots of Complex
Numbers, Conics Sections, and more.
Gregory Moore of Orange Coast College
developed these lessons
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The
MathClass package provides Maple functions
and techniques for constructing textbook-quality
mathematical diagrams. Professors Paul
Eakin, Carl Eberhart, and K.K. Kubota
developed this course as part of a National
Science Foundation CCLI curriculum development
project at the University of Kentucky. |
This
complete set of Maple lessons for 1st
semester calculus covers topics such
as differentiation rules, max and min
problems, the mean value theorem, Riemann
sums, the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus,
and more. The lessons in this course
were created by the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Department of Mathematics. |
For basic to advanced applications
and resources, visit the Maple
Application Center |
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