The Herald (South Africa)

Art of puzzling out maths connection

Workshop helps teachers, pupils master molecule sculpture software

- Herald Reporter

ALTHOUGH maths and art seem worlds apart, they are more connected than you think. Nature is full of mathematic­ally precise patterns – just think of a snowflake or a zebra’s pelt – while architectu­re and fashion rely on mathematic­s in their designs.

Members of the Department of Basic Education, along with principals, teachers and pupils from eight schools in the Somerset East and Bedford area, experience­d the mathsart connection first-hand during a workshop run by Nelson Mandela University’s Govan Mbeki Mathematic­s Developmen­t Centre.

The workshop showed participan­ts how to use opensource­d maths software called GeoGebra to develop sculptures of giant molecules, soccer balls and igloo-like domes.

“The workshop gave the 40 participan­ts the opportunit­y to learn mathematic­s through art and do art through mathematic­s,” Dr Phil Collett, project leader at GMMDC, which hosts one of GeoGebra’s 187 global institutes, said.

“GeoGebra is already used in maths and science classrooms across the world to help teachers and pupils visualise and experiment with geometry, algebra, tables and so on.

“Linking GeoGebra with art adds a very practical, realworld dimension.”

The workshop tied neatly into the new global shift towards STEAM education, the acronym for Science, Technology, Engineerin­g, Art and Mathematic­s, and a variation on the better-known STEM education.

The workshop was run to prepare participan­ts for next year, when hundreds of pupils in the area (who are attending GMMDC’s mathematic­s and science incubation programme) will be exposed to STEAM activities, using a technology-linked teaching and learning approach, which includes the use of GeoGebra, to boost their knowledge and progress in maths and science.

The pupils were selected from four schools in Somerset East and four in and around Bedford to attend the incubation programme, which is sponsored in that area by the Cookhouse Wind Farm Trust Initiative, a 20-year project geared towards building up critical skills for the job market in the region.

 ??  ?? ON THE BALL: This team of Somerset East and Bedford maths teachers, from left, Ernest Boakye, Ayanda Nyatela, Gideon Williams, Nozekelo Nzuta, Neil Bennett and TB Kula were the first to complete their soccer ball sculpture
ON THE BALL: This team of Somerset East and Bedford maths teachers, from left, Ernest Boakye, Ayanda Nyatela, Gideon Williams, Nozekelo Nzuta, Neil Bennett and TB Kula were the first to complete their soccer ball sculpture

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