"These are the problems that always confounded me – if two trains are traveling toward each other, and one is going 50 mph and the other 75 mph and the first one leaves Penn Station at noon for Union Station and the other leaves Baltimore for Newark at 1:15, when will they pass each other? This is why I became an English major. The CPA thing was just a terrible aberrant period in my life that I’d just as soon forget about."I understand. Many of us do. (As my grandmother told it, the question was, "What color were the conductor's eyes?) Dan Meyer @ dy/dan also balks at these impossibly dull, interest-killing train problems.
Next year, I'd love to put a photo speeding ticket in front of my 9th-grade physics students and ask, "Was this ticket fair?" The People Will Want to Know.
Any volunteers?
Dorrie,
ReplyDeleteI've actually found that students enojy the two trains problems if they model them with real objects (find when and where these two buggies will collide if released from opposite ends of the table). Here's something I wrote about it last year: The big payoff for CVPM
But I also really like your idea, and I LOVE that you're blogging.
Fun stuff, Dorrie. I want to make this happen.
ReplyDeletewonder if we can get the original images..
ReplyDeletehttp://gizmodo.com/5794614/the-man-who-successfully-challenged-five-speeding-tickets-using-traffic-photo-timestamps
A follow-up post is coming with real ticket images... (The Washington Times articles has one set of photos from The Man Who Successfully Challenged Five Speeding Tickets.)
ReplyDelete