Exeter Student Places Third in Harvard-MIT Math Tournament
web.mit.edu/hmmet/www/

Zuming Feng, Instructor and Coach to the U.S. Math Olympiad Team, Talks About the Importance of Math
The New York Times

Exeter Math Institute Brings New Skills to Texas Teachers
ONLYKATY

Exeter Mathematics Institute Travels to Houston Area
The Sun

Parris, Math Instructor, Publishes Articles in College Mathematics Journal

Exeter's Summer Math Institute Helps the San Diego Unified School District Improve Math Teaching
SanDiego.com

PEA Senior Wins Gold Medal in China Girls Math Olympiad
MercuryNews.com

China Girls Mathematical Olympiad Underway
VOA.com

Exonian Awarded ExxonMobil 2007 Hispanic Heritage Youth Award in Engineering and Mathematics
BusinessWire

Exeter Student Attends Mathematics Olympiad Summer Program
Seascoastonline


Zuming Feng, Instructor and Coach to the U.S. Math Olympiad Team, Talks About the Importance of Math |

Parris, Math Instructor, Publishes Articles in College Mathematics Journal | "A Waiting-Time Surprise" and "Commensurable Triangles"

PEA Senior Named Semifinalist in 2007-08 Siemens Math, Science and Technology Competition | One of only 294 students selected from across the country

PEA Senior Wins Gold Medal in China Girls Math Olympiad | Team coach Feng, Exeter math instructor, predicts success will encourage other students

Exeter's Summer Math Institute Helps the San Diego Unified School District Improve Math Teaching | The conference "really challenges you as a mathematician," says a participant

Exeter Scores First in the Nation at ARML Math Competition | Math team competes against other states, regions in the country

Math Teacher Edits New Book, Leads Math Team to USA Mathematics Olympiad | Zuming Feng Edits Mathematics Book, Leads Academy Math Team to Olympiad Competition


Lion's Eye Favorite: A Passion for Math | Collaborative problem solving is at the heart of the math curriculum

"Table Talk with Mathematics Instructor (and Olympic Coach) Zuming Feng" from The Exeter Bulletin, Fall 2007 | Instructor with iconic status in the math world is a "magnet for talent"

Harkness Teaching Adds Up To Math Opportunities Worldwide | Harkness math brought to thousands of teachers; PEA students competing in U.S. and Asia

MacArthur Fellow and Fields Medal Winner Visits Exeter | David Mumford '53 visits campus as a Harkness Fellow



Mathematics

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The goal of the Mathematics Department is that all of our students understand and appreciate the mathematics they are studying; that they can read it, write it, explore it, and communicate it with confidence; and that they will be able to use mathematics as they need to in their lives.

We believe that problem solving (investigating, conjecturing, predicting, analyzing, and verifying), followed by a well-reasoned presentation of results, is central to the process of learning mathematics, and that this learning happens most effectively in a cooperative, student-centered classroom.

We see the following tenets as fundamental to our curriculum:

  • that algebra is important as a modeling and problem-solving tool, with sufficient emphasis placed on technical facility to allow conceptual understanding;
  • that geometry in two and three dimensions be integrated across topics at all levels and include coordinate and transformational approaches;
  • that the study of vectors, matrices, counting, data analysis, and other topics from discrete mathematics be woven into core courses;
  • that computer— and/or calculator-based activities be part of our courses;
  • that all topics be explored visually, symbolically, and verbally;
  • that developing problem-solving strategies depends on an accumulated body of knowledge.

Our intention is to have students assume responsibility for the mathematics they explore—to understand theorems that are developed, to be able to use techniques appropriately, to know how to test results for reasonability, to learn to use technology appropriately, and to welcome new challenges whose outcomes are unknown.

To implement this educational philosophy, members of the PEA Mathematics Department have composed problems for nearly every course that we offer. The problems require that students read carefully, as all pertinent information is contained within the text of the problems themselves—there is no external annotation. The resulting curriculum is problem-centered rather than topic-centered. The purpose of this format is to have students continually encounter mathematics set in meaningful contexts, enabling them to draw, and then verify, their own conclusions.

As in most Exeter classes, mathematics is studied seminar-style, with students and instructor seated around a large table. This pedagogy demands that students be active contributors in class each day; they are expected to ask questions, to share their results with their classmates, and to be prime movers of each day’s investigations. The benefit of such participation in the students’ study of mathematics is an enhanced ability to ask effective questions, to answer fellow students’ inquiries, and to critically assess and present their own work. The ultimate goal is that the students, not the teacher or a textbook, be the source of mathematical knowledge.