Integrate TI graphing calculator technology into math instruction. Includes lessons, problem-solving practice, and step-by-step instructions.
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Saturday, July 11, 2009
TI Graphing Calculator Strategies Middle School Math: (TI Graphing Calculator Strategies) Review
Posted by Vendi at 7:24 PM 0 comments
Friday, July 10, 2009
Texas Instrument TI-73TP Graphing Calculator (10-pack) Review
Texas Instruments Inc. TI-73TP Teacher 10 PackTexas Instruments, Inc.TI-73TP Teacher 10 Pack is a graphing calculator with 32 KB memory, with unit to unit link cable formiddle grades mathematics and science.-BLUE
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Posted by Vendi at 6:36 PM 0 comments
Thursday, July 9, 2009
Casio fx-9860G Slim Graphing Calculator Review
I have owned top of the line graphing and scientific calculators from TI, HP, Casio, Sharp, etc. This machine, the Casio FX-9860g Slim version, continues the Casio quality tradition and is definitely put together very well. It is also a very good improvement over its predecessor, the Casio FX-9860g, with a very fine pocketable clamshell portable design with a much improved keyboard layout except for the location of the Navigation keypad itself, etc. At $69.99 right now from one of the quality suppliers in NJ on the Amazon website, it is indeed a very great deal!
The pros and cons as I see it are:
PROS:
1) It has all the standard features that we have come to expect on such a machine, plus the inclusion of an electronic OS upgrade capability from the Casio educational website. This is done using a USB interface with a PC computer and is also quite fast and easy to set up. The current OS production version is 1.10, but it can be upgraded to the OS version 2.0 (which is almost entirely compatible with the current system hardware) at Casio's educational website.
2) The machine itself is quite fast with a nice graphical interface and resultant plotting system. The resultant plots are high quality and with the many added features available for enhancement are very intuitive for the learning process.
3) It has a nice and quite modern, folding clamshell body design that sits very nicely both on a desk or a table as well as in your hand. It even has two feet for great stability that are constructed on the bottom at the back of the very well made unit.
4) It has a very large amount of onboard main memory, plus additional Flash memory for tackling quite memory intensive problems.
5) Although it is called a calculator, it is really a small and very fast handheld computer system which can tackle problems from the most simple to almost the most complex.
6) It has a very useful user interface system with multiple icons. The calculator functions are all controlled using an Algebraic Operating System (AOS).
7) It has a very high quality backlight system that makes the display screen much easier to read at very low, prevailing light levels.
8) It also has a very fine stored Help system with both syntax and an onboard Manual of Explanations for every command in the FX-9860 System Catalog. Both the Help function and the System Catalog function are available at the touch of a key (or a shifted key for the System Catalog).
CONS:
1) Some functions that you would readily expect to be available with a single key press on the main keyboard (such as the common hyperbolic functions for example) require instead multiple key presses (hyperbolics are embedded in the OPTN menu softkeys which is much more inconvenient), but usually with only a single shift key press first.
2) This machine is limited to graphing functions in two-dimensions (2-D) and NOT in 3-D as can be performed on the Casio Classpad330 (or the HP50g or the TI-89 Titanium or on the TI-89 or on the TI Voyage 200).
3) There is no CAS (Computer Algebra System) at all which these days is a very BIG limitation. Casio CAS systems are now only available on the Classpad 330 pen-based system or on the older FX-2.0Plus which is much harder to find at all or even at a good price these days, since it was first introduced about 2000.
4) The FX-9860g Slim does not require a backup coin cell battery, but is powered only by two AAA batteries for over 150 hrs with no backlight and for 50 hrs with the backlight on continuously. This is a significant battery life improvement over the comparable HP and TI models.
5) The navigation keypad is located on the bottom left of the front face of the keyboard. This is just fine for left-handers, but for primarily right handed individuals, it should be located on the right hand bottom side in my opinion for much easier and far more natural key stroke motions.
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Posted by Vendi at 6:54 PM 0 comments
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
HP39GS Graphing Calculator Review
This calculator is just what I wanted and needed. I have owned top of the line graphing calculators from HP, Casio, Sharp, TI, etc., but overall I like this one almost the best due primarily to its simplicity and ease of use. I like it especially for trips and outside activities when I can do quite useful mathematical explorations that I don't normally have time for at home or in the office with my busy schedule. It was designed by HP and teachers, first and foremost however, as an aid in teaching HIGH SCHOOL students mathematics in a very user-friendly manner.
PROS:
1) It is simple, fairly light and quite fast (75 MHz clock speed), algebraic equation operating system (EOS), but not with HP RPN, but not bad for the money since the hp 39gs units are now on sale for $63.99 compared with $59.99 for the new HP 35s for example which is a great machine, but which is totally outclassed by this much more versatile unit. The hp 39 gs is now about one year in production having replaced the 39G+ with a much better designed keyboard, etc. as described below and has evolved through 3-4 flavors from the original HP 38 of about a decade ago).
2) Very well organized analysis activities using special Aplets with about a dozen available with the unit and many many more on the world wide web (or you can write your own since programming is also available on the 39 gs). These specialized Aplets include analysis of functions, parametric equations, the famous HP solver system, statistics, etc. (with least squares curve fits available for about a dozen types, such as cubic, exponential, power law, logistic or even a user defined type, etc.!). The unit also has about 200 kb of available RAM and about 1 Mb of ROM for the operating system which is a lot more than the more powerful hp 48gII for example.
3) It will supply three types of analysis for every problem, namely a numerical table of values, a graphic plot (only two-dimensional types however) and a symbolic analysis which is only completely possible for the simplest Calculus cases (polynomials and basic trig, logarithmic and hyperbolic functions). Nevertheless, it also does numerical differential and integral Calculus and it can even supply a Taylor series approximation for your functions. It can also display a fine split-screen view (side by side) supplying a table of values as well a plot which is also very useful (with many useful zoom options).
4) It also handles some advanced mathematical functions (including hyperbolics, etc.) and of course can be used to analyze complex numbers, lists and matrices and can even take the square root of negative numbers directly in a very straight forward manner (unlike the HP 35s)!
5) It also allows the user to make detailed notes and sketches and also interfaces very nicely with a PC using the USB cable supplied with the unit for exchanging information. It also has an RS-232 (serial) as well as an infrared transfer option available as well.
6) It comes with a well written and well organized 314 page users manual and with an even more advanced manual available on the supplied CD.
7) It has a new Flash ROM so that the calculator can be electronically updated if new EOS software ROM's are produced by HP without changing out the hardware.
8) Date and time is always available with the on-board clock (using the DISPTIME command)
9) The unit has a totally redesigned keyboard that has quite an excellent feel to it (unlike the fiasco's connected with the HP 49g series for example and even better in my humble opinion than the revered HP 50g now in production for over a year too which I also own). The overall unit seems to be very well made and should last a very long time too. As always, the calculator special self tests are excellent and are triggered by simple keystroke commands. Also, Typing RULES or AMIGOS in "Home" produces two "HP easter eggs" of people who were involved in the design and production of this great system.
10) It has a completely scrollable operations history in HOME (unlimited within the available RAM memory and also easy to erase when extra memory is needed) that is very easy to manipulate by using the Copy command to recall previously evaluated expressions in order to perform quick "what-if" analysis, etc.
11) It is also very intuitive to operate in my opinion even without HP RPN. It is a great start to get students and teachers interested in doing more math and science too which is a very good thing considering recent trends in North America.
CONS
1) The batteries only last 65 hours according to HP. I can't confirm this fact as of yet, but it uses 4 AAA batteries as well as a common Lithium battery to be used as a backup while changing the main batteries.
2) It is quite thick in comparison to other such calculators and in spite of the supplied high quality slide-on cover (a maximum total 1.22 inches thick with the cover on for protection), HP should have supplied a good case for further protection as has been its standard for many other of its calculators (including the HP 35s). Why just imitate the other manufacturers with a slide-on cover for its only protection? HP has always gone its own way in this field considering how few people really understand or actively use RPN logic every day (which I have previously always preferred for many years now). Most of us now have easily accessible computers and compilers to do most computing tasks. I usually use a calculator at work only to carefully check intricate computer calculations, but when I do I want it to be simple and easy to use, especially since I don't use it every day.
3) It will not analyze ordinary differential equations as the more advanced calculators can now readily do. Also, the statistical applet correlation coefficient provided is only for a linear curve fit (regardless of the fit assumed). The relative error is provided instead for both the linear as well as for any of the other curve fit options.
4) Hopefully its sister calculator, the HP 40gs (with a full HP Computer Algebra System-CAS) for UNIVERSITY LEVEL will also be released in North America soon. HP has recently combined efforts (as of early May, 2007) with a company in Oregon to use the 39GS and 40GS for routine laboratory measurements at high schools and at universities in the very near future.
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Posted by Vendi at 7:03 PM 0 comments
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
Graphing Calculator Review
With a large, 21-character x 8 line display with dual screen capability, the FX-9750G-APlus features an on-screen, icon-driven menu that provides easy access to advanced functions. Function keys are used to select from on-screen menus, keeping the keyboard free from clutter. With this advanced graphic calculator, you can create tables of values from given functions and generate plots and graphs from tables. A CONIC feature draws and analyzes standard conic Sections (Ellipses, Circles, Hyperbolas, and Parabolas). There is also a communications port for linking to a personal computer, another FX-9750GPlus, or the Casio EA-200 Data Analyzer. Graphic and numerical solver key provides instant solutions for root, maximum, Y intercept, and intersect for any graph. Also has list-based statistics with up to 36 lists and has complex number calculations. Communications port Suggested Courses for the FX-9750GPlus Graphing Calculator include Pre-Algebra, Algebra I and II, Middle School Math, Geometry, Trigonometry Physics, Calculus, AP Calculus, Statistics and Engineering The FX-9750GPlus is allowed on all major exams like SAT, ACT, Texas TAK and New York Regents Exams
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Posted by Vendi at 6:34 PM 0 comments
Monday, July 6, 2009
Texas Instruments TI-89 Titanium Graphing Calculator Review
Very bad keyboard design, because is not like the ti-83, where you can press once to calculate sine, cosine, or tangent. On this calculator, they replace those three MAIN buttons for y,z,t. As a result if someone wants to calculate or graph sin (x), he must press the key "2nd" "Y", ridiculous pain in the neck.
But graphing, taking the derivatives, and integrating is way much faster than the TI Voyage 200. Also it has better documentation, the rest is the same operating system.
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Posted by Vendi at 7:17 PM 0 comments
Sunday, July 5, 2009
Texas Instruments TI-84 Plus Graphing Calculator Review
I have bought two calculators already. One for my son and another one for myself. The product is excellent and I will recommend it for someone who takes maths seriously.
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Posted by Vendi at 7:02 PM 0 comments