Discrete Mathematics

An Open Introduction

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November 20, 2022 | History

Discrete Mathematics

An Open Introduction

This text aims to give an introduction to select topics in discrete mathematics at a level appropriate for first or second year undergraduate math majors, especially those who intend to teach middle and high school mathematics.

The book began as a set of notes for the Discrete Mathematics course at the University of Northern Colorado. This course serves both as a survey of the topics in discrete math and as the “bridge” course for math majors, as UNC does not offer a separate “introduction to proofs” course. Most students who take the course plan to teach, although there are a handful of students who will go on to graduate school or study applied math or computer science. For these students the current text hopefully is still of interest, but the intent is not to provide a solid mathematical foundation for computer science, unlike the majority of textbooks on the subject.

Another difference between this text and most other discrete math books is that this book is intended to be used in a class taught using problem oriented or inquiry based methods. When I teach the class, I will assign sections for reading after first introducing them in class by using a mix of group work and class discussion on a few interesting problems. The text is meant to consolidate what we discover in class and serve as a reference for students as they master the concepts and techniques covered in the unit. None-the-less, every attempt has been made to make the text sufficient for self study as well, in a way that hopefully mimics an inquiry based classroom.

The topics covered in this text were chosen to match the needs of the students I teach at UNC. The main areas of study are combinatorics, sequences, logic and proofs, and graph theory, in that order. Induction is covered at the end of the chapter on sequences. Most discrete books put logic first as a preliminary, which certainly has its advantages. However, I wanted to discuss logic and proofs together, and found that doing both of these before anything else was overwhelming for my students given that they didn’t yet have context of other problems in the subject. Also, after spending a couple weeks on proofs, we would hardly use that at all when covering combinatorics, so much of the progress we made was quickly lost. Instead, there is a short introduction section on mathematical statements, which should provide enough common language to discuss the logical content of combinatorics and sequences.

Publish Date
Pages
409

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Discrete Mathematics
Discrete Mathematics: An Open Introduction for Teachers
2018, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
in English
Cover of: Discrete Mathematics
Discrete Mathematics: An Open Introduction
Dec 31, 2018, Independently published, Independently Published
paperback
Cover of: Discrete Mathematics
Discrete Mathematics: An Open Introduction
2017, University of Northern Colorado, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
E-book in English - 2nd edition
Cover of: Discrete Mathematics
Discrete Mathematics: An Open Introduction
2015, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Source title: Discrete Mathematics: An Open Introduction

The Physical Object

Format
paperback
Number of pages
409

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL32005937M
ISBN 10
1792901690
ISBN 13
9781792901690

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History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
November 20, 2022 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
March 4, 2021 Created by ImportBot Imported from amazon.com record