Demonstrating to the Class
Differential Equations, Live and in Color

 Other Animations
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"A picture may be worth a thousand words, but a good
animation is worth much more."
Selwyn
Hollis Professor of Mathematics Armstrong Atlantic State University |
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Professor Selwyn Hollis has made many contributions to the use of
advanced technology in mathematical education. He has authored a
number of software supplements to Stewart's popular calculus
textbooks. His publications about
Mathematica show how students can use it as a tool to
explore calculus concepts and applications without getting bogged down
by algebraic and computational details.
Teaching by Example
A
Mathematica Companion for Differential Equations, one of
Hollis's books, is designed to supplement a typical college-level
differential equations course and shows students how to use
Mathematica
to solve and visualize common differential equations.
The book's companion website demonstrates how animations can
illustrate practical applications of calculus. Imagine, for example,
poking a hole in the bottom of a plastic cup filled with water. How
quickly will the water drain out?
Hollis generated a Mathematica animation that simultaneously simulates this simple
experiment and plots the results. Both representations originate from
the differential equations that relate the change in water level to
the shape of the container and to the volume of water. By seeing the
representations develop side by side, students can better understand
how the equations, graph, and physical situation all relate to each
other.
Interactive Learning
Watch the animation and see if you can come up with explanations for
what you see. Why, for example, does the water level change more slowly
at the end? You could go one step further and try the same thing with a
plastic cup and a sink. Are you convinced that the differential
equations and animations describe the real world accurately?
Other examples on the website include springs, pendulums, population
models, circuits, decay models, numerical techniques, and chaotic
systems. The examples demonstrate concepts and methods of differential
calculus such as nonlinear equations, orbits, vector fields, and phase
diagrams.
By using Hollis's A Mathematica Companion for Differential
Equations in conjunction with his custom differential equation packages for Mathematica, students can
reproduce the animations, experiment with the input parameters, and
perhaps even discover powerful animations of their own. Says Hollis,
who plans to keep adding new material to his website, "I'm always
interested in new ideas, and with their fertile imaginations, students
often provide good ones."
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