On 8/9/07, Ted Kosan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> William,
>
> This is exactly the kind of student that I had in mind in my response
> to your marketing email.  He is fairly good with computers but not so
> good with math for various reasons and there are hundreds of thousands
> of these type of students in the world.
>
> My opinion is that Sage definitely is appropriate for a beginner if
> they are introduced to it in the right way.  My Sage beginner's
> tutorial has turned into a Sage Beginner's book and I think I can have
> a useable version of it ready soon.
>
> The book takes a ground-up approach to teaching Sage ant it only
> assumes that the reader understands arithmetic and some beginning
> algebra as a prerequisite.  Here is a link to the current version of
> the book if anyone wants to take a look at it:
>
> http://206.21.94.60/tmp/sage_beginners_book_v.30_alpha.pdf
>
> I propose that a 3rd experimental Sage google group be created for CAS
> beginners like this student and that the beginner's book be used as
> its focus.  I will volunteer to help run the group.

Please add me to the group too.

>
> Invite this student to join the group along with some other high
> school students who are interested in learning Sage.  These students
> can then put the book through beta testing so that the bugs can be
> worked out of it.
>
> If the beta test indicates that this approach works, make the group permanent.
>
> What do people think?

Good ideas, I think. I'd like more high school math (drawing triangles etc,
lots of trig and algebra exercises) included.


>
> Ted
>
> >
>

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