180 Days of Ideas for Discussion in Math Class.
(as of 9July2014, we're in overtime!)
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Monday, January 27, 2014
9: Order of Operations is Wrong
I've always liked the version to the right as it displays the order of operations in a hierarchical fashion, which helps to eliminate a lot of the issues that students have.
They memorized PEMDAS and assume that M comes before D, such that $30 \div 6 * 5 = 1$, when the intent was for $30 \div 6$, then $5*5$.
Here's another: " $10^2 - 5^2 \div 5$.
The order of operations is most appropriately a way to ensure that everyone can communicate in a consistent fashion, that there isn't really a "natural reason" as much as there was a human one. "It's just an arbitrary rule" was one of the most-viewed posts on MathCurmudgeon, relating the story of an expression that only 30% of over 300,000 Facebook users got right. (And because Facebook is what it is, they were all certain that they were correct.)
$6-1*0+2 \div 2$
... but here is an interesting viewpoint. What is your take on it?
Transcript
If you went to elementary school in the United
States (or much of the rest of the world) you almost certainly learned about something
boringly called the "order of operations" - a set of rules for whether or not you should
do multiplication before addition or addition before subtraction to get the right answer
on your math test.
Except, you don't always get the right answer,
or even, one answer - I mean, is 8-2+1 equal to 5 or 7? and is 6/3/3 equal to two thirds
or six? - the problem is, focusing on the order of operations can lead to ambiguity
and obscures the real, underlying, and often beautiful mathematics.
A mathematician will tell you that 8-2+1 is
really 8+(-2)+1, which is unambiguously equal to 7, even though the so-called "order of
operations" standard in the US tells you the answer is 5. If you want five for your answer,
then you really need some parentheses! But why is this ambiguity even possible? Because
fundamentally, all of these operations are simply different procedures that start with
two numbers and combine them in some way to give you a single number. Each operation takes
two numbers as input - two, and no more. If you want to be entirely unambiguous (and pedantic),
every single pair of numbers in an algebraic expression should be inside parentheses, and
then there's no need to know ANY order of operations - just evaluate the innermost parentheses
first, and work outwards, collapsing them down pairwise like a championships bracket.
But it turns out that's not the only way - it's
possible to CHANGE the order in which you do the operations, to rearrange the parentheses,
as long as you know what the underlying mathematics IS. For example, if you want to add (3+4) and
then multiply the result by 5, you can either do the addition first and get 7 times 5 = 35,
or you can do the multiplication first as long as you know that multiplication "distributes"
across all the terms in the parentheses... that is, (5*3) plus (5*4) = 15 plus 20 = 35
- the same answer! And how do we know multiplication distributes? One way is to draw rectangles...
but I've done that before.
The same rearranging can be done for exponentiation
and multiplication: (3*2) all squared (or 6^2=36) is the same as 3 squared times 2 squared
- 36; It even works for addition and subtraction: 5 minus (1+2) is (5 minus 1) minus 2.
So, the true order of operations is this:
use parentheses, and learn what exponentiation, multiplication, addition and the rest are
REALLY doing - then you can proceed however you want.
That's not to say that we don't have a conventional
order of operations in mathematics... I mean, deciding that we evaluate multiplication before
addition allows us to get rid of lots and lots of redundant parentheses, and noticing
that (1+2)+3 = 1+ (2+3) and 2*(3*4)=(2*3)*4 removes a ton more... but the point is that
those parentheses are still there, still implied - just like how 3 minus 4 is secretly implying
3+ negative 4 and 3 divided by 4 is really 3 times one fourth. But any time the result
might be ambiguous, you really need to use parentheses. Then you can proceed in whatever
order you want.
The order of operations learned in school,
however, is different - it's a mechanical set of instructions that dictates just one
of many ways you can do algebra - it locks you into a single path through the beautiful
mathematical landscape, which, while necessary for a computer whose goal is merely to give
you the right answer, doesn't really give any insight onto WHAT IT IS that you're doing
when you do algebra.
So, while, the order of operations isn't technically
wrong, because most of the time it'll give you the right answer, it's morally wrong,
because it turns humans into robots.
A mathematician will tell you that 8-2+1 is really 8+(-2)+1, which is unambiguously equal to 7, even though the so-called "order of operations" standard in the US tells you the answer is 5.
This statement is wrong. Order of Operations says to do addition and subtraction in order from left to right. Thus 8-2 =6 and 6+1=7. I don't know where they get that the "US" standard says 5 is the answer.
I agree with Anonymous. When operations are at the same hierarchy level (as addition and subtraction are, or as multiplication and division are), the evaluation proceeds from left to right. Of course, no one (outside of some school texts and poorly designed test questions) ever writes something like "6 times 2 divided by 4" without parentheses.
A mathematician will tell you that 8-2+1 is really 8+(-2)+1, which is unambiguously equal to 7, even though the so-called "order of operations" standard in the US tells you the answer is 5.
ReplyDeleteThis statement is wrong. Order of Operations says to do addition and subtraction in order from left to right. Thus 8-2 =6 and 6+1=7. I don't know where they get that the "US" standard says 5 is the answer.
I agree with Anonymous. When operations are at the same hierarchy level (as addition and subtraction are, or as multiplication and division are), the evaluation proceeds from left to right. Of course, no one (outside of some school texts and poorly designed test questions) ever writes something like "6 times 2 divided by 4" without parentheses.
ReplyDelete