ZeroSum Ruler (home)

Blogging on math education and other related things

Building Blocks.dotx missing (can’t insert page numbers in Word 7) April 25, 2012

If you have lost the ability to insert page numbers in Word 7, your Building Blocks.dotx file is missing.  If you know this already and have looked to Microsoft to help you, I’m sorry you wasted your time.  However, if you have Word 7 on another computer, follow these directions to transfer Building Blocks.dotx from one computer to the other (If you don’t have a second computer, continue reading):

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Building Blocks.dotx fix that works: (also see Aspasia’s comment below for a second solution that worked for her)
1: Get Building Blocks.dotx from a computer that has it.  It’s located in:
Computer>C>Program Files(x86)>Microsoft Office>Office12>Document Parts>1033

If you do not have a second computer with Word, continue reading for an alternate solution.

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2: Make a copy of the file to the desktop.  Send it via email to yourself.  Download it to the same directory on the computer where it’s currently missing.

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If you do not have a second computer, you can download the Building Blocks.dotx file at http://www.box.com/s/316bd7ec11f87c77e85f .  It’s also in the sidebar of this blog (in the Box widget).  Having looked for hours for a Microsoft fix online, I feel your pain.  Pain no more!

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If this fix does not work, here is a comment that came in (you can read it below) about additional steps:

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      Submitted on 2012/05/22 at 7:59 am

“Hi! Your post helped a lot. It was one of the clearest solutions i found online. However, that didn’t solve my problem. I had to go in Word options>Add-ins>Manage: Templates , Go>add> and then add the file (Building Blocks.dotx) and then Ok. When i opened word again the page numbering templates were there :)  i just thought to add this comment in case someone had the same problem as me.”

 

Happy Page Numbering!

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The Language of Math Poster August 19, 2011

Below is a poster I hang in my classroom every fall.  Each year it grows longer as more and more terms come up for the different operations of math.  When I was a kid, no one told me to look out for these words, or that math was even a language at all, which made word problems pretty tough.  By clicking on the poster you will be sent to the original Excel file on Google Docs.  Do you have any words to add?

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Link to Google doc:

https://spreadsheets.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0Asra4GjkRBNidGhoZlZYcjk4dmhISDlSNHJDbjBPTXc&hl=en_US

 

Income and Debt with ZeroSum Ruler July 10, 2011

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One of the ZeroSum ruler’s main purposes is to calculate debt/income problems.   In the problem “I owe you $12 and pay you back just $7. How much do I still owe you?” how do you come to your answer?   Do you count backwards from $12 to $7?   Or do you count forwards from $7 to $12?   No really, how much do I owe you?   How did you figure this out?    The ZeroSum ruler allows the student to count forwards instead of backwards just like we do in real life!    So why do we make our kids count backwards in school?

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Manny Ramirez adds his fractions… January 7, 2011

Usually when adding fractions, we never ever ever ever ever add the denominators together.  That is, except for in baseball.  In a season of baseball, a “whole” is the entire season of at bats, not any one individual game. We won’t know what that whole is until the end of the season, so we keep adding the at bats (denominator), and tallying the numerator (hits), to find how many hits per at bats Manny has at any point in time during the season.  Weird, right?  But true!

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Scenario 1: Manny Ramirez’s batting average is 5/7 (ie .714, “Batting a 714!”, WOW!  Go Manny!) after two games: one game of 3/4 (three hits out of 4 at bats), and another game of 2/3 (two hits out of 3 at bats).  In other words, Manny has hit 5 times in 7 at bats, which was realized by adding the numerators and adding the denominators. 

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But we’re told to never ever ever add denominators, so what happened?  What happened is simple: the “whole”, which is the basis of fractions, is defined here as the entire Baseball season at any point in time.  At this point in time, Manny’s whole season has consisted of 7 at bats.  The “whole” in baseball grows as each game progresses.  In fact, if we were to use the adding fractions algorithm to get a common denominator, we’d get 3/4 + 2/3 = 9/12 + 8/12 = 17/12!  Manny can’t possibly get 17 hits after 12 at bats!  That’s just nonsense! 

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Wait, I don’t get it.  I hardly do, either.  But let’s try…

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Let’s think a bit more about Manny’s at bats.  Maybe if we thought of every at bat as its own whole, that is, each at bat is like a coin flip – he’ll either hit or not – we’d begin to understand what is happening.  Ah, we do!  BUT, we also have to keep in mind when we’re looking at his batting average: after 7 hits.  There is a common denominator here, it’s 7!  7 is the, albeit temporary until the next game, sample space.  When we look at 3/4 + 2/3 = 5/7, what we’re really looking at is (1/7 + 1/7 + 1/7 + 0/7) + (1/7 + 1/7 + 0/7) = 5/7! 

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This can be seen with eggs, too…

Scenario 2: Here, we have 8/12 + 2/4.  If we add (8+2) and (12+4) we will get the fraction 10/16, and there are, in fact, 10 out of 16 spaces filled with eggs.  However, we completely disregarded the fact that the two containers are different sizes.  Let’s see what happens if we really ignore the discrepancy in container size:  If we first reduce 8/12 to “2/3” by chopping the numerators and denominators both by 4 (allowed!), and reduce the 2/4 to “1/2” by the old halfsies method (also allowed!), and then try adding the numerators and denominators together, we’ll end up with 3/5.  3/5 is definitely not the same as 5/8 (reduced from 10/16 by halfsies).  But why? 

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We have to remember what we were doing, just like Manny had to remember that outfield is just as important as batting.  When we added the original numerators together (8+2) and the original denominators together (12+4) we were working with raw data, just like in the case of Manny Ramirez’s batting average.  What we really did was add (1/16 + 1/16 + 0/16, … you get the idea.  We defined the sample space as 16 because there are 16 total spaces for eggs, and we disregarded the different sizes of the containers.  If we first take the time to reduce the fractions, we change the fractions from ones that represent real information (actual egg numbers) to one that represents the proportion of eggs in each container.  Herein lies the problem.  How big is our whole?  We need to clearly define it.  If it’s 16, that’s fine if we consider 2 containers to be one whole.  But if we consider each container its own whole, we need to do things differently…    

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If we are merely looking at how many eggs we have versus how many egg spaces, disregarding the discrepancy in egg carton size, we find that we have 10 eggs out of 16 total spaces.  16 is the whole.  This is useful information to have when baking a cake.  Or a few cakes and some French toast.  But if we first allow ourselves to reduce the egg carton fractions individually to 2/3 and 1/2, we change the problem from looking at one whole of 16 to two separate, differently-sized wholes of 3 and 2.  Once we do this, we enter into the realm of WHOLES.  And this is OK!  This is what fractions are all about!  There is a way to add wholes of different sizes; you just have to define how large you want your whole to be. 

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But first, we have to remember an old mantra I heard somewhere, or didn’t hear anywhere, that Math is a Language.  Math is a language just as Portuguese is a language.  In Portuguese, you can’t talk in straight verbs, people would think you cracked your egg!  There are rules to follow when speaking Portuguese, and the same is true in math.  If we want to add 2/3 + 1/2, we absolutely can, but we first have to remember that each of these two fractions has already been given a clearly defined whole: one is the denominator 3 and the other is the denominator 2.  To add these portions of wholes, we have to first decide how large we want our end whole to be, and it can be any number.  It can be 1, 2, 1.17, 2.14, anything.  But what number makes sense, and more importantly, what number is easy to work with?  How about 6?

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Both 3 and 2 go into 6, so we can make the common baseball season, er, we can make the common denominator 6.  We do this by un-reducing the fractions:

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2/3 = 4/6 by multiplying the top and bottom both by 2.

1/2 = 3/6 by multiplying the top and bottom both by 3.

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Now we have our new common sample space, our new common whole, our new Common Denominator!  It’s 6!  Now we can add the numerators and come to 4/6 + 3/6 = 7/6.  The new common egg carton has 6 spaces for eggs and 7 eggs, or 1 carton and 1/6 of a carton.  We could make our sample space 12 and add 8/12 + 6/12 = 14/12, or one full carton of 12 with 2 eggs left over. 

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But wait!  Why do we have one egg left over in the first addition and 2 eggs left over in the second addition?  Remember, we’re no longer talking real eggs here; we left real eggs behind when we decided to look at each carton individually and throw sample space 16 [rightfully] out the window.  We are talking “proportion of the whole”, and with fractions, we can decide however big we want our whole to be.  How many at bats will Manny have?

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For a picture tour on how to deal with fractions: Multiplying Fractions With Pictures!

 

 
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