Topic outline

  • First week: Listening and Speaking

  • Second Week: Reading and Writting

  • Third Week: Listing and Speaking

  • Fourth Week: Grammer

  • Fifth Week: Listing and Speaking

  • Sixth Week: Reading and Writing

  • Seventh Week: Grammer

  • Eigth Week: Listning

  • Nineth Week : Reading Comprehension

    THE ARGUMENT AGAINST MATH AS A LANGUAGE

    Not everyone agrees that mathematics is a language. Some definitions of "language" describe it as a spoken form of communication. Mathematics is a written form of communication. While it may be easy to read a simple addition statement aloud (e.g., 1 + 1 = 2), it's much harder to read other equations aloud (e.g., Maxwell's equations). Also, the spoken statements would be rendered in the speaker's native language, not a universal tongue.

    However, sign language would also be disqualified based on this criterion. Most linguists accept sign language as a true language. There are a handful of dead languages that no one alive knows how to pronounce or even read anymore.

    A strong case for mathematics as a language is that modern elementary-high school curricula uses techniques from language education for teaching mathematics. Educational psychologist Paul Riccomini and colleagues wrote that students learning mathematics require "a robust vocabulary knowledge base; flexibility; fluency and proficiency with numbers, symbols, words, and diagrams; and comprehension skills."

    Anne Helmenstine

    https://www.mathnasium.com/blog/why-mathematics-is-a-language


  • Tenth Week: Speaking

    watch the following vidéo that we will discuss its topic in teams

    Math as a Language



  • Week Eleventh: Debate

    a session on teams

    • twelvth Week : Written Expression

      Discuss the following saying: "Mathematics is called the language of science."
      Do you think that mathematics is a language?
    • Topic 13

      • Topic 14