Employing basic mathematical operations such as addition, division, and percentages can heighten feelings of uneasiness in readers who are math-averse, while exponents, irrational numbers, logarithms, algorithms, and proofs may be intolerable and induce math anxiety. Former math teacher Orlin (
Math with Bad Drawings) attempts to make the science more palatable for readers whose math skills are lacking. He correlates mathematics education to second-language acquisition. Consequently, he introduces nouns that describe numbers, such as “counting,” “fractions,” “negative numbers,” “rounding,” and “irrational numbers.” There are related verbs too: “add,” “subtract,” “multiply,” “divide,” “square,” “cube,” and “compute.” He asserts that the syntax of mathematics brings these nouns and verbs together to form symbols, variables, equations, graphs, and formulas. The book includes a glossary that covers terms such as “error” and “estimate”, “cause” and “correlation,” “logic” and “proof,” and “data.” Orlin peppers his discussion with his unique style of stick-figure illustration, which adds a fun, humorous element.
VERDICT Orlin’s lighthearted, informative, and engaging approach may encourage some math-averse readers to keep trying and could quell math-related anxiety as well. It makes a great complement to the multitude of available basic math texts.
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