You can click on any of the above categories to see some of the information you can search for within this site. It is pretty cool to see the computational information that is attached to all of these different categories. I could see this website being great for an inquiry based learning unit. I may try to incorporate this website into a unit on statistics and probability in my 8th grade classroom. You can type just about anything into the search bar and Wolfram-Alpha will return some number that are attached to what you typed in. For example, if I wanted my students to learn more about their community, I could type in "Austin neighborhood, Chicago" and Wolfram-Alpha will tell me the size of the neighborhood in square miles and population. It will tell you the time and temperature in Austin and it has a link to the wikipedia page about the Austin neighborhood.
I think students would have a lot of fun navigating through this site and collecting data on different subjects that interest them.
Mary--
ReplyDeleteWhat an excellent resource! I kind of want to get rid of Wikipedia surfing and replace it with Wolfram-Alpha surfing. I agree that students would have a lot of fun navigating this, and it will help them build background knowledge on the world and their subject areas!
Mary,
ReplyDeleteI remember when we reviewed this website in that Saturday math class! I agree, Wolfram-Alpha is a great resource for students. I used this site in college, but I had no idea it existed in high school.
A fun way to use Wolfram-Alpha is to do research on names. If you search for a name on Wolfram-Alpha, it will give you a ranking based on popularity, as well as a graph displaying how the popularity of the name has changes over time. I think this would be a great topic to use in a statistics or probability lesson. In general, Wolfram-Alpha is a great source of accurate, high quality, real-world data for our students.
Mary,
ReplyDeleteI remember when we reviewed this website in that Saturday math class! I agree, Wolfram-Alpha is a great resource for students. I used this site in college, but I had no idea it existed in high school.
A fun way to use Wolfram-Alpha is to do research on names. If you search for a name on Wolfram-Alpha, it will give you a ranking based on popularity, as well as a graph displaying how the popularity of the name has changes over time. I think this would be a great topic to use in a statistics or probability lesson. In general, Wolfram-Alpha is a great source of accurate, high quality, real-world data for our students.