Maths is everywhere
Mathematician Vijay Ravikumar talks about how
he developed the “Geometry of Vision” series of online learning modules
If you mime a silent Edvard
Munch scream every time you see a mathematical problem, perhaps it is time to
take a closer look at how much of our life is actually governed by numbers and
equations. “Maths has the potential to connect us to universal truths that we
can each access directly with our bodies and minds,” says Vijay Ravikumar, a
mathematician with a penchant for puppetry and theatre arts.
Ravikumar recently premiered
the “Geometry of Vision” series of online learning modules, which examines how
we make visual sense of the world around us through Maths. The course has been
developed with the support of the National Programme of Technology Enhanced
Learning (NPTEL) and is available free online. In India, students can take it
for credit at their home institution.
Maths to arts to maths again
Ravikumar’s own journey into interactive learning has an
unusual background. Growing up in the U.S., he obtained a double major in Maths
and English Literature from Amherst College, Massachusetts, before pursuing his
Ph.D. in Maths at Rutgers University. He moved to India in 2013 for
post-doctoral studies at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR)
Mumbai, and then became an assistant professor at the Chennai Mathematical
Institute.
By 2018, he left academia completely to become a theatre
artist and puppeteer. However, Ravikumar shifted his focus back to Maths when
the COVID-19 lockdown made online education de rigueur. “Geometry of Vision
”aims to demystify the way arithmetic works, especially in a non-academic
setting. While we may not perceive ourselves as born number crunchers, our
physical senses are constantly applying mathematical principles to process
sensory data, says Ravikumar.
“Arithmetic can be surprisingly intuitive at a visceral level, even if
we’ve never thought about it consciously,” he says. His modules explain how the
human mind is able to construct an intricate 3D understanding of our
surroundings from 2D visual snapshots, by utilising various deep, elegant, and
ancient mathematical principles. Beginning with an investigation of perspective
drawing, and a survey of techniques artists have used for representing depth,
the lessons move on to the “projective geometry” branch of Maths.
Open source learning
“My goal is to create a gateway to fundamental maths that is both
accessible and exciting to interested learners from pretty much any background
— whether they’re high-school or Ph.D. students, or adult learners looking for
interesting activities after retirement,” says Ravikumar.
“Arithmetic can be surprisingly intuitive at a visceral level, even if
we’ve never thought about it consciously,” he says. His modules explain how the
human mind is able to construct an intricate 3D understanding of our
surroundings from 2D visual snapshots, by utilising various deep, elegant, and
ancient mathematical principles. Beginning with an investigation of perspective
drawing, and a survey of techniques artists have used for representing depth,
the lessons move on to the “projective geometry” branch of Maths.
Keeping in mind that online instruction is a totally different medium
from traditional in-person teaching, he has designed an interactive e-book
format. “The course is not meant to be accessed through the usual NPTEL portal,
but rather through an ‘Interactive Sandbox’ that I designed with Aatish Bhatia,
a science writer at the New York Times. The student can scroll through a given
lecture watching short, visually engaging videos interspersed with interactive
questions, activities, and graphics. The ‘Interactive Sandbox’ is open source,
and we plan to create a tutorial so interested teachers can easily adopt it,”
he says.
Info you can use
·
The course can be accessed https://this-vijay.github.io/vision-math/
· Students in India must register for the course at the NPTEL Swayam site
(https://onlinecourses.nptel.ac.in/noc22_ma68/preview), in order to submit
weekly homework sets, and access live help sessions.
Source | THE HINDU | 7th NOVEMBER 2022
Regards!
Librarian
Rizvi Institute of Management
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