Integration Taught Correctly

[Math the World] claims that your calculus teacher taught you integration wrong. Thatās assuming, of course, you learned integration at all, and if you havenāt forgotten it. The premise is that most people think of performing an integral as finding the area under a curve or as the āantiderivative.ā However, fewer people think of integration as adding up many small parts. The video asserts that studies show that students who donāt understand the third definition have difficulty applying integration to real-world problems.
We arenāt sure thatās true. People who write software have probably looked at numerical integration like Simpsonās rule or the midpoint rule. That makes it pretty obvious that integration is summing up small bits of something. However, you usually learn that very early, so youāre forgiven if you didnāt get the significance of it at the time.
Even if you didnāt learn calculus, the video is an easy introduction to the idea of integration with practical examples drawn from basketball, archery, and more. Although there is a bit of calculus terminology, the actual problems could just as easily have been the voltage on a charging capacitor, for example.
We think calculus has a bad rap as being difficult when it isnāt. Maybe you should take more than 20 minutes to learn it.
from Blog ā Hackaday https://ift.tt/zs4LpS0
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