DocumentCode
994139
Title
3Ms for Instruction, Part 2: Maple, Mathematica, and Matlab
Author
Chonacky, N. ; Winch, D.
Volume
7
Issue
4
fYear
2005
Firstpage
14
Lastpage
23
Abstract
Our intent with this Technology Review is to present a framework that helps educators make their own critical comparison of Maple, Mathematica, and Matlab as candidate computational productivity tools for use in their instructional programs. This is an alternative to our providing a critical comparison of our own, as would be conventional in a review. In the first installment, we provided a common set of talking points—concrete, understandable, existing applications as well as an idealized "paradigmatic" example—around which to build this framework. We also defined a particular subset of issues that undergraduate science and engineering educators face regarding computational technology. In this issue, we conclude this framework-building strategy by defining a compact, common feature set in which we can finally describe in some comparable detail how Maple, Mathematica, and Matlab work.
Keywords
Maple; Mathematica; Matlab; productivity; Computer interfaces; Computer languages; Costs; Educational technology; Graphical user interfaces; MATLAB; Packaging; Testing; Winches; Writing; Maple; Mathematica; Matlab; productivity;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Computing in Science & Engineering
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1521-9615
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MCSE.2005.62
Filename
1463131
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