Today I was teaching my trigonometry students about angles. We were trying to expand from the middle school concept of intersecting rays to the broader concept of a rotating ray. Things were going fine:
- Rotate the initial ray about its endpoint to create the terminal side of an angle - no problem.
- Angles are measured based on how far the ray was rotated - simple.
- One degree means the ray was rotated one 360th of a full rotation - gotcha.
- Angles can be measured in degrees-minutes-seconds - HOLD YOUR HORSES!
Flying by the seat of my pants, I tried to emphasis that "minutes" and "seconds" in this context, do not refer to time, but to a fraction of a degree - blank stares.
Completely off the cuff, I moved on to talk about that 60 was a special number for the people who came up with this crazy stuff. That's why there's 60 seconds in a minute and 60 minutes in a degree - nothing.
That they used a number system that was based on 60, not 10 - so what?
That the concept of 3.2 meaning 3 wholes and 2 tenths would not have made sense to them - kinda weird.
That they would have said something like 6 wholes and 8 minutes.
Then it happened.
LIGHT BULB!
Minutes.
Seconds.
They are the Mesopotamian/Babylonian version of decimals. A minute is the base 60 version of a tenth. A second is the base 60 version of a hundredth. I got excited, I started teaching like mad, and slowly more light bulbs started coming on all across the room.
Man, sometimes I LOVE my job!
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