Information and Resources for the Final Project

Read these articles about giving a good (math) talk: Article 1, Article 2, Article 3, Article 4. Visit this web page, this blog, and watch this webinar.

First choose your partners (you should work in groups of size 2 or 3) and a topic in history of mathematics in the Islamic World. The topic should include significant amount of mathematics. The final project has 2 components: presentation and paper. For the presentation part, you have 3 options: talk (power point presentation), poster, or digital storytelling. If you choose the story telling option, please check out some resources here.

Important Note: Please do not choose a topic without looking at resources first. Therefore, get the books (order them from Ohio link if necessary) well in advance of the first deadline.

Timeline and Deadlines for the Project

Proposal: Let me know, in writing, what topic you choose by Mon Oct 21 (week 8). You should submit, in writing, your choice of the topic, the group members, what you plan to cover in the presentation and the paper, the format of the public presentation (one of the 3 options), and an annotated bibliography. If you choose a topic that we covered (or will cover) in class, make sure you go above and beyond what we did in class and explain how. Explain what you will focus on for the public presentation vs final paper. You need to come up with a good title for the public presentation part. 2-3 pages would be sufficient for the proposal (one proposal per group).

Outline: Next, you submit an outline of your paper by Wed, Nov 6 (week 10). If your presentation is a digital storytelling, then you submit your narrative separately at this time. The purpose of the outline is to help you specify and clarify what you will cover in the paper, and to help you make progress towards the final products (paper and presentation). The outline should be 3-5 pages and include more details and specifics than the proposal. It should also include a bibliography. Spacing should be 1 or 1.5. The more you include, the better (onlty one paper per group is to be submitted).

Draft Paper: This should be a complete draft of your paper that includes all major parts and most details. The deadline is Wed, Nov 20 (week 12). You are highly encouraged to receive feedback for your paper from the writing center. If your presentation is a digital storytelling, then you must submit a complete draft of your video as well. It is also required that you receive feedback from CIP prior to submission of your compelete draft. You need to document that you received feedback from CIP.

Rehersal Presentations: You will present your project to the class (talks should be 15-20 minutes, and digital stories 3-5 minutes) to receive feedback from your peers and the professor on Mon and Wed of Week 13 just before the main public event at NICC on Friday of the same week. All groups must be prepared to present on Monday Dec 2. The public event at NICC will take place on Friday Dec 6, at 8 pm. We will leave campus at 5:15 pm.

Final Paper: The final paper is due at the official final exam date for this course which is 6:30 pm, Wed December 18. There is no fixed length for the final paper but keep in mind that it is a subtantial paper and must include non-trivial amount of mathematical material. It should be no less than 10 pages (1 or 1.5 spaced). One paper per group. Please do citations properly and avoid plagiarism. Your paper will be checked for potential plagisarism issues.

A good paper has the following characteristics:

Here are some possible topics to give you an idea and get you started but this is not an exhaustive list. You may choose another topic with the approval of the instructor.

Some Useful Books and Other Sources for the Project (can get ideas for possible projects from these sources too)

More resources on Islamic art here.