Preface Preface
The Math Catcher Outreach Program has been part of the British Columbia educational environment for almost ten years. Through more than 600 classroom visits, close to 100 workshops and journal, magazine, and newspapers articles, and a dozen of Small Number stories, the program has reached out to tens of thousands of students, educators, and members of the general public from across British Columbia, Canada, and around the world. The program originated in the following two conclusions identified by the participants of the First Nations Math Education Workshop which was held in Banff, Alberta, in November 2009:Teach math in the cultural context of the students,
Teach basic skills and problem-solving early.
mathematics is applicable in real life and hence can be used to solve real-life problems;
young people like Small Number encounter mathematics and require knowledge of it on a daily basis;
mathematics can be a source of joy.
Veselin Jungic The Math Catcher Outreach Program Contact address: math_catcher@sfu.ca In Burnaby, B.C., January 2025What is life? It is a flash of a firefly in the night. It is a breath of a buffalo in the wintertime. It is as the little shadow that runs across the grass and loses itself in the sunset.