User:David W Gillette: Difference between revisions
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I am David Gillette, recently retired from teaching mathematics at a community college in the USA. | I am David Gillette, recently retired from teaching mathematics at a community college in the USA. | ||
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==Current articles== | ==Current articles== | ||
[[Elementary functions]] | [[Elementary functions]] | ||
[[Birthday coincidence]] | |||
[[Solving cubic equations]] | |||
[[Category:CZ Authors|Gillette, David W]] | [[Category:CZ Authors|Gillette, David W]] | ||
[[Category:Mathematics Authors|Gillette, David W]] | [[Category:Mathematics Authors|Gillette, David W]] |
Latest revision as of 02:44, 22 November 2023
The account of this former contributor was not re-activated after the server upgrade of March 2022.
I am David Gillette, recently retired from teaching mathematics at a community college in the USA.
My four years of undergraduate study were done in physics, at Wheaton College in Wheaton IL. The BS was awarded in 1964. My year and a half of graduate study were completed in 1966, at Oregon College of Education. This campus is now known as Western Oregon University. I earned a Master of Arts in Teaching in mathematics.
Next I spent a year and a half teaching math and science in a private high school in Salem OR. Then I joined a computer education project for two years. Our aim was to introduce computer concepts into several high schools in the mid Willamette valley. From there I was drafted and served two years in the USMC, running computer equipment in Santa Ana CA.
In 1971, I began my stay at Chemeketa Community College in Salem OR. Over 32 years of full-time work I my emphasis was on developmental mathematics (preparing or providing review for students, readying them to accomplish university level math.) I also taught precalculus algebra and trigonometry, calculus, and introduction to discrete math. I taught a few computer programming courses in Basic and Pascal, in the early years of the microcomputer.
After retiring from full-time teaching in 2003, I worked just less than half-time for two years, before retiring completely in 2005.