Math 396
Communications in Math
Fall 2012 guidelines for expository paper


The audience for your expository paper is high-school students. Assume that your reader knows high-school algebra but not calculus.

Your task is to choose a topic connected with mathematics or applied mathematics (a topic different from the subject of your technical paper) and tell your high-school audience about the topic. The goal is that after reading your essay, a high-school student would be convinced that mathematics is fun or interesting or worth learning more about.

The topic is your choice; be creative. Here are a few conceivable topics to illustrate the flavor of what I think could make an interesting essay.

  • the method of mathematical induction
  • what is π?
  • what is infinity?
  • why is a coffee cup like a doughnut?
  • should you play the lottery?
  • understanding the size of the national debt
  • how long is a piece of string?
  • why is the sky blue?

You may write on one of these sample topics if you wish, but I hope that you will think up your own topic.

Your paper should be written in LaTeX using a standard documentclass. The length should be about two pages (using the default single spacing).

Since this paper is intended to be accessible to high-school students, you may be able to write the paper based solely on your own knowledge, without doing any research. In that case, you do not need to include a bibliography. But if you do borrow some of the ideas from external sources, then be sure to document your sources to avoid plagiarism.