Only a bit of math ... but an important concern ... needing a solution:
Thursday, April 23, 2026
Waiting for good and kind . . .
Thursday, April 16, 2026
2026 AMS Math-Poetry Contest Winners
Today I have discovered the wonderful list of winning poems from this years Math-Poetry Contest sponsored by the American Mathematical Society. This link to the AMS website offers links to thirteen winning poems , ,, , I encourage you to follow the link and enjoy . . . and encourage students you know to explore math-poetry connections.
Below I offer the opening stanzas of a very fine poem by one of the AMS winners -- Jaycee Chen from the STEAM Academy at John F. Kennedy School. Chen's poem received an Honorable Mention in the Middle School Division.
A Quiet Music of Numbers by Jaycee Chen
Monday, April 13, 2026
April -- Celebrate BOTH Mathematics and Poetry
April is National Poetry Month AND National Mathematics and Statistics Awareness Month -- and here in this blog we continue to celebrate poetry-math connections. Below I offer the opening stanzas of an old poem of mine entitled "Time".
The clock goes round --
making time a circle
rather than a line.
Each year's return to spring
layers time on time.
Wednesday, April 8, 2026
A Poetic Triangle of Numbers
The shape and patterns of the following lines have me thinking of them as a visual poem:
1 x 1 = 1
11 x 11 = 121
111 x 111 = 12321
1111 x 1111 = 1234321
11111 x 11111 = 123454321
111111 x 111111 = 12345654321
1111111 x 1111111 = 1234567654321
11111111 x 11111111 = 123456787654321
111111111 x 111111111 = 12345678987654321
Friday, April 3, 2026
Scientific American Shares Rhymes
Lots of years ago, an important part of my awareness of poems that involve math came from reading work by Martin Gardner in his "Mathematical Games" in Scientific American . . . and it has been a delight to me to find poetry again in my issues of that magazine. METER, a Scientific American feature edited by Dava Sobel, offers a bit of science-related poetry each month -- and the April 2026 issue features three mathy limericks by Jeffrey Branzburg (a retired math teacher and technology consultant). I offer one of these limericks below.
Topology by Jeffrey Branzburg
