Hunting for parabolas at Marsh Billings Rockefeller National Park
Algebra 2 students recently visited Marsh Billings Rockefeller National Park on snowshoes to look for parabolas in nature.
A parabola is the U-shaped curve that shows up when you graph a quadratic equation. Parabolas come up a lot in the real world: the path a ball takes when you throw it, the shape of a satellite dish, the curve of a suspension bridge cable. They're a useful tool for modeling how things move and behave.
The question students are exploring is whether parabolas actually appear in nature on their own. They hiked through the forest, took pictures of curves they found in branches, roots, and other natural shapes, and will bring those photos back to class to write equations and see how well the math holds up.
Thank you to Marsh Billings Rockefeller National Park and to Kat Robbins for supporting the trip.