"There's no such thing as not being a math person," Marielle Ong says.
"I want people to be able to realize their potential in problem solving.
With enough time and effort, you can do this."
Ong is a PhD student at the University of Pennsylvania's School of Arts and Sciences, and she's come up with a novel way to share her math knowledge with young people.
She recently took a break from her research to bring a few oversize cardboard Battleship game boards to a high school in Philadelphia, where she ran math circles, an interactive, puzzle-based session, Penn Live reports.
Instead of calling out a letter and number, students would need to aim at an opponent's ship by writing an equation for a line that intersected with the ship's location.
"Instead of calling out a letter and number, the students would need to aim at an opponent's ship by writing an equation for a line that intersected with the ship's location," explains Penn Live.
"The game was a hit," Ong says.
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