re: zero-based indexing
Along the way, I did some time observing instruction at Bronx Science. As a math major, I was amused that their ground-floor is labeled as the zeroth floor. But then, I went to a school where very few buildings had a first floor at ground level (usually you would walk in and be on the fourth or so), so it didn't bother me at all. It is difficult to say what is "easy" for students to understand. If you use one exclusively, then the other will seem weird. For higher level math and science, we definitely want students to be comfortable with zero-based. At the same time, when I teach and review matrices in the classroom, I use one-based--because the TI that each student uses is one-based. I think that I am conscientious about telling them that zero-based exists, and what it looks like. On the other hand, when I teach sequence and summation, I try to generally use zero-based. As far as the "you shouldn't count starting at zero" (I use the digests, so I don't remember who said it and won't quote the entire email), surely most of us have seen the Sierpinski (usually, I think) anecdote related on (among other places) http://wuarchive.wustl.edu/aminet/pix/unrl/sierp.readme
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Lloyd Hugh Allen