Mathematical Visualization Toolkit - History
A Brief History of MVT


The Applied Mathematics Department at CU Boulder felt that there was not a good program to simulate visual learning of Calculus and Differential Equations for their students. The department used traditional mathematical software packages which were not targeted towards K-12 and lower division mathematics. These softwares required a basic understanding of programming, had expensive licensing fees and required local installations. Thus the Mathematical Visualization Toolkit, better known to you and I as MVT, became the department's new model for the learning curve.
In the summer of 1998 at the University of Colorado at Boulder, the Applied Mathematics Department (APPM) began the project of MVT under the leadership of Department Chair Dr. James H. Curry and by the people at SUN Educational Services. MVT has been developed exclusively by University of Colorado at Boulder students. All of its source code is platform independent and written using web-based Java technologies.
Original designers wanted to use the visual power of the computer to enhance learning in mathematical science classrooms with the hopes of creating software tools that were easy to use and could be vertically integrated into several courses. MVT also provided students the opportunities to incorporate their software design, numerical analysis, and programming skills in a challenging and professional environment. The first efforts began with several Java applets related to graphing and Differential Equations. It was after this illustrious beginning that the relationship with Sun Educational Services was created and Associate Chair Dr. Anne Dougherty of the APPM department joined the group.
What is MVT?
MVT is a set of visual and computational tools designed to help students better visualize the concepts of Calculus. It contains:
- Scientific calculator
- Plotting tools
- Numerical tools
- Linear algebra tools
- Differential equations tools
- Content-specific applications
- Other Calculus visualization tools
- Tutorial-style help system
These intuitive tools are what make MVT unique and useful in educational settings.
Building on the Idea
MVT continues to grow and expand every year to include more tools and applications. Dozens of students, both undergraduate and graduate have collaborated with Sun Microsystems and APPM faculty to make MVT what it is today.
Where It Is Today
Since this illustrious beginning MVT has expanded to include upper-division Calculus and linear algebra tools. After many hours of work under extreme conditions the MVT crew, with the help of some others, was able to package its first set of MVT CD's. The 1000 CD's have been distributed to teachers and students on the CU campus, in the Denver-Metro area and nationally.
We get by with a little help from our friends
In the spring semester of 2004, the Applied Math Department employed the help of five brilliant Sun student interns from South Korea. The students contributed some novel visualization ideas, assisted in the design and redesign of new MVT features, and learned a thing or two about snowboarding in Colorado. Click here for more details.
This student-exchange collaboration warrants a huge thank you to the helpful folks at Sun Microsystems. Thank you Paul Nelson, Dave Nelson and other supporters.
The Next Steps
We put out our newest version of MVT before the fall semester, usually late August, annually. One hope for the future is to get MVT included with a Calculus textbook so that students across the country can benefit from what it offers. We also hope to reach a great amount of teachers so that MVT expands into one of the premier teaching aids in math.
Involvement, Awards and Recognitions
- Spring 2005: the mathematical Visualization Toolkit was awarded the MERLOT (Multimedia Educational Resource for Learning and Online Teaching) editor's choice award.
- MVT awarded the 2003 ICTCM Award for Excellence and Innovation with the use of technology in Collegiate Mathematics. The award was presented to Dr. James H. Curry and Dr. Anne Dougherty. It was accepted on their behalf by Sarah Macumber and Jay Jones at the ICTCM conference in Chicago
- MVT was presented at the 2004 annual SIAM conference in Portland, Oregon.
- MVT is presented in an annual 2 week professional development course for high school math teachers.
- MVT is demonstrated by the Applied Math Department during the High School Honors Institure (HSHI). This program helps high school students experience the various disciplines of engineering.
We would like to thank the following
The Department of Applied Mathematics at the University of Colorado, Boulder:
Faculty Sponsors
- James H. Curry
- Anne Dougherty
Sun Microsystems
Sun Educational Services
- Paul Nelson
- Dave Nelson
J.R. Woodhull/Logicon Teaching Professorship in Applied Mathematics
MVT Developers
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