Science provides countless opportunities for mathematical exploration. One fascinating example comes from astronomy. Students studying the solar system often learn that planets do not travel in perfect circles. Instead, their orbits are ellipses. In analytic geometry, an ellipse can be modeled by the equation:
X^2/a^2 + Y^2/b^2 = 1
Since a represents the semi-major axis and the b represents the semi-minor axis, students begin by looking up the major and minor axis of each planet in the solar system. Then they determine the an and b for each planet before actually calculating the orbit. In addition, they can compare the nearly circular orbit of Earth to the more elongated paths of other planets. This exercise can be done with scientific notation so students can see when scientific notation is used. Suddenly, students see the way our solar system works.
History offers equally meaningful mathematical applications. Rather than simply memorizing dates and events, students can analyze historical data using percentages and ratios. Consider the impact of World War I or World War II. Students can calculate what percentage of a country's population served in the military, what percentage volunteered before conscription, or what percentage of soldiers lost their lives during the conflict.
To introduce the activity, students can practice on hypothetical situations. For example, if a nation had a population of 50 million people and 5 million served in the military, students can calculate that 10% of the population served. If 400,000 soldiers were killed, students can determine that 8% of those who served lost their lives. Then students could look up the actual information for their country be it the United States, Australia, New Zealand, or the UK.
Once they've researched the numbers, they can calculate the statistics for the number who served in the military versus the percent who died. In addition, teachers can also ask students to compare casualty rates between countries or between different wars, encouraging thoughtful discussions about the human cost of conflict while reinforcing proportional reasoning and percent calculations.
These lessons also strengthen students' data literacy. Students learn that statistics tell stories, but only when interpreted carefully. They begin asking deeper questions: Why were casualty rates different? How did population size influence military service? What factors affected survival? Mathematics becomes a tool for historical investigation rather than just computation. Another possibility for history is having students calculate how fast the Japanese balloons traveled to Oregon or Alaska from Japan, or how long it took the mini submarines travel to Pearl Harbor.
Connections extend well beyond science and history. In geography, students calculate map scales and distances. In economics, they examine inflation, taxes, and compound interest. Physical education provides opportunities to analyze heart rate, speed, and averages. Art introduces symmetry, tessellations, proportion, and geometric design. Even literature can include graphing character relationships or analyzing patterns in poetry.
These interdisciplinary experiences help students understand that mathematics is the language used to describe patterns, solve problems, and make informed decisions across nearly every field of study.
When students recognize these connections, engagement increases because the mathematics has a purpose. Instead of asking, "When will I ever use this?" they begin asking, "What can this math help me discover?" That shift in thinking is one of the greatest rewards of cross-curricular teaching. By building bridges between mathematics and other subjects, teachers help students see that math is not just another class—it is a way of understanding the world around them. Let me know what you think, I'd love to hear. Have a great day.