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Your Students… Where Are They Headed? What Do They Need? (with your help) Jeff Morgan Chair, Department of Mathematics Director, Center for Academic Support.

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Presentation on theme: "Your Students… Where Are They Headed? What Do They Need? (with your help) Jeff Morgan Chair, Department of Mathematics Director, Center for Academic Support."— Presentation transcript:

1 Your Students… Where Are They Headed? What Do They Need? (with your help) Jeff Morgan Chair, Department of Mathematics Director, Center for Academic Support and Assessment University of Houston

2 Shameless Advertising High School Mathematics Contest http://mathcontest.uh.edu Houston Area Calculus Teachers Association AP Calculus Workshops http://www.HoustonACT.org EatMath Algebra I Teacher Workshops http://www.EatMath.org

3 (continued) Online Practice AP Testing in Calculus and Statistics (info at http://www.HoustonACT.org) Online Practice AP Chemistry Testing (Beginning Spring 2009) Online Materials (see http://online.math.uh.edu) UTeach Replication ( teach HOUSTON )

4 Technology Tool Tips PDF Annotator Mimio Notebook WinPlot Bamboo Tablet

5 Back to Business… Interesting Trends and Observations

6 Fall Freshmen Math

7 Fall Calculus I, II and III Math 2433 enrollment: Summer 06 = 62, Summer 07 = 106.

8 Fall Math Below Calculus

9 Concerns Prerequisite Knowledge –Arithmetic –Graphing Knowledge –Algebraic Skills Student Performance –Independence –Responsibility

10 Previous Attitude They are adults. Let them find their own way. Current Attitude Force them to work hard.

11 2003 - Actions In Mathematics Below Calculus I Improved Placement Testing - Fall 2007 No Adjunct or Graduate Student Instruction Mandatory Attendance Daily Class Grades Daily Written Homework Weekly Online Quizzes Online Course Materials Increased Tutoring Availability Common Exams and Common Grading Improved Instruction and Course Coordination

12 2007 - Actions In Calculus I Improved Placement Testing – Fall 2007 Mandatory Attendance (40%) Daily Class Grades (40%) Weekly Written Homework (75%) Weekly Online Quizzes (100% 2005) Online Course Materials (100% 2005) Increased Tutoring Availability (2003) Common Exams and Common Grading (2005) Improved Course Coordination (2005) Peer Pressure

13 Performance Data - College Algebra 1310 Fall 06 ABCDFW Number662409313212247242 Cumulative66210711384159618432085 %3220151012 Cum. %3251667788100 Improved performance with increased standards.

14 Performance Data PreCalculus 1330 Fall 06 ABCDFW Number206156127101111146 Cumulative206362489590701847 %241815121317 Cum. %2442576982100 Maintained performance with increased standards.

15 Performance Data Calculus I 1431 Fall 06 ABCDFW Number215290229181258248 Cumulative21550573491511731421 %1520161318 Cum. %1535516482100. Time will tell…

16 The Bottom Line Students will only work as hard as you require them to work. If you want more from your students, then demand more.

17 Which Missing Skills Are Crippling Students in College? (…the same ones that cripple them in your classroom…) Simple Arithmetic Simple Algebraic Manipulation Graphing and Understanding Basic Shapes Simple Geometry Critical Thinking A Sense of Responsibility

18 Simple Arithmetic

19 Example – Basic Fractions

20 Example – Integer Manipulation

21 Solutions Restrict calculator usage. Encourage drill and kill arithmetic for 5 minutes each day.

22 Simple Algebraic Manipulation

23 Example – Facts Through Experimentation

24 (if they are proceeding to calculus)

25 Comments Not everything has to be memorized. Encourage students to experiment. We expose students to so much of the forest, that they don’t know the difference between an oak and a pine. Students need to be able to organize their work.

26 Example – Lines 1

27 Example – Lines 2

28 Example – Lines and Quadratics

29 Graphing and Understanding Basic Shapes

30 Please…

31 More…

32 You Can’t Keep Yourself From Reading “Stop” (this is a different drill)

33 Example – Why Shape Is Important?

34 Example - Growth

35 Notes Your students will be required to create simple graphs without a calculator, and also think about the shapes of simple graphs. Your students should know everything about lines and parabolas (except foci), square root, 1/x, sine and cosine. Your students should have seen an asymptote.

36 Simple Geometry

37 What Geometric Concepts are Important? Pythagorean Theorem Areas of triangles, rectangles and circles. Circumference of rectangles and circles. The sum of the angles in a triangle. The facts associated with isosceles and equilateral triangles. Triangle trigonometry (if they are proceeding to calculus). Honestly, that’s it!

38 Combining Arithmetic, Algebra and Geometry

39 In General, We Are Happy If Students Can do simple arithmetic and basic algebra. Know everything about lines. Know everything about parabolas (except foci). Can solve linear and quadratic equations. Can factor simple quadratics, complete the square and use the quadratic formula. Have seen an asymptote. Know the shapes of basic functions (nothing tricky). Know the area formulas for circles, rectangles and triangles, and know the perimeter of a circle and a rectangle. *Know the trig functions at the special angles. Can organize their work.

40 Critical Thinking Can your students find the error in an argument? Can your students combine ideas without seeing a previous example? Do your student know the difference between a definition and an example?

41 Example – Simple Critical Thinking

42 A Sense of Responsibility This Is The #1 Employer Requirement!


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