Meaning-full Mathematics. Essential Question for Teachers How do you lead students to develop connections between mathematical models and symbolic representations?

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Presentation transcript:

Meaning-full Mathematics

Essential Question for Teachers How do you lead students to develop connections between mathematical models and symbolic representations?

Teaching with Problems Teaching Student-Centered Mathematics John Van De Walle & Louann H. Lovin The single most important principal for improving the teaching of mathematics is to allow the subject of mathematics to be problematic for students.

Teaching with Problems Before Activate student thinking through essential question and student engagement Be sure the task is understood Clarify expectations for student behavior, allotted time, and work products to be completed During Let go! Listen carefully Facilitate through questioning Observe and assess Give problem extensions as necessary to promote continuous student engagement After Accept student solutions without evaluation Have students justify results and methods used Look for misunderstanding and/or common errors When different solutions arise, have students prove or disprove through class discussion

Consider these three stories and four graph models: Match each story with one of the models. Label the axes, and explain what different parts of the graph mean in terms of the situation you have chosen Story 1 A parachutist is taken up in a plane. After she jumps, the wind blows her off course and she ends up tangled in the branches of a tree. Story 2 Tomas puts an inheritance in the bank and leaves it there to earn interest for several years. Yesterday, he withdrew half the amount.

Probe continued Story 3 Gerry orders 30 cubic meters of gravel for his new driveway. He is shocked when he sees the enormous pile delivered by the dump truck, but he rents equipment to spread the gravel onto the driveway. On the first day he is enthusiastic and moves half the gravel from the pile to his driveway. On the next day he is tired and moves only half of what is left. On the third day Gerry has less time, so he again moves half of what is left. He continues in this way until the pile has practically disappeared.

Probe 2 Alejandro is making ballots for an election. He starts by cutting a sheet of paper in half. He then stacks the two pieces and cuts them in half. He stacks the resulting four pieces and cuts them in half. He repeats this process, creating smaller and smaller pieces of paper. After each cut Alejandro counts the ballots and records the results in a table. Make a table that shows what Alejandro did. Look for a pattern in the way the number of ballots changes with each cut. If Alejandro made 20 cuts, how many ballots would he have? How many with 30 cuts?

Probe 2 How does the table show the pattern of change? Sketch a graph of the table you made. How does the graph show the pattern of change?

Mars Colony

Problem 1.1 Staking a Claim Imagine it is the year 2100 and a rare and precious metal has just been discovered on the planet Mars. You and hundreds of adventurers are traveling to the planet to stake your claim. Each new prospector is allowed to claim any piece of land that can be surrounded by 20 meters of laser fencing. You want to arrange your fencing to enclose the maximum area possible.

Staking a Claim Suppose the Mars colony adds the restriction that each claim must be a rectangle. A.Sketch several rectangles with a perimeter of 20 meters. Include some with small areas and some with large areas. Label the dimensions of each rectangle. B.Make a table showing the length of a side and the area for each rectangle with a perimeter of 20 meters and whole-number side lengths.

Staking a Claim C. Make a graph of your (length of a side, area) data. Describe the shape of the graph. D. If you want to enclose the greatest area possible with your fencing, what should the dimensions of your fence be? How can you use your graph to justify your answer?

Problem Follow-Up Suppose the dimensions of the rectangle were not restricted to whole numbers. Would this change your answer to part D? Explain. Suppose the shape of the claim were not restricted to a rectangle. How could you arrange your 20 meters of fencing to enclose a greater area?

Quadratic Relationships Quadratic relationships are characterized by their U-shaped graphs called parabolas. The Gateway Arch in St. Louis, Missouri, is a real life example of a parabola.

Problem 1.2 Reading a Graph How does this graph compare with the graph in Staking a Claim? Compare linear, exponential, and quadratic graphs. Compare the tables of linear, exponential, and quadratic relationships. Compare the tables of linear, exponential, and quadratic relationships.

Connections Suppose a rectangular field has a perimeter of 300 yards. The relationship between the length and the width of the field is represented by the equation l = 150 – w. Is the relationship between the length and the width quadratic? How do you know?

Regardless of the grade level of the students, the mathematics should be imbedded in problems that involve concrete models,

And students should use informal language to describe patterns and functional relationships before using symbolic notation. Kathleen Cramer Using Models to Build An Understanding of Functions Mathematics Teaching in The Middle School

Assessing in a Problem-Based Classroom Use a problem for the assessment problemany task that has no prescribed or memorized rules or solution method A good problem-based task: promotes learning permits every student to demonstrate knowledge provides real-world or authentic contexts include oral justification for answers

Assessing for Understanding Mr. Defores Do-Over A Little Story for Teachers Story by David Puckett Story by David Puckett Illustrations by Andrea Yost

Research base Lappan, Glenda, Fey, James T., Fitzgerald, William M., Friel, Susan N., Phillips, Elizabeth Difanis (2002). Thinking with Mathematical Models. Connected Mathematics. Glenview, Illinois: Prentice Hall. Lappan, Glenda, Fey, James T., Fitzgerald, William M., Friel, Susan N., Phillips, Elizabeth Difanis (2002). Frogs, Fleas, and Painted Cubes. Connected Mathematics. Glenview, Illinois: Prentice Hall. Puckett, David (2005). Mr. DeVores Do-Over. Westerville, OH: National Middle School Association. Rose, Cheryl M., Arline, Carolyn B., (2009). Uncovering Student Thinking in Mathematics. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press Van De Walle, John, Lovin, LouAnn H., (2006) Teaching Student-Centered Mathematics. Boston, MA: Pearson Learning. What Moves You: How to get the most from Essential Questions (2009). Learning Focused

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