Do children in my maths group think different maths topics are easy, appropriate or hard? By Joe Rogers.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
By Harry Boeken Age 10.  I wanted to find out if children at my school liked after school clubs.  I also wanted to make other after school clubs for.
Advertisements

We have put together a Power Point on how we improved our yard.
What people in my school and community think about the police and what they do: a small-scale study Christopher Orme age 10.
What children in my school think about first-aid
What children in my school and my local secondary school think about reading and writing stories Chenice Hadfield aged 10.
What do children think about the age limit to driving? By Lukas Jenkins Year 5 Wavendon Gate school.
By Vivek. Why did I research this question? I chose to research this specific question because I myself take my phone in to school and I wanted to see.
By C.J. Wilber WHAT I LEARNED IN MATH.. This week in math we learned how to tell if one decimal is bigger than an other. For example 6.3 is bigger than.
What children think about having a thyroid disorder: a small scale study By Shannon Davidson Age 10.
Two way tables There are 125 children in Year 6. 52% of them are girls. 20% of girls do not play football. Five times as many boys play as do not play.
Do Children in ks2 at my School Play Age Inappropriate Video Games? By Rhia Arora.
WHY DO WE USE LIBRARIES? BY JESS GLENNIE. WHAT I’VE BEEN DOING Over the last three months I have been researching children's ideas and opinions about.
What Do Children Think About Golden Time? June 2014 By Gabrielle Human.
My Research Project By Karolina Strzelec. My Research Question Topic: Literature & libraries My research question is: Do the former year 7 students like.
Investigating the views of Year 6 students at Oxley Park Primary School – school subjects and important qualities in teachers. By Mitchell Schofield.
Student views about homework Toby Leonard Eleanor Scott Jessica Hollis Nima Habibzadeh Lauren Danbury Alice Ward.
MATH SURVEY(HEIGHT) By. Mingyu. the people I include..  Some of 6B girls and boys  Some of 6c girls and boys  Some of 6D girls and boys  Some of 6A.
This show is intended for students who were absent from class on the day of the task.
Fractions, Decimals & Percentages 1 Mr. Roche: 1st Year maths.
What do children in my school think about zoos?
GO BACK TO ACTIVITY SLIDE GO TO TEACHER INFORMATION SLIDE To move from one activity to the next, just click on the slide! PATTERNS OR CLICK ON A BUTTON.
Data from Luanda By Charlotte and Keina.
Data Management Grade 7. What’s the Story? Secondary data is information that was collected by someone else. Referring to information that was published.
Middle School Math Jeopardy Joe Hill. 100 Fractions, Decimals, % Mental MathPrimesPatterns EXIT 500.
How do children in my school use the internet? By Josh Mistry.
3 rd Grade Math SOL Powerpoint By ____________. Place Value.
Rebeca Moreo The Learning Zone. First Week When I entered the Southeast Branch library I didn’t know were to go so I went to the front desk. When I walked.
What children at my school think about the courtyard
Maths - Subtracting. Subtracting is simple. It is the opposite of adding. For example: 3 – 2 =___.
A-ing You have two minutes to write a hypothesis about the difference between girls and boys You need to be able to test it by asking other pupils in your.
Graphing day one Objective: I can formulate and answer questions by interpreting and analyzing displays of data, including multi-bar graphs or double line.
CBMS relax, and beat your score!!.
Adding & Subtracting Whole Number and Fractions
Adding and Taking Away The Easy Way Mental Maths Learning Objectives I will be able to use a number of different mental strategies to add and subtract.
Natural Europe Posttest Students (Control group) The questionnaire is aimed at collecting information on the features and tools of the Natural Europe project.
I have learned a lot of math units mostly which are fractions, mixed numbers, and geometry. I thought by far Geometry was the most difficult units with.
How to Administer and Interpret Running Records. Running records A running record is a tool that helps teachers to identify patterns in student reading.
Rates of Change I am learning to solve rate problems.
Grade 8 Math Project Kate D. & Dannielle C.. Information needed to create the graph: The extremes The median Lower quartile Upper quartile Any outliers.
Multiplying, dividing, adding and subtracting. Fractions are a piece of cake….
Today we will be learning: how to carry out a survey how to organise results and show them as a bar chart.
Halving And Doubling for mental maths By Ben Pickford.
Long and Short Term Goals To develop a responsible and positive attitude we chose Respect for Self, Others and Learning for the long term goal. Our students.
Fractions By Brandon Boore and Zachary Goliash. Table of Content Section 1 Introduction Section 2 Comparing Fractions Section 3 Practice Multiplying Section.
Dividing a Decimal by a Decimal. Dividing Whole Numbers 12 ÷ 2 = 120 ÷ 20 = 1200 ÷ 200 = ÷ 2000 = Multiply both 12 and 2 by 10 Multiply.
Operations with Decimals
By Bridget. G RAPH The first graph on my wiki is a pie graph of my Fall Portfolio test. There are 3 sections to it. One section represents what I did.
Carrying out a Survey We carry out surveys to enable us to gain more information on topics that are of particular interest to us e.g. eating habits, exercise.
“Clockominoes”. Materials Planning Goals: In this activity children will develop and understanding of whole numbers. Understand that a number refers.
oI feel like my media product has challenged forms and conventions of real media products a little bit because of the way I have placed my masthead.
PSSA Eligible Content Part 1 In other words… What you need to know to be successful!
The Results of Using Educational Games on Math Score for Preschool Children Pavinee Komanasin.
Math Test Overview The Mathematics Test is divided into two equally weighted parts: On Part I - 25 questions; 45 minutes; Casio fx-260 On Part II - 25.
Bell Ringer 58, What is the place value of the 8?
Math Worksheets Fractions - Mental Math Test (1)
AKA – Input/output tables
End of year expectations
4. Finding the Average, Mode and Median
Using the spinner below:
Youngwummin: Analysis and Presenting Findings
Geometry (Including properties of shapes and position and direction)
Questions I need to ask myself when doing a lab write-up
During this survey, I went up to 50 random students and asked each one what time they woke up in the morning for school .These are the results I got…..
By: Britany Thornton and Iyawnna Hazzard
Multiplying and Dividing by powers of ten
Percentages Year 5-6 (age 9-11)
Multiplying and Dividing by powers of ten
Multiplying and Dividing by powers of ten
Steph Scott – Maths Leader and Year 4 Teacher
Y7 Assessment – Calculations with Fractions
Presentation transcript:

Do children in my maths group think different maths topics are easy, appropriate or hard? By Joe Rogers

Introduction O My name is Joe Rogers. O My question is: do children in my maths group think different maths topics are easy, appropriate or hard? O I chose this question because I found parts of maths easy and some hard and I wanted to find out what other people think and their opinions. O My group consists of only of children from year 5. I am in the top class, on the highest table, all of my results came from my table. O This is how I got my answers.

Planning my research and ethics O I started by working out what method I should use to find my answers. O I chose questionnaires as my method and I started to think of questions I should use. O I made questionnaires so my research participants are anonymous so I did not know who wrote what on the questionnaires. O I kept my data confidential so no-one knew who my data was from.

My questionnaires and data collection O My questionnaires had 6 questions. O All of the questions were open-ended questions except question 1. O I gave my questionnaires to the nine other people in my group. There was 5 girls and 4 boys. O All of them filled in the sheet and returned it to me within 1-20 minutes. O The person who took 1 minute rushed so he could get to play football.

Data analysis O I analysed my data by comparing the answers and finding similarities. O To do this I made a tally chart of each question. O Here is a chart of question 3.

Tally chart Maths topicsToo easyAppropriateToo hard Timell Adding/subtractinglllllll Multiplyinglllll Dividinglll Angles lllll Patterns l Shapes l Algebrall Perimeter ll Area ll Decimals l Fractions l Mental mathsl Percentagesl

My findings based on the tally chart O I found out that most people found adding and subtracting too easy and would like it to be more challenging. O I also found out that the topics that people found hard were area, perimeter, angles, decimals and fractions. O People thought that multiplying, dividing and angles were appropriate, although two people found angles too hard.

My findings from answers to questions 2,4,5 and 6. O Most people said that they wouldn’t change anything about the difficulty of the Maths work. O Most people said that they found some topics hard and some easy, but were happy with that. O Some people said that they enjoyed being challenged and some said that they would like to do more group and pair work.

Conclusion O To conclude I found out that out of the 9 people I asked, most of the found maths easy. O If I had to do this again, I would use more closed questions, as it was to hard to interpret my data with open questions, I would also use a graph, such as a bar chart to analysis data, as a tally chart is to confusing. O Also I would use a bigger sample size, for example my whole class or the whole of year 5, with a range of ability, as I only asked able children.