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Looking at the Structure of Arithmetic Story Problems Through the Eyes of Children’s Solution Strategies.

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Presentation on theme: "Looking at the Structure of Arithmetic Story Problems Through the Eyes of Children’s Solution Strategies."— Presentation transcript:

1 Looking at the Structure of Arithmetic Story Problems Through the Eyes of Children’s Solution Strategies

2 Consider the following problems—How would you solve each? Eliz had 8 cookies. She ate 3 of them. How many cookies does Eliz have left? Eliz has 3 dollars to buy cookies. How many more dollars does she need to earn to have 8 dollars? Eliz has 3 dollars. Tom has 8 dollars. How many more dollars does Tom have than Eliz?

3 Most adults would solve all three of these problems by subtracting 3 from 8. To young children, however, these are 3 different problems, which they solve using different strategies.

4 Research Children can solve many mathematical problems that involve +, -, x or / without being shown how to solve them.

5 Initially, most children use a strategy researchers refer to as “direct modeling.” That is, the children model the action and relationships they see in the story.

6 Additive Structures Four Basic Problem Contexts: –Join, –Separate, –Part-Part-Whole, and –Compare. Although the number size, themes, and contexts of the problems may vary, the basic structure involving actions and relationships within each class remains the same.

7 Join and Separate problems involve action. –In join problems, elements are added to a given initial set. –In separate problems, elements are removed from a given initial set.

8 Part-Part-Whole and Compare-No action Part-Part-Whole problems involve static relationships among a set and its two distinct subsets. Compare problems involve the comparison of two distinct, disjoint sets rather than the relationship between a set and its subsets.

9 Join, Result Unknown Four birds were singing on a branch. Three more flew in to join them. How many birds were singing now? Join (an action), Result Unknown 4 + 3 = __

10 Join, Change Unknown Four birds were singing on a branch. Some more flew in to sing with them. Now there are 7. How many birds are on the branch? Join (an action), Change Unknown 4 + __ = 7

11 Join, Start Unknown Some birds were singing on a branch. Three more flew in to sing with them. Now there are 7. How many birds were already there? Join (an action), Start Unknown __ + 3 = 7

12 Separate, Result Unknown Seven birds were singing on a branch. Three flew away. How many birds are left? Separate (an action), Result Unknown 7 - 3 = __

13 Separate, Change Unknown Seven birds were singing on a branch. Some flew home. Now there are 3. How many birds went home? Separate (an action), Change Unknown 7 - __ = 3

14 Separate, Start Unknown Some birds were singing on a branch. Three flew home. Now there are 4. How many birds were there to begin with? Separate (an action), Start Unknown __ - 3 = 4

15 Part-Part-Whole, Whole Unknown Some birds were singing on a branch. Three were blue and 4 were red. How many birds were on the branch? Part-Part-Whole, Whole Unknown (Note—no action! This is a relationship between 2 parts of one set.) There is no specific number sentence for part- part-whole problems. Can you see why?

16 Part-Part-Whole, Part Unknown Seven birds were singing on a branch. Three were blue and the rest were red. How many birds were red? Part-Part-Whole, Part Unknown (Note— no action! This is a relationship between 2 parts of one set.)

17 Compare, Difference Unknown The oak tree has 7 birds. The pine tree has 4 birds. The oak tree has how many more birds than the pine tree? Compare, Difference Unknown (Note—no action! This is a relationship between 2 distinct, disjoint sets.)

18 Compare, Larger Quantity Unknown The oak tree has 3 more birds than the pine tree. The pine tree has 4 birds. How many birds does the oak tree have? Compare, Larger Quantity Unknown (Note—no action! This is a relationship between 2 different sets.)

19 Compare, Smaller Quantity Unknown The oak tree has 3 more birds than the pine tree. The oak tree has 7 birds. How many birds are in the pine tree? Compare, Smaller Quantity Unknown (Note—no action! This is a relationship between 2 different sets.)

20 As children mature, their strategies become more abstract and efficient. –Direct Modeling strategies are replaced by-- –Counting strategies, which in turn are replaced with-- –Derived Facts strategies (invented strategies with single-digit numbers), which are replaced by-- – Recall of Number Facts strategies.

21 Other Notes Direct Modeling provides a basis for children’s learning of other, more efficient, strategies.

22 Other Notes Strategies at different levels of abstraction are related----which leads to flexible use of strategies. Children in any classroom will be at different levels of understanding and will use different strategies to solve the same problems.


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