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Thinking mathematically through games. If you ask mathematicians what they do, you always get the same answer. They think. M. Egrafov.

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Presentation on theme: "Thinking mathematically through games. If you ask mathematicians what they do, you always get the same answer. They think. M. Egrafov."— Presentation transcript:

1 Thinking mathematically through games

2 If you ask mathematicians what they do, you always get the same answer. They think. M. Egrafov

3 6 + 4 = 10 10 take away 9 makes 1 1 add 17 is 18 18…… Competitive aim – stop your partner from going

4 Collaborative aim – cross off as many as possible What’s the longest chain? Is it possible to strike them all out? If so how? If not why not?

5  What is the mathematical knowledge that is needed to play?  Who would this game be for?  What is the value added of playing the game?  Could you adapt it to use it in your classroom?

6 Low threshold high ceiling  Accessible to all at the start  Plenty of supporting activity for those who benefit from it  Lots of opportunities for challenge for those who decide they are ready for it  Lots of opportunities for teacher to tweak both the mathematical knowledge needed and the mathematical thinking

7  Children can do more than you think  Children’s own problems  Importance of talk and questioning  Children as mathematicians

8 ‘Effective teaching requires practitioners to help children see themselves as mathematicians. For children to become (young) mathematicians requires creative thinking, an element of risk-taking, imagination and invention - dispositions that are impossible to develop within the confines of a work-sheet or teacher-led written mathematics.’ Worthington and Curruthers 2007

9 Valuing mathematical thinking Creative climate and conjecturing atmosphere Purposeful activity and discussion Conditions for learning

10 Purposeful activity Give the pupils something to do, not something to learn; and if the doing is of such a nature as to demand thinking; learning naturally results. John Dewey

11 Liz Woodham emp1001@cam.ac.uk Bernard Bagnall B.Bagnall@damtp.cam.ac.uk Fran Watson fw279@cam.ac.uk nrich.maths.org


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