25
By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University [email protected] To Assessment ….. And Beyond!

By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University [email protected]

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

By: Amanda Meiners

Western Illinois University

[email protected]

To Assessment ….. And Beyond!

Page 2: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

If today is zero degrees outside, and tomorrow is predicted to be twice as cold. How cold is it going to be?

Illinois Weather

Page 3: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

One grandfather, one grandmother, two fathers, two mothers, fours children, three grandchildren, one brother, two sisters, two sons, two daughters, one father-in-law, one mother-in-law, and one daughter-in-law attended a family reunion. If both halves of a relationship attended (i.e. the father and the son), how many people showed up?

A Family Reunion

Page 4: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

GrandfatherFather In Law

GrandmotherMother In Law

FatherSon 1 Child 1

MotherDaughter In Law

Son 2Child 3

Daughters 1Sister 1 Child 2

Daughters 2Sister 2 Child 4

Page 5: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

• Based from a book: The Big Book of Brain Games by Ivan Moscivich

• My version of the Hunger Games.

• Challenges that are more about thinking than math all the time. Let students “play” with math ideas without instructing them how to go about solving the problem.

• Opens up the critical thinking and reasoning skills students will need to use in the real world.

The Brain Games

Page 6: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

What is the level of math would you prefer teach? Click all that apply

A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H.

0% 0% 0% 0%0%0%0%0%

A. 6th grade

B. 7th grade

C. 8th grade

D. 9th grade

E. 10th grade

F. 11th grade

G. 12th grade

H. College and beyond.

Page 7: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

How many homework problems do you plan to assign each day?

17%

17%

17%

17%

17%

17% A. I never assign any work outside of class.

B. 1-5 problemsC. 5-10 problemsD. 10-15 problemsE. 15-20 problemsF. 20 or more problems a night

Page 8: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

How much time do you expect students to spend on their daily assignment?

0%0%0%0%0%

A. B. C. D. E.

A. 15 minutes

B. 30 minutes

C. 45 minutes

D. 1 hour

E. 2 hours

Page 9: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

Common Core aligned materials (Option 2)

Manga High

http://www.mangahigh.com/en_us/

Aligned to Common Core

Math based only

750 Prodigi and Games

Response to Intervention

Pros and Cons

Page 10: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

Study Aid

Quizlet.com

www.quizlet.com

Free online/mobile device

Have 8 free classes

Self made OR use what's out there.

Page 11: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

• Allow students to make their own (school appropriate) math music video.

• Allows students to use the vast amount of math vocabulary they have learned in a particular chapter, unit, or year.

• ABC’s of Math

MTV (Math Television)

Page 12: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

• Bring the games students enjoy playing into class.

• Buy yourself a twister board and place real number values on the spots. • I had student keep the numbers positive if their right foot/

hand was on the number. If their left foot/hand was on the number it is a negative value.

• Composed a worksheet to help students walk through the different ways to convert between the different types of linear equations. (Algebra I)

• Could also use this idea when teaching students to compose equations with particular zeros (Algebra II)

Twister Slope

Page 13: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

• Play on the shows we have/ students like Carmen Santiago

• Allows students to learn while they are being assessed under the multiple different equations they will see.

• Build confidence in solving lots of equations and having the option to come and ask the “Chief” (teacher) questions as they arise.

Where in the World is Variable Equation?

Page 14: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

• This is just one chapter this applies.

• Chapters with generalized ideas and/or lots of formulas are great for this kind of review/ assessment.

• This can be interactive, you could even allow small groups assess their knowledge.

Jeopardy Conics

Page 15: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

• Millionaire.

• Able to work on formulas such as perimeter, area, volume, Etc. building and building

• When using the template make sure you place the RIGHT answer in the green box. It will not show up green initially in the presentation, but if students get the answer right it will show green then.

• Could also use to test proofs or any other math topics that are more need to know

• Test math facts with powers and other items that students need to know in High School

Who Wants to be a Geo-iare?

Page 16: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

• Family Feud

• Are You Smarter than a ____ Grader

• Deal or No Deal

Other Game Shows Setups that are out there.

Page 17: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

Can I guess your number?

Pick any 3 digit number

Rearrange the digits in reverse order

Subtract from the original. •Want a positive difference, subtract accordingly•Note: if this is equal to a two digit number, think of it as a “three” digit number with a zero in front when reversing the digits.

Take this new number and reverse again

This time add the two numbers

Page 18: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

You will always get 1089. Classroom use: Also the place value. Intro to Perfect squares

CC: High school-rational and irrational numbers

Page 19: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

Proofeg. 534  Claim: Choose any three digit number with distinct digits represented abc. Reverse the digits of this number so you have cba. Subtract the smaller of the two numbers from the larger one so you are left with a new number. Take this new number and reverse the digits again to make another new number. Add the two new numbers. Take the square root of that sum, and you will always be left with 33. Note: if the first difference is equal to a two digit number, think of it as a “three” digit number with a zero in front when reversing the digits. Proof: Imagine an arbitrary three digit numberLet the number abc be represented as 100a + 10b + c where a,b,c are distinct numbers in the set {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}Reversing the digits would result in 100c + 10b + aSubtract the second number from the first 100a + 10b + c – (100c + 10b + a) = 100a + 10b + c – 100c – 10b – a = 99a – 99c = 99(a - c)Our new number is 99(a-c)Let x represent a-c.

Page 20: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

Since we know a and c are single digit numbers which do not equal each other, and the difference is at least 1, we know that 1 < x < 8We will take this case by case.99 * 1 = 099 099+990 = 108999 * 2 = 198 198+891 = 108999 * 3 = 297 297+792 = 108999 * 4 = 396 396+693 = 108999 * 5 = 495 495+594 = 108999 * 6 = 594 594+495 = 108999 * 7 = 693 693+396 = 108999 * 8 = 792 792+297 = 1089 We always get 1089 in EVERY case. The square root of 1089 is 33, hence you always get 33 as an answer. q.e.d. 

Page 21: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

Fold’m Eights

Fold the values up in a way so that when looked at read 1-8.

8 levels starting off with easy and getting more difficult as they go.

Make a check list that students need to mark off a certain number by a certain date or end of a chapter.

Great pre-curser to nets or a way to have students fill the last 5 minutes of class.

CC: sixth grade Geometry ideas.

Page 22: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

Magic TablesTake a look at the 5 cards in front of your group, pick a secret number between 1 and 31.

Put all the cards with that number in the center of the group.

I will guess your number

Page 23: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

• Reason: Add all the numbers together on the first numbers of the cards given to you: Powers of 2• Example: If the cards in the center have cards that start with 16 and 4, since when added together this would make their number be 20.

• CC: sixth grade- evaluating exponents with whole numbers • Seventh grade- Use properties of operations to generate equivalent expressions•High school: rewrite exponential functions using multiple exponents.

Magic Tables Continued

Page 24: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

CC: 7th grade students solving real life mathematical problems

Page 25: By: Amanda Meiners Western Illinois University meinersaj@live.com

Thank you for coming!

Questions? And Answers!