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Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math Geoff Krall emergentmath.wordpress.com

Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math

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Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math. Geoff Krall emergentmath.wordpress.com. Local!. Relevant!. Authentic!. My Exponential Growth and Decay project. 21 st Century Skills!. 9.756 sq in/101.6832 sq in = 0.0959. About 10% of the final product included mathematics???. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math

Getting Students to Struggle (and

Engage) With Math

Geoff Krallemergentmath.wordpress.com

Page 2: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math

My Exponential Growth and Decay project

Local!Local!

Relevant!Relevant!

Authentic!Authentic!

21st Century Skills!

21st Century Skills!

Page 3: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math

My Exponential Growth and Decay project

4.5”

1.62”

1.8”1.37”

7.29 sq in

2. 466 sq in7.29 sq in + 2.466 sq in=9.756 sq in

19.86 in101.6832 sq

in

9.756 sq in/101.6832 sq in = 0.0959

About 10% of the final product

included mathematics???

Page 4: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math

Objective

Promote Mathematical conflict...

….by any means necessary.

Resources and links at

emergentmath.wordpress.com

Page 5: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math
Page 6: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math
Page 7: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math

A CONFLICT-CENTRIC APPROACH TO MATHEMATICS

Malcolm Swan – Conflict and Discussion Approach to Mathematics

Page 8: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math

Evidence of “good” mathematical conflict.

• Students talking about math.

• A debate about why / what answer?

• Little teacher direction

• Relevance – being able to make connections between everyday experience

• Task offers multiple possible solutions

• Task links several mathematical concepts

• All student levels are engaged

• Emphasis on process

• Arguing different methods about solving the problem.

Evidence of “bad” (or no) mathematical conflict.

• Sleeping

• Answers are on the board

• Notetaking

• No surprises

• Students are quiet little islands

• Computations

• Teachers’ throat hurts – they’re doing all the work

• Lack of words / word walls

• Students not helping each other

• No questions

Page 9: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math

Using Problems to create conflict in a PBL Classroom

Page 10: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math

OTHER TASK TYPES TO PROMOTE CONFLICT

Page 11: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math
Page 12: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math

Classifying or Ordering Things

Page 13: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math

Odd one out

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Evaluating “Truthiness”

Page 16: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math
Page 17: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math

Evaluating Student Work

Page 18: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math
Page 19: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math

Matching

Page 20: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math

Two ways to a “conflict-centric”

approach

Activiti

esActiviti

es

Page 21: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math

What would I have done differently?

Page 22: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math

• Formative Assessment• Focus on modeling with another scenario

“Having Kittens”math.mapshell.org

Page 23: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math

END OF CLASS DEBRIEF

Geoff Krall | [email protected]

emergentmath.wordpress.com

Page 24: Getting Students to Struggle (and Engage) With Math

Exit Ticket (2 minute

assessment)

!

?!

?

One thing that became clear – a lightbulb moment

One thing that you want to make sure not to forget that you learned today

One thing that could be made better

One thing you still have a question about