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Jenny NovakSecondary Math Resource Teacher
Warm-UpIt's a hot summer day, and Eric the Sheep is
at the end of a line of sheep waiting to be shorn. There are 50 sheep in front of him. Being an impatient sort of sheep, though, every time the shearer takes a sheep from the front of the line to be shorn, Eric jumps in front of the next two sheep in front of him. If he continues to do this how many sheep will be shorn before Eric?
Be prepared to explain how you determined your answer.
OutcomesBy the end of this session participants will:
Engage in mathematical tasks and generate multiple strategies for solving a problem
Consider how worthwhile mathematical tasks can improve students mathematical practices
Examine tools to evaluate mathematical tasksBecome familiar with resources for finding
math tasks
Standards for Mathematical PracticeMake sense of
problems and persevere in solving them.
Reason abstractly and quantitatively.
Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others.
Model with mathematics.
Use appropriate tools strategically.
Attend to precision.Look for and make
use of structure.Look for and express
regularity in repeated reasoning.
Revisiting the Warm-UpIt's a hot summer day, and Eric the Sheep is
at the end of a line of sheep waiting to be shorn. There are 50 sheep in front of him. Being an impatient sort of sheep, though, every time the shearer takes a sheep from the front of the line to be shorn, Eric jumps in front of the next two sheep in front of him. If he continues to do this how many sheep will be shorn before Eric?
Be prepared to explain how you determined your answer.
Another approach
The Candles TaskYou will be assigned either #1 or #2. Then
complete #3.3. Megan lights two candles of equal length
at the same time. The red candle takes six hours to burn out and the green candle takes nine. How much time will pass until the slower-burning candle is exactly twice as long as the faster-burning one? Explain how you got your answer.
The Locker ProblemThere are 20 closed lockers in one hallway of your
school. Your class decides to conduct an experiment. The first student is going to run down the row and open each of the locker doors. The second student in line will start with locker #2 and close every second door. The third student will start at locker #3 and change the state of every third locker. The fourth student will start at locker #4 and change the state of every fourth locker, and so on, until 20 students have passed by the lockers.
Which locker doors are still open after the twentieth student is finished? Which locker(s) changed the most?
Evaluating a Math TaskSelect one of the math tasks we have
completed today & use the evaluation sheet to rate the taskWhat were the strongest areas represented in
this task?How could we improve the task?
How could this tool be used in your classroom?
Additional ResourcesDriscoll, M. (2001). Fostering Algebraic
Thinking Toolkit. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.National Council of Teachers of Mathematics
(2010). Focus in High School Mathematics: Reasoning and Sense Making. Reston, VA: National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, Inc.
Small, M. & Lin, A. (2010). More Good Questions: Great Ways to Differentiate Secondary Mathematics Instruction. New York: Teachers College, Columbia University.
Web ResourcesLearner.org: Math tasks and video of lessons
http://www.learner.org/index.html
Secondary Mathematics Intranet Page-Math Taskshttp://login.hcpss.org/Login/__WWW/Portal/Curricular_Programs/Math/MathTask
Figure This! NCTM site with activities for familieshttp://www.figurethis.org/index.html
In Closing
What is one take-away you have from this session?
What is one action step you plan to take?