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FACULTY OF EDUCATION AND LANGUAGES JANUARY / 2011 HBMT3203 TEACHING MATHEMATICS IN YEAR FIVE AND SIX MATRICULATION NO : IDENTITY CARD NO. : TELEPHONE NO. : E-MAIL : [email protected] LEARNING CENTRE : JOHOR LEARNING CENTRE

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HBMT3203 TEACHING MATHEMATICS IN YEAR FIVE AND SIX

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FACULTY OF EDUCATION AND LANGUAGES

JANUARY / 2011

HBMT3203

TEACHING MATHEMATICS IN YEAR FIVE AND SIX

MATRICULATION NO :

IDENTITY CARD NO. :

TELEPHONE NO. :

E-MAIL : [email protected]

LEARNING CENTRE : JOHOR LEARNING CENTRE

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HBMT3203INTRODUCTION

VOLUME

The word ”volume” has several different meanings. The most common definition

is the magnitude or intensity of a certain sound. Volume may also refer to how much

space a three dimensional object takes up or the amount of three dimensional space

occupied by an object.

For example, the volume is height x base x length = 4 x 5 x 10 = 200 units³. Units

of volume include :

1) Metric thats in cubic centimeters (cm³), cubic meters (m³) and liters.

2) Imperial are in fluid ounce, cubic inch, cubic foot, pints, gallons and bushels.

A cubic centimeter (cm3) is a commonly used unit of volume extending the

derived SI-unit cubic metre, and corresponds to the volume of a cube measuring 1 cm ×

1 cm × 1 cm. One cubic centimetre corresponds to a volume of 1⁄1000000 of a cubic metre, or 1⁄1000 of a litre, or one millilitre; thus, 1 cm3 ≡ 1 mL. The mass of one cubic centimetre of

water at 3.98 °C (the temperature at which it attains its maximal density) is roughly equal

to one gram.

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HBMT3203CAPACITY

Capacity means the amount that something can hold. Usually it means or in other words,

capacity is the volume of a container given terms of liquid measurement, such as

mililiters (ml) or liters (l) in Metric, or pints or gallons in Imperial. The liter is a unit of

volume equal to 1/1000 cubic meter or 1 cubic decimeter (dm³). The unit has two official

symbols: the Latin letter L in lower and upper case (l and L). If the lower case L is used it

is often written as a cursive ℓ, although this usage has no official approval by any

international bureau.

The word litre is derived from an older French unit, the litron, whose name came from

Greek via Latin. The original French metric system used the litre as a base unit, and it has

been used in several subsequent versions of the metric system and is accepted for use

with the SI, although not an official SI unit, the SI unit of volume is the cubic metre (m3).

The spelling of the word used by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures is

"litre" and this is also the usual one in most English-speaking countries, but in American

English the spelling is "liter", being endorsed by the United States.

One litre of water has a mass of almost exactly one kilogram.

Example, ”the bucket has a capacity of 9 liters”. So, this bucket has the ability or

power to contain or hold.

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HBMT3203CONTENT

COMPARE AND CONTRAST STRATEGIES OF TEACHING MATHEMATICS

a) Example on Volume

INTERACTIVE LEARNING STRATEGY

VOLUME OF LIQUID LESSON PLAN:

Learning Area : Computation of volume of liquid.

Learning objectives : 1. Use and apply fractional computation to problems

involving the volume of liquids.

Learning outcomes : (i) Compute volume of liquid from a situation expressed in

fraction.

Teaching aids : Measuring cylinder, coloured liquids, measuring tape.

Set induction : Teacher shows a jug of coloured liquids to pupils.

Teacher pours half of the liquid into a container.

Step 1 : Pupils to discuss in their own group about amount of the remains

of the liquid.

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Notes To Teachers:

Try to recall the fraction through the names:

o half,

o one over two

o one halve

Guide pupils to say the measurement in correct conversion (basic

knowledge) in liter and mililiter.

Eg:

½ of 1000m l = 500ml

¼ of 1000m l = 250 ml

¾ of 1000m l = 750 ml

Pupils’ Activity.

Teacher asks pupils to name the fraction of the water remains.

Teacher asks pupils to convert the volume into liter and mililiter.

Teacher asks pupils to write down the relationship between fraction and volume.

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Step 2 : Teacher shows pupils how to compute volume from situation

exposed in fraction. Teacher demonstrates how to solve them.

e.g.

of 400 ℓ

In this context, “of ” means multiplication (×) operator, so,

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Expected answers from pupils:

o They get their answer from the

previous knowledge and from the

examples given.

Teacher’s Instruction:

o Can anyone tell me how do you get

your answer?

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Step 3 : Teacher shows a few questions on cards and asks the pupils to

solve.

A. Compute the following in litre.

No. Question Answer

1 18

of 800 ℓ

2 38

of 320 ℓ

3 68

of 480 ℓ

4 78

of 560 ℓ

5 58

of 640ℓ

Step 4 : Stress the importance of when to multiply and when to divide by

having each student write down, verbally repeat, and use the rules

in the provided examples.

 Step 5 : Recreational Game (BINGO)

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Recreational Game ( BINGO )

Answer

1)

23 of 150 mℓ = ………….. mℓ 7)

35 of 45 ℓ = ……………. ℓ

2)

34 of 720 mℓ = ………….. mℓ 8)

45 of 250 ℓ = …………….. ℓ

3)

56 of 420 mℓ = ………….. mℓ 9)

38 of 104 ℓ = …………….. ℓ

4)

25 of 370 mℓ = ………….. mℓ 10)

37 of 126 ℓ = …………….. ℓ

5)

47 of 630 mℓ = ………….. mℓ 11)

14 of 100 ℓ = ……………… ℓ

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Instructions

1. Choose a question from 1 to 12.

2.[5.] Solve the question and circle the

correct answer.

3.[6.] When a pupil gets 5 straight or

diagonal lines, the game is over.

4.[7.] The pupil with the least uncircled

Instructions

[1.] Choose a question from 1 to 12.

[2.] Solve the question and circle the

correct answer.

[3.] When a pupil gets 5 straight or

diagonal lines, the game is over.

[4.] The pupil with the least uncircled

answers will be the winner.

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6)

67 of 560 mℓ = ………….. mℓ 12)

56 of 108 ℓ = ……………… ℓ

DIFFERENCES BETWEEN INTERACTIVE STRATEGY AND LECTURE

STRATEGY

INTERACTIVE STRATEGY LECTURE STRATEGY

1. It means “Interactive” is in the sense

they create a collaborative and dynamic

set of mechanisms to stimulate their

own learning. Initially the interactive

teaching processes are shown. The basic

presupposition of this process is that

there is much efficiency in learning if

the student adopts an active, energetic

posture during information transmission.

The hardware mechanisms for

interactive teaching are then described.

As the software devices for the model, a

set of expert systems is considered.

Finally, the evaluation of the whole

experiment is discussed.

2. It allows students to get more

information and also allows students to

talk, listen, read, write and reflect as

they approach course content through

problem solving exercises and activities.

3. It can stimulates critical thinking and

decision making but still with teacher’s

guidance. Without proper teacher

guidance, students may learn incorrect

1. Teacher have to set overarching goals,

organized content and developed a

course plan with ideas for how to give

students the practice that will make it

possible for them to achieve the learning

outcomes. In this section, teacher will

make choices about what students will

have to do in order to learn the content

of the skills or lesson.

2. It also can convey a lot of information to

many student but only from what teacher

gives in the classroom.

3. It can maximizes staff time.

4. This strategy also non-threatening to

students.

5. Students may feel boring and also lacks

of student’s feedback.

6. Teacher and students may difficult to

meet individual learning needs. It is

more to “The talk and chalk method”.

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HBMT3203info.

INTERACTIVE STRATEGY LECTURE STRATEGY

4. Can include others teaching aids such as

technology systems. Example,

computer, projector, internet connection

system, books, articles, films,

recordings, experiences, projects and

other people.

5. Students feel more enganged and

empowered to the teaching and learning

activities.

6. Encourage the questioning mind and

equip students with skills for finding the

answers.

7. Encourages one – way communication,

the teacher must make a conscious effort

to become aware of student problems

and student understanding of content

without verbal feedback.

8. Requires a considerable amount of

unguided student time outside of the

classroom to enable understanding and

long-term retention of content.

9. Requires the teacher to have effective

speaking skills.

SIMILARITIES BETWEEN INTERACTIVE STRATEGY AND LECTURE

STRATEGY

Interactive strategy and lecture strategy still have some similarities in both

strategies that teacher will use in their teaching and learning activities especially in the

classroom. From both strategies, the teacher will have the same problems such as some

students may be passive in the classroom. For interactive teaching strategy, assessing

students contribution in active learning environments ca be a problem. Teacher needs to

outline the evaluation criteris for each assignment.

Interactive strategy and lecture strategy also can get the teacher give the reward or

compliments for students if they can give cooperation in answering the questions and also

after give the correct result in the groups activities.

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b) Difficulties and misconceptions

EVALUATION

LITERATURE REVIEW

CONCLUSION

I would say that volume refers to the space taken up by an object itself, while capacity

refers to the amount of a liquid or other pourable substance a container can hold. That

more or less parallels what you have seen. I have never, however, seen both terms used of

the same object without clarification, where you would not talk of the volume of a

pitcher, meaning the amount of plastic it is made of, without carefully saying so, since it

is so common to use the two terms interchangeably.

The first thing to realize about interactive teaching is that it is not something

new or mysterious. If you are a teacher and you ask questions in class, assign and check

homework, or hold class or group discussions, then you already teach interactively.

Basically, interactive teaching is just giving students something to do, getting back what

they have done, and then assimilating it yourself, so that you can decide what would be

best to do next.

But, almost all teachers do these things, so is there more to it? To answer this

question, one has to step away from teaching and think about learning. Over the last

twenty years, the field of cognitive science has taught us a lot about how people learn. A

central principle that has been generally accepted is that everything we learn, we

"construct" for ourselves. That is, any outside agent is essentially powerless to have a

direct effect on what we learn. If our brain does not do it itself, - that is, take in

information, look for connections, interpret and make sense of it, - no outside force will

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HBMT3203have any effect. This does not mean that the effort has to be expressly voluntary and

conscious on our parts. Our brains take-in information and operate continuously on many

kinds of levels, only some of which are consciously directed.

But, conscious or not, the important thing to understand is that it is our brains

that are doing the learning, and that this process is only indirectly related to the teacher

and the teaching. For example, even the most lucid and brilliant exposition of a subject

by a teacher in a lecture, may result in limited learning if the students' brains do not do

the necessary work to process it. There are several possible causes why students' learning

may fall short of expectations in such a situation. They may,

not understand a crucial concept partway into the lecture and so what follows is

unintelligible,

be missing prior information or not have a good understanding of what went

before, so the conceptual structures on which the lecture is based are absent,

lack the interest, motivation, or desire to expend the mental effort to follow the

presentation, understand the arguments, make sense of the positions, and validate

the inferences.

However, whatever the cause, without interacting with the students (in the simplest case

by asking questions), a teacher has no way to know if his or her efforts to explain the

topic were successful.

This brings me to the first of three distinct reasons for interactive teaching. It is an

attempt to see what actually exists in the brains of your students. This is the "summative"

aspect. It is the easiest aspect to understand and it is well described in the literature. But,

it is far from being the only perspective! The second reason is "formative", where the

teacher aims through the assigned task to direct students' mental processing along an

appropriate path in "concept-space". The intent is that, as students think through the

issues necessary in traversing the path, the resulting mental construction that is developed

in the student's head will possess those properties that the teacher is trying to teach. As

Socrates discovered, a good question can accomplish this result better than, just telling

the answer.

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The third may be termed "motivational". Learning is hard work, and an injection

of motivation at the right moment can make all the difference. One motivating factor

provided by the interactive teacher is the requirement of a response to a live classroom

task. This serves to jolt the student into action, to get his brain off the couch, so to speak.

Additional more subtle and pleasant events follow immediately capitalizing on the

momentum created by this initial burst. One of these is a result of our human social

tendencies. When teachers ask students to work together in small groups to solve a

problem, a discussion ensues that not only serves in itself to build more robust knowledge

structures, but also to motivate. The anticipation of immediate feedback in the form of

reaction from their peers, or from the teacher is a very strong motivator. If it is not

embarrassing or threatening, students want to know desperately whether their

understanding is progressing or just drifting aimlessly in concept space. Knowing that

they are not allowed to drift too far off track provides tremendous energy to continue.

VOLUME OF LIQUID WORKSHEETS

NAME: _______________________________ DATE: _______________

YEAR: _____________________

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INSTRUCTIONS

Do not copy the assignment question and instructions to your answer.

Prepare your assignment answer following the layout of the ASSESSMENT

CRITERIA shown in the RUBRICS provided for the course. Where RUBRICS are

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HBMT3203not provided, follow the instructions/guidelines specified by the Faculty for the

assignment concerned.

Your assignment should be between 2500 to 3000 words EXCLUDING references.

Type your answer using 12 point Times New Roman font and 1.5 line spacing.

Show the number of words at the end of your assignment.

Tables and figures where provided, should be appropiately titled.

List your references separately in the APPENDIX page.

ATTACHMENT

REFERENCES

Author’s name (year). Book, Title, Publication

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