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Transforming Maths lessons: From ordinary to extraordinary Matt Skoss matt@skoss.org 0418-624 631 Wiki: maths-no-fear.wikispaces.com Ning: remoteteachers.ning.com Twitter: matt_skoss
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The only person I can can change is myself!
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12 day challenge Trial 2-3 ideas
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Creating urgency... At a personal level With colleagues With kids
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Implementation Dip
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No such thing as a lousy lesson or activity! What would I do differently next time?
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What are you thinking about now... that you weren ’ t thinking about 6 months ago?
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How do we leverage ‘the Cloud’ for Mathematics learning?
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Shared document for reflections http://tinyurl.com/shared-doc instead of: https://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dhcpgz6t_83fqjng7jd
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John Mason: “ Mathematics hasn ’ t been done in a Mathematics lesson unless it has involved generalising. ”
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2 families of roos need to pass each other on a mountain slope. Constraints: Can only jump into a vacant square Can jump over a roo into a vacant square Can ’ t jump backwards Minimum number of moves Jumping Kangaroos
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in Adelaide
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Which is the odd one out, and why?
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Is there a Maths task lurking in there?
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Mathematicians ask... How many ways are there of arranging... ? How can I convince you I ’ ve found them all?
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How many ways of arranging five tiles? Pentomino tiles
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Allowed? Yes or no?
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How many ways of arranging five tiles? Pentomino tiles
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How can all the Pentomino tiles be arranged? What rectangles are possible? What are not possible?
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Not possible? Argue a mathematical case why some rectangles are not possible?
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Building new tasks...
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Perimeters - Which has biggest? Smallest? What about two shapes together?
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Symmetry - Where could you add a 6 th square to give the shape symmetry?
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How many ways of arranging 3 or 4 cubes? What constraints are possible? Soma cube
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How many ways of arranging 3 or 4 cubes? What constraints are possible? Soma cube
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Viewing my classroom as an archaeological dig...
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Challenge students ’ sense of mathematical attributes
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Say what you see!
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What would a typical 7 year old say?
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25 cm 32° x
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or
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25 cm 32° x
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25 cm 32° x Hypotenuse Adjacent
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25 cm 32° x Hypotenuse Adjacent Cos Rule: cos 32° = Adjacent Hypotenuse
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25 cm
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Questions to provoke mathematical thinking, triggering changes in practice Good sources: Thinkers Primary Questions & Prompts Questions & Prompts for Mathematical Thinking Building on the work from Zygfryd Dyrszlag, a Polish Mathematics Educator Published by ATM(UK) Available online from www.aamt.edu.au, search on Mason & Watsonwww.aamt.edu.au
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Questions... Closed Open Extended Investigati on
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Questions... Closed Open Extended Investigati on
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Questions... Closed Open Extended Investigation What is 3 + 4? What pairs of numbers add to 7? How many pairs of numbers add to a given sum?
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Questions... Closed Open Extended Investigation What is 3 + 4? What pairs of numbers add to 7? How many pairs of numbers add to a given sum?
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Additional Conditions Imposing a constraint, then repeating the same question with additional constraints added one by one. Each additional constrain prompts learners to think more precisely about the properties of the example they are creating.
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Give me an example of... a set of numbers whose mean is 5 and whose mode is 4 and whose median is 3 and whose range is 6 and whose standard deviation is 1 (for the brave!)
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Give me an example of... a quadrilateral with at least two right angles and whose sides are not all the same length and which has reflective symmetry about at least one diagonal
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Always, sometimes never true All numbers in the 5 times tables end in a five To multiply by ten put a 0 on the end Division always makes smaller Squaring a number makes it larger
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