Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Julian Davenport Education Transformation Office Cisely Scott Jesse J. McCrary.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Julian Davenport Education Transformation Office Cisely Scott Jesse J. McCrary."— Presentation transcript:

1 Julian Davenport Education Transformation Office Cisely Scott Jesse J. McCrary

2 DATE: June 21, 2011 BENCHMARK: Manipulatives MT 2.0.2011 OBJECTIVE: Participants will explain the purpose of using math manipulatives and identify ways of enhancing math instruction through the use of manipulatives. ESSENTIAL QUESTION: How can we use concrete resources to move students to the understanding of representational and abstract math concepts. VOCABULARY: manipulatives, tangram, learning styles, concrete, representational, abstract (CRA), base 10 blocks, geoboards, pattern blocks, virtual manipulatives AGENDA: Icebreaker What Are Manipulatives? What the Research Shows Reaching Various Types of Learners Hands-On Activities Rotations Demonstrations for Upcoming Benchmarks Challenges with prizes Virtual Manipulatives Take Aways: Things learned during this session Tangram Handout EXIT SLIP: IN YOUR JOURNAL Connect: How can we use concrete resources to move students to the understanding of representational and abstract math concepts. Connect: 1 question you still have about the using manipulatives. HOME LEARNING: Review today’s lesson and develop your next steps to share this information with teachers at your school. Common Board Configuration (CBC)

3 Ice Breaker (3 minutes) 1. Each of you has a tangram in your group. 2. Your job is to figure out what fraction the smallest triangle represents of the complete tangram.

4 Answer……… What else could we use tangrams to teach?

5 Role Of The Teacher “The mere use of manipulatives does not guarantee that students understand concepts and procedures and be able to connect these concepts to abstract symbols without teachers making these connections explicit.” (Reimer & Moyer 2005)

6 Random Thoughts….. How many of you feel you could become master teachers by just watching a master teacher? How many of you could build a computer after sitting in a computer programming class and listening to your professor tell you how to build a computer? How many of you could fly a plane without ever touching the controls prior to your first flight? Why is this important to the classroom?

7 What Are Manipulatives? Physical objects used to visualize abstract concepts and promote learning Concrete materials that can be used when exploring math ideas, performing math tasks or solving math problems

8 What the Research Says…. The most valuable learning occurs when students actively construct their own mathematical understanding Provide opportunities for children to explore, develop, test, discuss, and apply ideas The use of physical materials is conducive to the concrete kinds of learning that lay the foundation for the development of mathematical understanding NCTM, 2000

9 Some things you might encounter….. Why use manipulatives? They can’t use them on the test? Concrete/Kinestethic  Conceptual/Visual Understanding  Ability to Understand the Abstract My students can’t behave when they have toys in front of them. Allow students 1-2 minutes to play with the manipulatives before utilizing them. Set specific rules i.e. if they hit the floor, you lose yours!

10 C-R-A CONCRETE: The “doing” stage. Uses hands-on physical (concrete) models or manipulatives to represent numbers and unknowns. REPRESENTATIONAL : The “seeing” stage. Draws or uses pictorial representations of the models ABSTRACT: The “symbolic” stage. Involves numbers as abstract symbols of pictorial displays Conceptual understanding in math will usually follow this order. Therefore it is best to use manipulatives to introduce lesson and/or concept. What grade should we start introducing manipulatives?

11 Why Use Manipulatives? Motivate students Feel like they’re playing Make math learning real and concrete Prompt discussions about math ideas Allow teachers to see students at work doing mathematics Increase engagement Accommodate various learning styles Visual learners Auditory learners Logical/Mathematical Musical/Rhythmic Bodily/Tactile/Kinesthetic learners Learn through moving, touching, and doing

12 Role Of The Teacher PLANNING IS KEY!!!! Choose manipulatives to support the lesson’s objectives!! Provide opportunity to become acquainted with manipulatives before they are used in the lesson Consider the students when planning the lesson and choosing the appropriate manipulatives Encourage the students to talk and write about what they have learned. Help the students to move from manipulatives to paper- and-pencil operations Discuss observations and to help students draw connections

13 Center 1: Base 10 Blocks Center 2: Geoboards Center 3: Pattern Blocks

14 Stations (5-7 minutes each) Place Value Blocks Activity: Make a list of how these can be used in the classroom and then show me how many ways you can represent the number 123 using base 10 blocks (thousands, hundreds, tens, ones) Geoboard Activity: Make a list of the many things this can be used for, then using a geoboard, show me how you can teach congruent/similar figures and angles Pattern Blocks: Make a list of ways pattern blocks can be used and then show me one equivalent fraction.

15 Geoboards Aid in the teaching of basic geometric concepts and in developing conceptual understanding of area and perimeter Improve communication skills, share ideas, and use mathematical vocabulary.

16 Pattern Blocks A tool to learn and practice fractions Can be used to familiarize oneself with the different shapes, their relations, and their proportions

17 Base 10 Blocks Aid to teach Base 10 place value Basic arithmetic operations Usually the foundation for understanding of number sense

18 Challenge (with prizes)

19 Choices of Manipulatives Tangrams Pattern Blocks Counters Geoboard Base 10 Blocks Color Tiles (square inch tiles)

20 Challenge 3 rd Grade: MA.3.G.3.2 Compose and Decompose Polygons What manipulative and how?

21 Challenge 4th Grade: MA.4.G.3.3 Area of Composite Shapes What manipulative and how?

22 Challenge What manipulative and how? 5 th Grade: MA.5.G.5.4 Derive and apply formulas for areas of parallelograms and trapezoids. What do you notice about the formulas? How do you prove it?

23 Virtual Manipulatives National Library of Virtual Manipulatives Gizmos- www.explorelearning.comwww.explorelearning.com

24 Journal Reflection How can we use concrete resources to move students to the understanding of representational and abstract math concepts.


Download ppt "Julian Davenport Education Transformation Office Cisely Scott Jesse J. McCrary."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google