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1 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining The National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics The Common Core State Standards Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning Construct viable arguments www.mathedleadership.org
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2 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Module Evaluation Facilitator: At the end of this Powerpoint, you will find a link to an anonymous brief e- survey that will help us understand how the module is being used and how well it worked in your setting. We hope you will help us grow and improve our NCSM resources!
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3 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Common Core State Standards Mathematics Standards for Content Standards for Practice
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4 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Today’s Goals To explore the mathematical standards for Content and Practice To consider how the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) are likely to impact your mathematics program and plan next steps In particular, participants will Examine opportunities to help students express regularity and repeated reasoning and construct viable arguments (MP3, MP8)
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5 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Standards for Mathematical Practice “The Standards for Mathematical Practice describe varieties of expertise that mathematics educators at all levels should seek to develop in their students. These practices rest on important ‘processes and proficiencies’ with longstanding importance in mathematics education.” (CCSS, 2010)
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6 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Content Goals These standards of practice will be examined in the context of the following content standard: Understand properties of the operations. Grade 1: p. 14Grade 2: p. 18 Grade 3: p. 22Grade 4: p. 28 Grade 5: p. 33 (paragraph #2)
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7 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining What generalization is suggested by these problems?
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8 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Video 1 – Will it always work? CTB/McGraw-Hill; Mathematics Assessment Resource Services, 2003 Ms. Kaye’s 3 rd Grade
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9 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Video 2 – Will it always work?
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10 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Video 3 – Will it always work?
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11 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Adding 1 to a Factor Writing prompt: In a multiplication problem, if you add 1 to a factor, I think this will happen to the product…
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12 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Students’ Articulation of the Claim “The number that is not increased is the number that the answer goes up by.” “The number that is staying and not going up, increases by however many it is.” “I think that the factor you increase, it goes up by the other factor.”
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13 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Choose which of the original equations you want to work with. Then do one of these… Draw a picture for the original equation; then change it just enough to match the new equations. Make an array for the original equation; then change it just enough to match the new equations. Write a story for the original equation; then change it just enough to match the new equations. Example: Original equation 7 x 5 = 35 New equations 7 x 6 = 42 8 x 5 = 40
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14 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Frannie’s Story Context There are 7 jewelry boxes and each box has 5 pieces of jewelry. There are 35 pieces of jewelry altogether.
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15 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Jewelry Boxes 7 x 5 Seven boxes with five pieces of jewelry in each box 35 pieces of jewelry
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16 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining 7 x 5 8 x 5 Eight Seven boxes with five pieces of jewelry in each box 35 pieces of jewelry + 5 pieces of jewelry 40 pieces of jewelry Jewelry Boxes
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17 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining 7 x 5 Seven boxes with five pieces of jewelry in each box 35 pieces of jewelry Jewelry Boxes
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18 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining 7 x 5 7 x 6 six Seven boxes with five pieces of jewelry in each box 35 pieces of jewelry + 7 pieces of jewelry 42 pieces of jewelry Jewelry Boxes
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19 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Other Stories Baskets of bouncy balls Tanks with salmon eggs Baskets of mozzarella sticks Rows of chairs
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20 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining
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21 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Explain how the array changes from 7 x 5 to 8 x 5 and from 7 x 5 to 7 x 6. Making Sense of Multiplication
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22 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Video 4
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23 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Video 5
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24 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Importance of Contrasting Operations We were talking about the addends changing by 1 and what happens to the sum. Now we’re talking about the factors changing by 1 and what happens to the product.
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25 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Pause and Reflect How did the mathematical practices play out in these sessions? What properties of addition and multiplication were under consideration? How did the practices of noticing regularities and constructing arguments support learning about these properties and about the meaning of the operations?
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26 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Associative Property of Addition a + (b + c) = (a + b) + c a + (b + 1) = (a + b) + 1 5 + (7 + 1) = (5 + 7) + 1
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27 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Distributive Property of Multiplication over Addition a (b + c) = ab + ac a (b + 1) = ab + a 5 (7 + 1) = 35 + 5 (a + b) c = ac + bc (a + 1) c = ac + c (5 + 1) 7 = 35 + 7
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28 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Importance of Contrasting Operations Commutative property of addition: a + b = b + a What about subtraction? Is a – b equal to b – a?
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29 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Video 6
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30 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining 2 nd grade How were the students engaged in the 8 th practice: noticing and expressing regularity? How were they engaged in the 3 rd practice, creating viable arguments? How did the practices of noticing regularities and constructing arguments support learning about properties and about the meaning of the operations?
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31 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Today’s Goals To explore the mathematical standards for Content and Practice To consider how the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) are likely to impact your mathematics program and plan next steps In particular, participants will Examine opportunities to help students express regularity and repeated reasoning and construct viable arguments (MP3, MP8)
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32 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Reflection on Standards for Mathematical Practice What implications might the Standards for Mathematical Practice have on your classroom? 1. Individually review the Standards for Mathematical Practice. 2.Choose a partner at your table and discuss a new insight you had into the Standards for Mathematical Practice. 3.Then discuss the following question.
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33 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining End of Day Reflections 1. Are there any aspects of your own thinking and/or practice that our work today has caused you to consider or reconsider? Explain. 2.Are there any aspects of your students’ mathematical learning that our work today has caused you to consider or reconsider? Explain.
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34 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Acknowledgements This module was developed by Deborah Schifter and Susan Jo Russell, based on work from the projects Teaching to the Big Ideas, Foundations of Algebra in the Elementary and Middle Grades, and Using Routines as an Instructional Tool for Developing Students’ Conceptions of Proof. Video clips are used with permission from these projects. This work was funded in part by the National Science Foundation through grants ESI-0242609 to EDC and ESI- 0550176 and DRL-1019482 to TERC. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.
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35 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Join us in thanking the Noyce Foundation for their generous grant to NCSM that made this series possible! http://www.noycefdn.org/
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36 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining NCSM Series Contributors Geraldine Devine, Oakland Schools, Waterford, MI Aimee L. Evans, Arch Ford ESC, Plumerville, AR David Foster, Silicon Valley Mathematics Initiative, San José State University, San José, California Dana L. Gosen, Ph.D., Oakland Schools, Waterford, MI Linda K. Griffith, Ph.D., University of Central Arkansas Cynthia A. Miller, Ph.D., Arkansas State University Valerie L. Mills, Oakland Schools, Waterford, MI Susan Jo Russell, Ed.D., TERC, Cambridge, MA Deborah Schifter, Ph.D., Education Development Center, Waltham, MA Nanette Seago, WestEd, San Francisco, California Hope Bjerke, Editing Consultant, Redding, CA
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37 National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics Illustrating the Standards for Mathematical Practice: Reasoning and Explaining Help Us Grow! The link below will connect you to a anonymous brief e- survey that will help us understand how the module is being used and how well it worked in your setting. Please help us improve the module by completing a short ten question survey at: http://tinyurl.com/samplesurvey1
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