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Published byElvin Bennett Modified over 9 years ago
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GeoGebra and the STEM agenda Mark Dawes University of Cambridge
Comberton Village College GeoGebra Institute of Cambridge
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xkcd
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Every Child Matters (ECM)
According to the British government, every child should: be healthy stay safe enjoy and achieve make a positive contribution achieve economic well-being
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STEM Science Technology Engineering Mathematics
achieve economic well-being Science Technology Engineering Mathematics
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STEM Science Technology Engineering Mathematics Engineering Technology
Maths Are the parts of mathematics that do not have applications to S, T and E considered to be worthless?
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A better model? Science Technology Engineering Mathematics Maths
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GeoGebra = Geometry + Algebra + Spreadsheet Algebra Window
Geometry & Graphics Window
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This talk GeoGebra and STEM
How much I have learned from using GeoGebra: as a learner as a school-teacher from pupils in school as a lecturer from students at university
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Some things I learned from my pupils
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Question: “Make a conjecture about the triangle in a semi-circle
Question: “Make a conjecture about the triangle in a semi-circle. Prove it.” I explained that there must always be a diameter involved in this triangle. I asked the class (of 14-year-olds) to draw this in GeoGebra and then to make a conjecture. I expected that they would focus on the size of the angle…
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John’s Conjecture John drew this.
I thought he would then use it to provide an algebraic proof/explanation of the angle CED = 90. This is what I expected …
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John’s Conjecture y x y x This is what I expected: Label angle ACE = x
Triangle ACE is isosceles, so angle AEC = x Label angle ADE = y Triangle ADE is isosceles, so angle AED = y In triangle DEC we have x+x+y+y = 180, so x+y = 90 and angle DEC is therefore a right angle. This is the proof I learned at school, and while it works and certainly proves that the angle is 90 degrees, it is not very satisfying because it doesn’t really explain what is going on.
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What actually happened …
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John’s Conjecture The two smaller triangles have the same area
In fact, John had a different conjecture: The two smaller triangles have the same area. This is very interesting, because it was new to me and I didn’t immediately know whether it was true or not. John and the rest of the class didn’t know either. We tried a few things out. There are some special cases: when E is moved to C then the areas are both zero. When E is move to be vertically above A then there is symmetry and the areas are clearly the same. Some pupils used the area measurement tool to try this out, but we talked about this not providing a proof. I later asked a single question: “How do you work out the area of a triangle?” – and this was enough for them to prove that the conjecture was correct.
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Maddie’s Diagram Maddie tried to make her own copy of John’s diagram, but instead of using “line segment” she drew a line. I used to do that all the time! It made me realise that I use the word “line” wrongly. If I ask pupils to “draw a line” I am asking them to do something impossible because a line should extend infinitely in both directions! What was particularly exciting here was that Maddie did not delete her line, but looked at the diagram differently.
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Maddie’s Diagram She saw a rectangle!
She then said “this is a rectangle, so the angle DEC must be a right angle”! How exciting is that! Again – I had never come across this, but the reason the angle in a semi-circle is a right angle is that the triangle is half a rectangle! Wow! It is a proof, but is even better than the algebraic proof because it is a proof that explain why it works too! But the proof is not complete. Someone else in the class pointed out we hadn’t proved that the shape really was a rectangle. Maddie said that the diagonals of the quadrilateral were the same length because they are both diameters, so it must be a rectangle. Someone else said that in an isosceles trapezium the diagonals are the same length (and in fact there are other non-special quadrilaterals where this is true too). Eventually we arrived at the diagonals being the same length and bisecting each other. This means it must be a rectangle.
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Some things I learned as a teacher / as a learner
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Maths Science
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Maths Engineering
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Interacting with important ideas
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This talk GeoGebra and STEM
How much I have learned from using GeoGebra: as a learner as a school-teacher from pupils in school as a lecturer from students at university
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Tell me and I forget. Teach me and I remember. Involve me and I learn.
Benjamin Franklin
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