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MTL Meeting December 6, 2011 Hank KepnerConnie Laughlin Lee Ann PruskeBeth Schefelker Mary MooneyRosann Hollinger.

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Presentation on theme: "MTL Meeting December 6, 2011 Hank KepnerConnie Laughlin Lee Ann PruskeBeth Schefelker Mary MooneyRosann Hollinger."— Presentation transcript:

1 MTL Meeting December 6, 2011 Hank KepnerConnie Laughlin Lee Ann PruskeBeth Schefelker Mary MooneyRosann Hollinger

2 We are learning to  deepen our understanding of ratio.  reflect on teacher moves to probe student thinking.

3  Capture the general tone and substance of an interaction between yourself and a student around the heartbeat problem.  Prepare a short reflection on your conversation to share at December’s meeting.

4  In your triad, use the Wheel of Protocol to share your reflections around your Professional Practice: 3 min/2 min  What did you find in common/unique?  Each table share one commonality or one unique aspect to their conversations.

5 Deepen our understanding of the Standards for Mathematical Practice with a focus on: #1 Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them. #3 Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others. #6 Attend to precision. Develop an understanding of various progressions of mathematics development.

6  use and justify various strategies to solve a ratio/rate problem,  recognize possible teacher moves to uncover student thinking.

7

8  If the small gear turns clockwise, which direction does the big gear turn? Why?  If you turn the small gear a certain number of times, does the big gear turn more revolutions, fewer, or the same amount? How can you tell?

9 You have turned the gears until they have returned to their original position.  How many revolutions does the small gear make?  How many revolutions does the big gear make?  Find a way to keep track of the number of revolutions both gears make until they return to their original position.

10 Students need to make a transition from focusing on only one quantity to realizing that two quantities are important.

11  Some found out that when the small gear turns 5 times, the big gear turns 3 times. What are some other rotation pairs for the gears?

12 Students need to make a transition from making an additive comparison to forming a ratio between two quantities.

13 Think back to Part I: Find a way to keep track of the number of revolutions both gears make until they return to their original position. Form pairs of teacher-student roles. Student explains their thinking while teacher asks probing questions.

14  use and justify various strategies to solve a ratio problem,  recognize and use teacher moves to uncover student thinking.

15 As you reflect on today’s problem and the dialogs between teacher and students, how will you support a teacher in probing students’ thinking?


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