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Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario Intermediate / Senior Mathematics Winter 2011 SESSION 11 – Feb 2, 2011

Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

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Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario. Intermediate / Senior Mathematics Winter 2011 SESSION 11 – Feb 2, 2011. Practicum. Practicum. Practicum. Practicum. What Can We Learn From TIMSS? Problem-Solving Lesson Design. BEFORE (ACTIVATING PROBLEM 10 min) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in

OntarioIntermediate / Senior Mathematics Winter 2011SESSION 11 – Feb 2, 2011

Page 2: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

Practicum

Page 3: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

Practicum

Page 4: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

Practicum

Page 5: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

Practicum

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What Can We Learn From TIMSS?Problem-Solving Lesson Design

BEFORE (ACTIVATING PROBLEM 10 min) • Activating prior knowledge; discussing previous days’

methods to solve a current day problemDURING (LESSON PROBLEM 20 min) • Presenting and understanding the lesson problem • Students working individually or in groups to solve a

problem• Students discussing solution methodsAFTER (CONSOLIDATION the REAL teaching 30 min) • Teacher coordinating discussion of the methods (accuracy,

efficiency, generalizability)• Teacher highlighting and summarizing key points• Individual student practise

(Stigler & Hiebert, 1999)

Page 7: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

Compare your solutions. How are they similar? How are they different?

There are 36 children on school bus.There are 8 more boys than girls.How many boys? How many girls?

a) Solve this problem in 2 different ways. b) Show your work. Use a number line, square grid, picture,

graphic representation, table of values, algebraic expression

c) Explain your solutions. 1st numeric; 2nd algebraic

Bus Problem

Page 8: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

There are 36 children on school bus.There are 8 more boys than girls.How many boys? How many girls?

a) Solve this problem in 2 different ways. b) Show your work.c) Explain your solutions using one or more operations.

What’s the Mathematical Relationship to the Previous Problem? …. Knowing MfT

Page 9: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

Did you use this mathematical approach?

(Takahashi, 2003)

Page 10: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

(Takahashi, 2003)

Did you use this mathematical approach?

Page 11: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

Did you use this mathematical approach?

(Takahashi, 2003)

Page 12: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

(Takahashi, 2003)

Did you use this mathematical approach?

Page 13: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

(Takahashi, 2003)

Did you use this mathematical approach?

Page 14: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

How are these algebraic solutions related to the other solutions? … Knowing Math on the Horizon

(Takahashi, 2003)

Page 15: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

Which order would these solutions be shared for learning? Why? ... Knowing MfT

(Takahashi, 2003)

Page 16: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

See WIKI

Return to ML Kestell

Page 17: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

Growing Success: Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario Schools. 2010

Page 18: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

Seven Fundamental Principles – What do they mean for Mathematics Education?

Work with a partner and complete this form. Be specific about mathematics tools and strategies.

Page 19: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

Assessment and Evaluation

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Success Criteria based on Expectations

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Assessment for and as Learning

On the WIKI: Instructional Strategies TIPS for Teachers

Page 22: Practicum, Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting in Ontario

Mental Math• Addition (number lines, decomposing and composing)

− 8 + 5− 34 + 78− 392 + 259− 21.87 + 193.38

• Subtraction (number lines, compensation, alternative algorithms)− 32 – 18 − 363 – 149

• Multiplication (area model, lattice, halving and doubling)− 24 x 14− 36 x 17

• Division (subtraction algorithm, splitting)− 93 / 7− 260 / 13