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Teaching Middle School Mathematics Fractions, decimals and percentages Ratios, rates and proportions Work out the problem on your card, then find 3 other people who have the same number as you do. Sit with them to work a collaborative problem.

Teaching Middle School Mathematics

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Teaching Middle School Mathematics. Fractions, decimals and percentages Ratios, rates and proportions Work out the problem on your card, then find 3 other people who have the same number as you do. Sit with them to work a collaborative problem. Goals for the four sessions. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Teaching Middle School MathematicsFractions, decimals and percentagesRatios, rates and proportions

Work out the problem on your card, then find 3 other people who have the same number as you do.Sit with them to work a collaborative problem.

Page 2: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Goals for the four sessionsIdentify tasks and activities that are

effective for teaching the content of each session

Use visual representations and the concrete-representational-abstract approach to enhance students’ understanding of the content of each session

Identify mathematical language and develop its use in students

Page 3: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Use mathematical discourse to promote engagement and deep processing

Provide tasks that promote student engagement and mathematical reasoning within the content of each session

Assess students’ understanding and proficiency in order to provide useful feedback and make needed changes to instruction

Page 4: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Common Core for fractionsRead through each standard,

marking “solve word problems” and “use visual fraction models”

Match each problem to a standard

Anything surprise you about the CCSS?

Page 5: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Common Core StandardsComponents of Mathematical Proficiency1. Conceptual understanding2. Procedural skill and fluency3. Application

Page 6: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Adding or subtracting fractionsConceptual understanding

Apples and Oranges

(same size pieces of the whole)

Page 7: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Procedural Skill and Fluency

Page 8: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

ApplicationA pitcher contains pints of orange juice. After you pour of a pint into a glass, how much is left in the pitcher?

5.4 – 3.25 =

Page 9: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Learning Progression within Conceptual Understanding

Concrete - Representational - Abstract

Objects Pictures Symbols

+ Use fraction circles, bars or pattern blocks.

Draw the essential insight that allows students to add fractions of different size pieces.

+ = ? becomes + =

Read “The Role of Representations…” p. 494. Find a “Golden Sentence”.

Page 10: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Multiplying fractions1. Conceptual Understanding2. Procedural Skill 3. Application

Conceptual Understanding

Procedural Skill Application

Page 11: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Learning Progression within Conceptual Understanding

Concrete - Representational - Abstract

Objects Pictures Symbols

4 x Make 4 equal groups, add them.

Draw this on a number line.

Notice that the size of the fraction pieces stay the same. We’re only multiplying the numerator times the number of groups: 4 x 2 = 8. 4 x 2/5 = 8/5

Page 12: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Learning Progression within Conceptual Understanding

Concrete - Representational - Abstract

Objects Pictures Symbols

x Make ½ of a group. Read the multiplication as of .

Bar model:

Area model:

NLVM.usu.edu

The area model shows that we made pieces of a new size – tenths. The multiplication results in 2 tenths. Notice that this is the result of multiplying the numerators (as in the earlier example) and the denominators.

See pp. 23-25

Page 13: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Learning Progression within Procedural Skill

Acquisition - Fluency - Generalization C-R-A

Practice*Extensions

* Guided practice with feedback is critical

Page 14: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

One extensionGeneralize this process to multiplication involving mixed numbers.

Draw a visual fraction model.Connect to the procedure.

Fun problems: If the rectangle has a value of , show 1.

Page 15: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Learning Progression within ApplicationNear Transfer – obvious connection to previous problems to establish the “type”Far Transfer – problem-solving skills are required:

1. What “type” of problem is this?2. What do I know that I can use? (KWL)3. Is there a drawing or chart that will

help?4. Other problem-solving strategies

Page 16: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

3/4 of a pan of brownies was sitting on the counter. You decided to eat 1/3 of the brownies in the pan. How much of the whole pan of brownies did you eat?

A cake mix uses 2 cups of flour. You want to make 1 recipes of this cake. How much flour do you need?

Page 17: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Learning ProgressionsThe Common Core gradually increases complication of working with fractions.The Operations with Fractions packet steps students through these learning progressions carefully and systematically.

Page 18: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Interlude… Alternate Algorithms6 )234 -120 20 114 -60 10 54 -30 5 24 -24 4 0 39

Fluently divide multi-digit numbers using the standard algorithm. 6.NS.2 This type of division is called

repeated subtraction

Page 19: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

“When I reflect on this past unit, I think that learning the alternate algorithms was extremely helpful for me. I chose the scaffolding algorithm as my algorithm of choice for a good reason. Growing up through elementary school, middle school, and high school, I always struggled with long division. I never really got the grasp of an algorithm that made sense to me.”

Page 20: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

“This scaffolding method has made long division unbelievably easier for me. I finally understand how to solve those problems and can do them on my own now. I originally was taught how to carry the one and cross out certain numbers. But really I had no idea what my teacher was talking about. This scaffolding method not only helps me with my long division, but it also helps me with my multiplication tables, as well as adding. This scaffolding method will stay with me forever, and I truly do believe I will use this for the rest of my life.”

Page 21: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

This type of division is called fair shares, or partitioning

Page 22: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Partial Products Algorithm

How would this work for 2.3 x 1.8?

Page 23: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

So what about fraction division?One serving (1/2 cup) of broccoli

contains 47 mg of calcium. Kids ages 9-18 need to get 1300 mg of calcium daily to build strong bones. How many cups of broccoli would this be?

See the Acquisition-Fluency-Generalization scheme for division

Page 24: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Two types of divisionPartitive (fair shares)We want to share 12 cookies

equally among 4 kids. How many cookies does each kid get?

How would you solve this with objects?

The number of groups is known; the number in each group is unknown.

Page 25: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Measurement (repeated subtraction)

For our bake sale, we have 12 cookies and want to make bags with 2 cookies in each bag. How many bags can we make?

How would you solve this with objects?

The number in each group is known; the number of groups is unknown.

Page 26: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Why is this important?A box of Cheerios contains 12

cups. Each serving is cups. How many servings are in a box of Cheerios? How much is left over?

Partitive or Measurement division?

Write 3 additional problems like these.

Page 27: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Dividing a fraction by a whole numberWe have ½ of a pizza and want

to share it equally among 4 people. How much pizza does each person get?

Try this with fraction manipulatives.

What’s a procedure?

Page 28: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Dividing a whole number by a fractionWe have a dozen large cookies

and want to give ½ cookie to each child. How many children can we serve?

(How many times does ½ go into 12?)

What’s a procedure?

Page 29: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Dividing a fraction by a fractionA serving size is ¼ cup. How

many servings are in 5/4 cup?Solve it. Write it as an equation.

How many ¼’s are in 5/4?This is the same as asking “How

many 1’s are in 5?” Procedure: Get common denominators.

Page 30: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Dividing a fraction by a fractionCheerios problem – solved by

mental math or a drawing (C-R-A)Translated to symbols Procedure? Find common

denominators... then ask “how many 3’s in 50?”Write two more similar problems

to solve with common denominators. What about “invert and multiply?”

Page 31: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

See pp. 29-34 in Operations with Fractions for an instructional approach.

Why “invert and multiply” works: = = The last step is justified by

recognizing that if we multiply both numbers in a division problem (i.e. in a fraction) by a constant, we get an equivalent problem.

Page 32: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Decimals

2.3 x 1.8

Page 33: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

A generalization from multiplying fractions: Multiplying decimalsUnderstanding-Skill-ApplicationC-R-AA-F-GThink-Pair-Share Poster2.3 x 1.8

See the decimals and percents assessment

Page 34: Teaching Middle School Mathematics

Why do we “count decimal places?” 2.3x 1.8 .2 41.61.32 5.1 4

Yellow 2 x 1Orange 0.3 x 1Blue 2 x 0.8Green 0.3 x 0.8

2.3

1.8Decimals Forever!