1 / 17

Welcome to MATH 302A

Welcome to MATH 302A. Please find the index card with your name on it and sit there. On the other side of the index card, write: Name as you wish to be called Where you are from Year at UA Teaching interests Other interests.

kanan
Télécharger la présentation

Welcome to MATH 302A

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Welcome to MATH 302A Please find the index card with your name on it and sit there. On the other side of the index card, write: Name as you wish to be called Where you are from Year at UA Teaching interests Other interests

  2. Principles and Standards of School Mathematics (NCTM, 2000) • Website: http://www.nctm.org/standards/ • Five process standards: problem solving reasoning and proof communication connections representations

  3. Exploration 1.1 • With 25 people in class, including yourself, if each person shakes hands with every person, how many handshakes will there be?

  4. General Solution • How many handshakes will there be in a group of n people, if everyone shakes each other person’s hand once?

  5. How to Solve a Problem • Read--understand EVERY ASPECT of the problem. What is given, what is to be found, what can be assumed, what should not be assumed, all vocabulary, what the final answer should look like, etc. • Plan--ways to get at the final answer • Find the answer. • Check and extend.

  6. Solve this problem Pretend that you do not know algebra. A school play charges $2 for students and $5 for adults. For the three days of the play, 20 tickets were sold and $85 was raised. How many student tickets were sold?

  7. Using random trial and error

  8. Guess-check-revise • Organized trial and error.

  9. Make a diagram • Use pictures to clarify and help solve the problem.

  10. Organizing the information in a table

  11. Use algebra There are 20 tickets total. Let a represent the number of adult tickets and s represent the number of student tickets. Then, a + s = 20 because the sum of the number of adult and student tickets is 20. Since each adult ticket costs $5, all of the adult tickets sold have a value of 5a. And, since each student ticket costs $2, all of the student tickets have a value of 2s. The total value is $85, so 5a + 2s = 85. The number of adult tickets is 20 – s. Substitute this value into the second equation to find the value of s. 5(20 – s) + 2s = 85. Show and explain the algebra steps. Answer the question in the problem. There were 15 adult tickets and 5 student tickets sold for the play.

  12. Warm up • Use four 4s and the arithmetic operations (+, -, x, ÷) plus grouping symbols to create each of the counting numbers from 0 to 10. • Use exactly four 4s for each number.

  13. Problem Solving Strategies • Guess and check • Work backwards • Solve a simpler problem • Draw a picture • Solve a similar problem • Make a table • Draw a diagram • Make a graph • Find a pattern • Write an equation • Find a counter-example • Estimate • Solve by induction • Act it out • Organized List (Proof by exhaustion) • Other?

  14. Things to Remember • Explain what you did. • Explain why you did it. • Be sure you check to see that the answer does really answer the question asked. • Check to make sure you have not made arithmetic errors.

  15. 10 13 7 Exploration 1.7 • This problem explores both representations and connections. • Put

  16. More Patterns Try to figure out the next number in the sequence--explain how you got it in words that a 3rd grader would understand. • 1, 3, 6, 10, … • 1, 4, 9, 16, … • 2, 4, 8, 16, … • 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, …

  17. Exploration 1.4 Problem 1Darts • We will start this in class, and you will finish it for homework. The purpose of this exploration is to focus on having a solution strategy, instead of trying random things. • Instead, we will try to think of strategies that work for solving different problems.

More Related