1 / 30

Mathematical Modeling: What it is; What it looks like in the classroom; W hy it is so important

Mathematical Modeling: What it is; What it looks like in the classroom; W hy it is so important. Facilitators: Eric Robinson Teri Calabrese-Gray. Presentation Overview:. What is Mathematical Modeling? Examples of mathematical modeling problems

meagan
Télécharger la présentation

Mathematical Modeling: What it is; What it looks like in the classroom; W hy it is so important

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. Mathematical Modeling: What it is; What it looks like in the classroom;Why it is so important Facilitators: Eric Robinson Teri Calabrese-Gray

  2. Presentation Overview: What is Mathematical Modeling? Examples of mathematical modeling problems Summary: What mathematical modeling isn’t. Why mathematical modeling is so important in school mathematics. EngageNY.org

  3. In the NYSCCLS Mathematical Modeling is: • One of the eight Standards of Practice (that span the grades) • One of the Conceptual Categories that span the high school content areas Why is it both?? EngageNY.org

  4. “Mathematicians are in the habit of dividing the universe into two parts: mathematics, and everything else, that is, the rest of the world, sometimes called “the real world”. People often tend to see the two as independent from one another – nothing could be further from the truth…” --- Henry Pollak EngageNY.org

  5. “When you use mathematics to understand a situation in the real world, and then perhaps use it to take action or even to predict the future, both the real-world situation and the ensuing mathematics are taken seriously.” -- Henry Pollak EngageNY.org

  6. The “practice” “Mathematical modeling begins in the unedited real world, requires problem formulation before problem solving and once the problem is solved, moves back into the real world where the results are considered in their original context. Are the results practical, the answers reasonable, the consequences acceptable? If so, great! If not, take another look at the choices made at the beginning, and try again. This entire process is what’s called mathematical modeling.” -- Henry Pollak EngageNY.org

  7. Warm Up Your grandmother will be arriving at the airport at 6:00 pm. You live 20 miles from the airport. The speed limit is 40 miles per hour. When should you leave to get her? -- Henry Pollak EngageNY.org

  8. Mathematical Model Real World List key features of situation Include assumptions and constraints Simplify the situation Build math model : (strategy, concepts, data,, variables, constants, etc.) Clearly identify situation Pose (well-formed) question Formulate Revise Apply: Do results: make sense? satisfy criteria? Are results sufficient? Compute processdeduce Interpret (Valid) Mathematical results Mathematical Conclusions Real World Conclusions Modeling Paradigm EngageNY.org

  9. Note that the Formulate and Revise components are about “Problem Posing.” Real World connection “Inside Mathematics” EngageNY.org

  10. Interpret: Contextualize mathematical results and see if the model results make sense or works (e.g. if the results satisfies certain criteria). • Revise: • Because the results do not seem to fit what does/would actually happen. • You want to generalize your results thus far and this might affect your modeling approach. • You want to remove some of the simplifying featuresand/or add other features. • OR Validate: You decide this is good, accept the model results and write a report. EngageNY.org

  11. 4. Model with MathematicsMathematically proficient students can apply the mathematics they know to solve problems arising in everyday life, society, and the workplace…. Mathematically proficient students who can apply what they know are comfortable making assumptions and approximations to simplify a complicated situation, realizing that these may need revision later. They are able to identify important quantities in a practical situations…. They can analyze those relationships mathematically to draw conclusions. They routinely interpret their mathematical results in the context of the situation and reflect on whether the results make sense, possibly improving the model if it has not served its purpose. EngageNY.org

  12. The (High School) Conceptual Category Modeling Standards: Modeling is best interpreted not as a collection of isolated topics but rather in relation to other standards. Making mathematical models is a Standard for Mathematical Practice, and specific modeling standards appear throughout the high school standards indicated by a star symbol (★) --NYSCCLS pg. 62 EngageNY.org

  13. Examples of Content standards and modeling: Algebra:Seeing Structure in Expressions A-SSE Interpret the structure of expressions 1. Interpret expressions that represent a quantity in terms of its context.★ Functions Interpreting Functions F-IF Interpret functions that arise in applications in terms of the context. 4. For a function that models a relationship between two quantities, interpret key features of graphs and tables in terms of the quantities. Key features include: intercepts; intervals where the function is increasing, decreasing, positive, or negative; relative maximums and minimums; symmetries; end behavior; and periodicity. ★ EngageNY.org

  14. Standards for Mathematical Practice • Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them. • Reason abstractly and quantitatively. • Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others. • Model with mathematics. • Use appropriate tools strategically. • Attend to precision. • Look for and make use of structure. • Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning. EngageNY.org

  15. Storm Models EngageNY.org

  16. Thanksgiving Table Example: 6th grade https://vimeo.com/46127286 • Questions to consider as you watch the video: • Is the attention to the real world realistic? • Is the modeling question clearly stated? • Is the modeling question phrased in a way that there value to answer in the minds of students? • How does the material in the video fit with the modeling cycle? (Refer to the modeling cycle graphic on the handout.) Specifically, • What work/information/evidence, if any, which is in the video would you put under “formulation?” step in the cycle? Who is providing the information, the teacher or the student? (Refer to the top right box in the graphic.) • What work/information/evidence, if any, would put under the “compute/process/deduce” step in the cycle? (Refer to the lower right box in the graphic) • What work/information/evidence, if any, would you put in the “interpret” step of the cycle? (Refer to the lower left box in the graphic.) • What work/information/evidence would you put in the “revise” step in the cycle? • What content standards are evident in the student activity? Give evidence. • What mathematical practices are evident as students work? Give evidence. EngageNY.org

  17. PISA –Like Assessment Item Rock Concert For a rock concert a rectangular field of size 100 m by 50 m was reserved for the audience. The concert was completely sold out and the field was packed with all the fans standing. Which one of the following is likely to be the best estimate of the total number of people attending the concert? A 2,000 B 5,000 C 20,000 D 50,000 E 100,000 EngageNY.org

  18. Activities: Fun, Fun, Fun • Questions common to all Activities: • Is the attention to the real world realistic? • Is the modeling question clearly stated? • Is the modeling question phrased in a way that there value to answer in the minds of students? • How does the work on the activity fit with the modeling cycle? Be specific. • What content standards are evident in the student activity? Give evidence. • What mathematical practices are evident as students work? Give evidence. • Could you use or modify this problem for the grade level at which you teach? EngageNY.org

  19. “Math Class Needs a Makeover” Speaker: Dan Meyer http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NWUFjb8w9Ps Question to consider while watching: What is the role of mathematical modeling in the suggested “makeover?” EngageNY.org

  20. Summary regarding what mathematical modeling is. (a) Problems in which both the real world and mathematics are taken seriously. With modeling problems, student need to think about both the real world and the mathematics. (b) Modeling is about problem posing as well as problem solving. (c) Modeling is often open-ended requiring decisions about what assumptions, information and simplifications are to be included. Different models of some problems are viable. (e) Solutions to modeling problems usually suggest actions or predictions. EngageNY.org

  21. And maybe most importantly: (f) The practice of modeling includes a multi-step process: Formulating the problem, building the mathematical model, processing the mathematics, interpreting the conclusions, and often revising the model before writing a report. EngageNY.org

  22. What Mathematical Modeling is not. Just a fancy name for traditional textbook applications. (b) An incidental context for the teaching of the decontextualized “mathematics.” (c) Accomplished by simply “covering” the NYSCCLS content standards that are marked with a . A learning goal that can be accomplished without student understanding of the modeling cycle. (e) Only possible if you know a lot of complicated math. EngageNY.org

  23. Why mathematical modeling is important. (a) Modeling serves many everyday situations. (b) Some entire careers revolve around a single modeling problem. (c) Eliminates questions regarding “what good is this stuff?” (d) Standards from multiple mathematical domains (and multiple grade levels) can occur together in modeling problems. This serves to make connections between mathematical content. (e) It fosters flexible (mathematical) thinking and use of concepts. (f) Full scale modeling often engages many of the Standards for Mathematical Practice. EngageNY.org

  24. Additional important reasons: (g) Modeling serves as an environment that promotes deeper understanding of concepts. (h) Modeling problems provide context for the application of mathematics students know. In addition, such problems sometimes serve as a context to introduce new concepts in a meaningful way. (i) It is consonant with what we know about student learning. EngageNY.org

  25. Resources mentioned today: Teachers College Mathematical Modeling Handbook, COMAP Inc. 2011 (www.comap.com) Mathematics Modeling Our World (MMOW); COMAP Inc. 2010 - 2012 (www.comap.com) NCTM Reasoning and Sense Making Task Library http://www.nctm.org/rsmtasks/ NCTM Focus on Reasoning and Sense Making series Illustrative Mathematics Project http://www.illustrativemathematics.org/ EngageNY.org

  26. Sample modeling questions: • Where do you put the fire station? (2) • Why do trucks get stuck going under bridges?(4) • Is the testing of pooled blood samples an effective technique for detecting which athletes are using drugs? (2) • When will the Moose population in the Adirondacks reach the right size? (2) • You just won the “Gasoline for Life” prize. Should you take the option of a lump sum of $50,000 instead? (3) • When should you fill the bird feeder? (1) • Can you move that huge sofa around the hallway corner? (1) EngageNY.org

  27. Presentation Take-aways: Answers to: what is Mathematical Modeling? Examples of mathematical modeling problems intended for students that illustrate all or part of the modeling cycle What mathematical modeling isn’t. Why mathematical modeling is so important in school mathematics. EngageNY.org

  28. Mathematical Model Real World List key features of situation Include assumptions and constraints Simplify the situation Build math model : (strategy, concepts, data,, variables, constants, etc.) Clearly identify situation Pose (well-formed) question Formulate Revise Apply: Do results: make sense? satisfy criteria? Are results sufficient? Compute processdeduce Interpret (Valid) Mathematical results Mathematical Conclusions Real World Conclusions Modeling Paradigm EngageNY.org

  29. Framing you own Modeling Cycle Problem(s): Ways to start Create a new modeling cycle problem from an interesting real world question. Make a list of potential contexts for modeling. Make a list of real world questions. Create a modeling cycle problem/activity from a favorite “application.” EngageNY.org

  30. Thank You! EngageNY.org

More Related