Engaging students: Multiplying binomials

In my capstone class for future secondary math teachers, I ask my students to come up with ideas for engaging their students with different topics in the secondary mathematics curriculum. In other words, the point of the assignment was not to devise a full-blown lesson plan on this topic. Instead, I asked my students to think about three different ways of getting their students interested in the topic in the first place.

I plan to share some of the best of these ideas on this blog (after asking my students’ permission, of course).

This student submission comes from my former student Claire McMahon. Her topic, from Algebra I: multiplying binomials like (a+b)(c+d).

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I personally have had the pleasure of teaching this part of Algebra 1 to a freshman high school class.  The greatest part about the lesson was how the students were able to work together to really figure all of them out and better yet, they knew why!  You can use several different versions of BINGO for practically anything in math.  And who doesn’t love to win prizes.  This website in particular has led me to some really great lesson plans and I credit a lot of this blog to a lot of the lesson plans I have personally implemented.  Almost every one of them worked with almost little to no tweaking.  I’m not exactly a huge fan of the FOIL concept so I used BINO instead of Bingo!!  Just like singing the song and insert joke here.  So here is the lesson on Distributive Bingo and how it works.  The basic rundown is you give the students either the polynomial or the already factored binomials and have them solve it one way or the other.  For example, if you are trying to focus more on the factoring and zeros making them go from a polynomial to factoring is good practice.  The other really great thing is you can build scaffolds into the game itself by passing out hint cards or key concepts to help them figure out what they are looking for, similar to a formula sheet.

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One of the great things about the Internet is there is so much information constantly flowing in and out at all times.  YouTube is a great asset when trying to reinforce good study habits and good metacognition.  Most students are very visual and it gives step-by-step instructions on how to do almost anything.  The other key thing is they can pause rewind and replay if necessary.  If you prefer to have a safer environment for your students to browse then you can lean them toward teacher tube, which has all the same resources without the junk videos.  Here is one of the many multiplying videos that show a method similar to a Punnet Square, which is in line with learning genetics and heredity.  They might have already learned this in biology but if not then it’s a great visual representation of a multiplication table and they will learn it again in science.  It’s easy for the students to check their work and for you to see where any misconceptions can arise.

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Algebra tiles are an amazing tool for teaching area models and multiplying binomials.  There are virtual algebra tiles found on the Internet and also many different websites that you can buy a classroom set.   I recommend your students to get used to because they show the value of negative and positive and how multiplying, adding, subtracting or dividing positive and negative integers affects the outcome.  This concept is very important when you are learning to multiply binomials and is often lost or was never present in many student’s previous studies.  You need to make sure that these basic skill benchmarks are met before embarking on an algebra tiles journey.  If you teach the basic rules to play with algebra tiles then you will be set in teaching them multiplication and factoring of binomials and polynomials.  We all love a journey of understanding and this is one of the most awesome tools that students can use to “do math.”

Engaging students: Parabolas

In my capstone class for future secondary math teachers, I ask my students to come up with ideas for engaging their students with different topics in the secondary mathematics curriculum. In other words, the point of the assignment was not to devise a full-blown lesson plan on this topic. Instead, I asked my students to think about three different ways of getting their students interested in the topic in the first place.

I plan to share some of the best of these ideas on this blog (after asking my students’ permission, of course).

This student submission comes from my former student Claire McMahon. Her topic, from Precalculus: parabolas.

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The parabola took a long time to get to us and took a few thinkers to really get the idea down.  This website that I found really nailed the dates and also simplified the rational that led up to the parabola as we know it today.  The history of the parabola is as follows:

The parabola was explored by Menaechmus (380 BC to 320 BC), who was a pupil of Plato and Eudoxus. He was trying to duplicate the cube by finding the side of the cube that has an area double the cube. Instead, Menaechmus solved it by finding the intersection of the two parabolas x2=y and y2=2x. Euclid (325 BC to 265 BC) wrote about the parabola. Apollonius (262 BC to 190 BC) named the parabola. Pappus (290 to 350) considered the focus and directrix of the parabola. Pascal (1623 to 1662) considered the parabola as a projection of a circle. Galileo (1564 to 1642) showed that projectiles falling under uniform gravity follow parabolic paths. Gregory (1638 to 1675) and Newton (1643 to 1727) considered the properties of a parabola.

This really got me to thinking what it really took to figure out the derivation of the formula and even for the graph of the parabola.  I find it interesting that the idea had to travel through seven genius minds to come to all of the properties that the parabola holds to this day.

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This same website led me to another use of the parabola, other than to describe a projectile’s path.  The use of suspension bridges relies heavily on a parabolic model.  Other parabolic models would include the satellite dishes and even all types of lights.  Have you ever thought that every single place that light bulb reflects is a reflection off a point from the focus to the parabola to create your beam of light!!  Pretty cool!!  So you might ask why do I need to know anything about parabolas?  There is your answer; it’s used in everyday life.  Here are a couple of examples from the website that I found interesting:

One of the “real world” applications of parabolas involves the concept of a 3D parabolic reflector in which a parabola is revolved about its axis (the line segment joining the vertex and focus). The shape of car headlights, mirrors in reflecting telescopes, and television and radio antennae (such as the one below) all utilize this property.

Antenna of a Radio Telescope

All incoming rays parallel to the axis of the parabola are reflected through the focus.

Flashlights & Headlights

In terms of a car headlight, this property is used to reflect the light rays emanating from the focus of the parabola (where the actual light bulb is located) in parallel rays.

Here are the specs on the suspension bridge:

Hold up a chain by both ends and you’ll get a curve. What kind of curve is it? You might say it is a parabola – Galileo Galili believed it was a parabola. Yet, Galileo was wrong!!!! That curve is NOT a parabola. It is a catenary.It makes sense that you would think that the curved chain is a parabola. Both the catenary and the parabola have similar properties. Both curves have a single low point. They both have a vertical line of symmetry, they at least appear to be continuous and differentiable throughout, and the slope is steeper as we move away from the low point, but it never becomes vertical.So, how is the curve of the cable in a suspension bridge a parabola? When the structure is being built and the main cables are attached to the towers, the curve is a catenary. But when the cables are attached to the deck with hangers, it is no longer a catenary. The curve of the cables become the curve of a parabola. Unlike the catenary, which is curving under its own weight, the parabola is curving not just under its own weight, but also curving from holding up the weight of the deck. The cable of a suspension bridge is under tension from holding up the bridge.Therefore, the cables of a suspension bridge is a parabola, because the weight of the deck is equally distributed on the curve.

I never really knew that there was a difference between the two and now I know that there are certain properties that made it down through the ages that hold true today.  This was a very enlightening subject matter.

Website used: http://www.carondelet.pvt.k12.ca.us/Family/Math/03210/page2.htm

Engaging students: Completing the square

In my capstone class for future secondary math teachers, I ask my students to come up with ideas for engaging their students with different topics in the secondary mathematics curriculum. In other words, the point of the assignment was not to devise a full-blown lesson plan on this topic. Instead, I asked my students to think about three different ways of getting their students interested in the topic in the first place.

I plan to share some of the best of these ideas on this blog (after asking my students’ permission, of course).

This student submission comes from my former student Claire McMahon. Her topic, from Algebra: completing the square.

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There were a lot of famous mathematicians that contributed to the notion of completing the square.  The first of the mathematicians was that of the Babylonians.  This culture started the notion of not only solving the quadratics but of arithmetic itself.  The Babylonians started with the equations and then proceeded to solve them algebraically.  Back then; they used pre-calculated tables to help them with solving for the roots.  They were basically solving by the quadratic equation at this point.  The man that came along has a very hard name to not only pronounce but to spell, and I will do my best.  I will refer to him as Muhammad from here on out but his full name, or one of the common names to which he is referred is Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi.  He developed the term algorithm, which led to an algorithm for solving quadratic equations, namely completing the square.

The notion of completing the square has gone through a series of transformations throughout the history of mathematics.  As mentioned before the Babylonians started with the notion and increased the knowledge by developing the quadratic formula to find the roots of a given quadratic equation.  This spurred the thought that I can solve any equation and find its solution and roots by completing the square.  Muhammad brought this notion to us, of which was mentioned before.  More specifically the text that he developed was “The Compendious Book of Calculations by Completion and Balancing.”  This book of course has been translated several times over but the general idea is laid out in the title.  Modern mathematicians have developed a less compendious form that is now being taught in the math classes today.  They take on many different forms and can be taught with manipulates as well.

 

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The fabulous part to the story is there are a lot of resources that help the kids of today to deal with this “trick” of the math trade.  There are numerous You Tube videos on the different methods of which show every step along the way with encouraging thoughts.  Another great online resource is any of the math websites.  I find it a little unfair that these resources were not readily available when I was struggling with such concepts.  One of my personal favorites is the PurpleMath.com website.  This website breaks everything down to basically that of a fourth grade level.  They have pictures and fun problems to work out on your own.  My favorite part is that you get your answers checked instantaneously to build the self-confidence and self-efficacy it takes to be a successful student.  These particular websites are great tools for teachers as well, as they have a lot of great examples that can be used in the classroom and different ways that a student might present and calculate a problem.

Engaging students: Measures of the angles in a triangle add to 180 degrees

In my capstone class for future secondary math teachers, I ask my students to come up with ideas for engaging their students with different topics in the secondary mathematics curriculum. In other words, the point of the assignment was not to devise a full-blown lesson plan on this topic. Instead, I asked my students to think about three different ways of getting their students interested in the topic in the first place.

I plan to share some of the best of these ideas on this blog (after asking my students’ permission, of course).

This student submission comes from my former student Claire McMahon. Her topic, from Geometry: the proof that the measures of the angles in a triangle add to 180^o.

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One of the hardest concepts in math is learning how to prove something that is already considered to be correct.  One of the more difficult concepts to teach could also be said on how to prove things that you had already believed and accepted in the first place.  One of these concepts happens to be that a triangle’s angles are always going to add up to 180 degrees.  Here is one of the proofs that I found that is absolutely simplistic and most kids will agree with you on it:

triangle1

This particular proof is from the website http://www.mathisfun.com.  This is a great website to simply explain most math concepts and give exercises to practice those math facts.  For the more skeptical student, you can use a form of Euclidean and modern fact base to prove this more in depth.  I found this proof on http://www.apronus.com/geometry/triangle.htm.  Here you will see that there is no question as to why the proof above works and how it doesn’t work when you do a proof by contradiction.

triangle3 triangle2

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I stumbled across this awesome website that very simply put into context how easy it would be to prove that a triangle’s angles will always add up to 180 degrees.  In this activity you take the same triangle 3 times and then have them place all three of the angles on a straight line.  This proves that the angles in a triangle will always equal 180 degrees, which is a concept that should have already been taught as a straight line having an “angle” measure of 180. The website for this can be found here: http://www.regentsprep.org/Regents/math/geometry/GP5/TRTri.htm.

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The triangle is the basis for a lot of math.  There is one very important person that really started playing with the idea of a triangle and how 3 straight lines that close to form a figure has a certain amount of properties and similarities to parallels and other figures like it.  We base a whole unit on special right triangles in geometry in high school and never know exactly where the term right angle is derived.  This man that made the right angle so important in math is none other than Euclid himself.  While Euclid never introduced angle measures, he made it very apparent that 2 right angles are always going to be equal to the interior angles of a triangle.  Not only did Euclid prove this but he did so in a way that relates to all types of triangles and their similar counterparts using only a straight edge and a compass, pretty impressive!!

Engaging students: The field axioms

In my capstone class for future secondary math teachers, I ask my students to come up with ideas for engaging their students with different topics in the secondary mathematics curriculum. In other words, the point of the assignment was not to devise a full-blown lesson plan on this topic. Instead, I asked my students to think about three different ways of getting their students interested in the topic in the first place.

I plan to share some of the best of these ideas on this blog (after asking my students’ permission, of course).

This student submission again comes from my former student Maranda Edmonson. Her topic, from Pre-Algebra: the field axioms of arithmetic (the distributive law, the commutativity and associativity of addition and multiplication, etc.).

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B. Curriculum: How can this topic be used in your students’ future courses in mathematics or science?

It is safe to say that the field axioms are used in all mathematics classes once they are introduced. As students, we know them to be rules for how to simplify or expand expressions, solving equations, or just manipulating numbers and expressions. As instructors, we know them to be a solid foundation for further mathematical understanding. “In mathematics or logic, [an axiom is] an unprovable rule or first principle accepted to be true because it is self-evident or particularly useful” (Merriam-Webster.com). Is the distributive property not useful? Isn’t the associative property self-evident? We learn these axioms, master them during the first lesson we encounter them, and they stick with us. Why? Because they are obvious “rules” that we use and apply to all aspects of mathematics. They are a foundation on which we, as instructors, wish to build upon a greater mathematical understanding.

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B. Curriculum: How does this idea extend what your students should have learned in previous courses?

When students first begin to learn addition they are learning the associative property as well. Think about it – when kids learn about the expanded form of a number, they are already seeing that when you add more than two numbers together they equal the same thing, no matter what order they are being added in. For example:

1,458 = 1,000 + 400 + 50 + 8 = (1,000 + 400) + (50 + 8) = (1,000 + 50) + (400 + 8)

and so on. Kids tend to add numbers in the order that they are given. However, when they start learning little tricks (say, their tens facts), then they will start seeing how the numbers work together. For example: 3 + 4 + 7 soon becomes (3 + 7) + 4. Then, when students get into higher grades and begin learning multiplication, the commutative property becomes a real focus. When they are learning their multiplication facts, students are faced with $5 \times 7$ one minute, then 7 \times 5 the next. They start seeing that it does not matter what order the numbers are in, but that when two numbers are being multiplied together, they will equal the same product each time.

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E. Technology: How can technology be used to effectively engage students with this topic?

Math and music are always a good combination. Honestly, who doesn’t hum “Pop! Goes the Weasel” every time they need to use the quadratic formula? This YouTube video (the link is below) is of some students singing a song about the associative, commutative and distributive properties. The video is difficult to hear unless you turn the volume up, and the quality is not the greatest. However, the students in the video get the point across about what the axioms are and that they only apply to addition and multiplication.  Note that you only need to watch the first three minutes of the video. The last minute and a half or so is irrelevant to the axioms themselves.

Engaging students: Order of operations

In my capstone class for future secondary math teachers, I ask my students to come up with ideas for engaging their students with different topics in the secondary mathematics curriculum. In other words, the point of the assignment was not to devise a full-blown lesson plan on this topic. Instead, I asked my students to think about three different ways of getting their students interested in the topic in the first place.

I plan to share some of the best of these ideas on this blog (after asking my students’ permission, of course).

This student submission comes from my former student Alyssa Dalling. Her topic, from Pre-Algebra: order of operations.

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C. How has this topic appeared in pop culture (movies, TV, current music, video games, etc.)?

Hannah Montana is a Disney series that aired from 2006-2011. On this episode titled “Sleepwalk This Way”, Miley’s dad writes her a new song which she reads and doesn’t like. She decides to keep her dislike of the new song to herself causing her to start sleepwalking. In order to not tell her dad what she thinks of the song while sleepwalking, Miley stops sleeping which causes her many problems. One such problem occurs when Miley gets dressed in the wrong order causing her to get an unwanted result.

I would start out the class by showing the first 46 seconds of this Hannah Montana scene. (Editor’s note: Trust me, this is hilarious.) This scene is perfect for the engage because it is a way to relate the order of operations to getting dressed. After watching the scene, the teacher would explain that just like getting dressed in the proper order is important, the order of operations when doing math is as well. The students would learn PEMDAS (parenthesis, exponents, multiplication, division, addition, and subtraction) and try different problems to get them better acquainted with the concept.

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B. How can this topic be used in your students’ future courses in mathematics or science?

The order of operations will be used in almost every math class following Pre-Algebra. One example is in Algebra II when students start working with problems involving simplifying numbers and multiple variables. One example is

\left( \displaystyle \frac{18a^{4x} b^2}{-6 a^x b^5} \right)^3

Start out the class by asking students how the order of operations says to answer this question.  Most students will follow method two below. Upon completion of this lesson, students will learn multiple methods of problem solving which expand their previous knowledge of order of operations.

The first method students can use is to raise the numerator and denominator to the third power before simplifying. By raising each variable to the third power, no rules in the order of operations will be broken showing the student there is more than one way to use the order of operations. (Reference Method One below).

The method most students will originally think of is simplifying the fraction before raising it to the third power. The student would follow their previous knowledge of PEMDAS in order to simplify the equation to the reduced form. (Reference Method Two below). In either case, the students will see that the solution can be found by using a variety of different means that all fall under the order of operations.

Method One:

Alyssa_order1

Method Two:

Alyssa_order2

Resources: http://www.glencoe.com/sec/math/algebra/algebra2/algebra2_05/extra_examples/chapter5/lesson5_1.pdf

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B. How can this topic be used in your students’ future courses in mathematics or science?

An understanding of the order of operations is relied upon in Calculus as well. One application is when learning the chain rule. The following YouTube video does a fun job at explaining the chain rule by using a catchy song. The students are able to learn the rule and see examples that they can use to help them with this concept. Start it at 1:32 and end it at 2:10 (shown below).

The chain rule is used to find the derivative of the composition of two functions. So if f and g are functions, then the derivative of f(g(x)) can be found using the chain rule. Using the example F(x) = (x^3+5x)^2 , the chain rule states that the derivative will be F'(x) = f'(z) g'(x). Following this definition, the student finds the derivative to be 2(x^3+5x)(3x^2+5) . This is where the order of operations comes in. The student must use their previously acquired skills from Pre-Algebra as well as Algebra II to simplify the expression. From their previously acquired knowledge, the student would know they would have to multiply the 2 by each expression in f'(z). Also, if a question asked the student to find the derivative when x=3, the student would have to use their knowledge of the order of operations to find the solution after applying the chain rule.

Resources: http://archives.math.utk.edu/visual.calculus/2/chain_rule.4/index.html

 

Engaging students: Finding x- and y-intercepts

In my capstone class for future secondary math teachers, I ask my students to come up with ideas for engaging their students with different topics in the secondary mathematics curriculum. In other words, the point of the assignment was not to devise a full-blown lesson plan on this topic. Instead, I asked my students to think about three different ways of getting their students interested in the topic in the first place.

I plan to share some of the best of these ideas on this blog (after asking my students’ permission, of course).

This student submission again comes from my former student Maranda Edmonson. Her topic, from Algebra: finding x- and y-intercepts. Unlike most student submissions, Maranda’s idea answers three different questions at once.

green lineApplications: How could you as a teacher create an activity or project that involves your topic?

Culture: How has this topic appeared in pop culture (movies, TV, current music, video games, etc.)?

Technology: How can technology be used to effectively engage students with this topic?

This link is to a reflection by a mathematics teacher who used the popular TV show “The Big Bang Theory” to teach linear functions. She taught this lesson prior to teaching students about finding y-intercepts of linear functions, but it can be adapted in order to teach how to find the intercepts themselves.

ENGAGE:

One thing I would not change would be to show the students the above clip of the show where Howard and Sheldon are heatedly discussing crickets at the beginning of the activity. By showing the video at the beginning, students will be engaged and want to figure out what will be done throughout the lesson. Being a clip of a popular show that many probably watch during the week, students will be even more engaged and interested since they are able to watch something that they are already familiar with. Being something that they are already familiar with or can relate to, students have a tendency to remember the material or at least the topic longer than they would remember something that they were unfamiliar with or could not relate.

In the clip, Sheldon argues that the cricket the guys hear while eating dinner is a snowy tree cricket based on the temperature of the room and the frequency of chirps; Howard argues that it is an ordinary field cricket.  The beginning of their discussion is as follows:

Sheldon: “Based on the number of chirps per minute, and the ambient temperature in this room, it is a snowy tree cricket.”

Howard: “Oh, give me a frickin’ break. How could you possibly know that?”

Sheldon: “In 1890, Amos Dolbear determined that there was a fixed relationship between the number of chirps per minute of the snowy tree cricket and the ambient temperature – a precise relationship that is not present with ordinary field crickets.”

The whole episode revolves around the guys finding the exact genus and species of the cricket, but that is not the importance here. The importance of this clip is the linear relationship between the temperature and the number of chirps per minute of the cricket, which the activity should then be centered around.

EXPLORE:

After showing the short clip, it could be beneficial to show students the Wikipedia link that discusses Dolbear’s Law. Toward the bottom of the page, the relationship is written out in several formats, but there is a basic linear function that students could focus on for the activity.

Assuming students know how to graph linear functions (as stated above, the link is for a lesson the teacher taught before teaching students about y-intercepts), I would have students graph Dolbear’s Law on a piece of graph paper. The challenge would be for students to find out what happens when there are variations to the number of chirps of the cricket, the temperature or both to see how the graph changes – specifically where the graph crosses each axis.

 EXPLAIN/ELABORATE/EVALUATE:

At this point, students should be able to state what changes they noticed with the graph – specifically where the graph crossed the axes as changes are made to the function. After they have explained what they found, fill in any gaps and correct vocabulary as needed. Basically, teach what little there is left for the lesson. Follow-up by providing extra examples or a worksheet for students to practice before giving them a quiz or test to assess their performance.

Engaging students: Deriving the Pythagorean theorem

In my capstone class for future secondary math teachers, I ask my students to come up with ideas for engaging their students with different topics in the secondary mathematics curriculum. In other words, the point of the assignment was not to devise a full-blown lesson plan on this topic. Instead, I asked my students to think about three different ways of getting their students interested in the topic in the first place.

I plan to share some of the best of these ideas on this blog (after asking my students’ permission, of course).

This student submission again comes from my former student Maranda Edmonson. Her topic, from Geometry: deriving the Pythagorean theorem.

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D. History: What are the contributions of various cultures to this topic?

Legend has it that Pythagoras was so happy about the discovery of his most famous theorem that he offered a sacrifice of oxen. His theorem states that “the area of the square built upon the hypotenuse of a right triangle is equal to the sum of the areas of the squares upon the remaining sides.” It is likely, though, that the ancient Babylonians and Egyptians knew the result much earlier than Pythagoras, but it is uncertain how they originally demonstrated the proof. As for the Greeks, it is likely that methods similar to Euclid’s Elements were used. Also, though there are many proofs of the Pythagorean Theorem, one came from the contemporary Chinese civilization found in the Arithmetic Classic of the Gnoman and the Circular Paths of Heaven, a Chinese text containing formal mathematical theories.

http://jwilson.coe.uga.edu/emt669/student.folders/morris.stephanie/emt.669/essay.1/pythagorean.html

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E. Technology: How can technology be used to effectively engage students with this topic?

The following link is for a video that not only engages students from the very beginning by playing the Mission: Impossible theme and giving students a mission – “should they choose to accept it” – but that has great information. It begins with a short engagement, as stated before, and goes into a little bit of history about Pythagoras and the Pythagoreans. It then briefly describes what the Pythagorean Theorem is before the commentator says, “Does it have applications in our lives today?” At this point (2:43 in the video), it would be beneficial to stop the video and let students discuss where they could use the theorem. The rest of the video simply shows some examples of how the Pythagorean Theorem is used on sailboats, inclined planes, and televisions. It would be up to the teacher whether or not to show the last five minutes of the video to show students these examples, but they could take notes on these examples as they are worked out on the screen.

http://digitalstorytelling.coe.uh.edu/movie_mathematics_02.html

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B. Applications: How can this topic be used in your students’ future courses in mathematics or science?

After students learn the Pythagorean Theorem in their Geometry classes, they will use it throughout their mathematical careers. They will use it specifically in Pre-Calculus when they are learning about the unit circle. The theorem is fundamental to proving the basic identities in Trigonometry. It is also used in some of the trigonometric identities, aptly named the Pythagorean Identities based on the nature of their derivation.

In Physics, the kinetic energy of an object is

\displaystyle \frac{1}{2} (\hbox{mass})(\hbox{velocity})^2.

But, in terms of energy, energy at 500 mph = energy at 300 mph + energy at 400 mph. This equation means that, with the energy used to accelerate something at 500 mph, two other objects could use that same energy to be accelerated to 300 mph and 400 mph. Looks like a Pythagorean triple, right? The theorem is also used in Computer Science with processing time. Other examples are found in the link below.

http://betterexplained.com/articles/surprising-uses-of-the-pythagorean-theorem/

Factoring the time

factoring_the_time

True story: one way that I commit large numbers to (hopefully) short-term memory is by factoring. If I take the time to factor a big number, then I can usually remember it for a little while.

This approach has occasional disadvantages. For example, I now have stuck in my brain the completely useless information that, many years ago, my seat at a Texas Rangers ballgame was somewhere in Section 336 (which is 6 \times 7 \times 8).

Source: http://www.xkcd.com/247/

Engaging students: Introducing variables and expressions

In my capstone class for future secondary math teachers, I ask my students to come up with ideas for engaging their students with different topics in the secondary mathematics curriculum. In other words, the point of the assignment was not to devise a full-blown lesson plan on this topic. Instead, I asked my students to think about three different ways of getting their students interested in the topic in the first place.

I plan to share some of the best of these ideas on this blog (after asking my students’ permission, of course).

This student submission again comes from my former student Caitlin Kirk. Her topic, from Pre-Algebra: introducing variables and expressions.

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To keep track of some of the coldest things in the universe, scientist use the Kelvin temperature scale that begins at 0 Kelvin, or Absolute Zero. Nothing can ever be colder than Absolute Zero because at this temperature, all motion stops. The table below shows some typical temperatures of different systems in the universe.

Table of Cold Places

Temp.(K)

Location

 183

Vostok, Antarctica

160

Phobos- a moon of Mars

128

Europa in the summer

120

Moon at night

88

Miranda surface temp.

81

Enceladus in the summer

70

Mercury at night

55

Pluto in the summertime

50

Dwarf Planet Quaoar

33

Pluto in the wintertime

1

Boomerang Nebula

0

ABSOLUTE ZERO

You are probably already familiar with the Celsius (C) and Fahrenheit (F) temperature scales. The two formulas below show how to switch from degrees-C to degrees-F.

C = \frac{5}{9} (F-32)

F = \frac{9}{5} C + 32

Because the Kelvin scale is related to the Celsius scale, we can also convert from Celsius to Kelvin (K) using the equation:

K = 273 + C

Problems

Use these three equations to convert between the three temperature scales:

Problem 1: 212 F converted to K

Problem 2: 0 K converted to F

Problem 3: 100 C converted to K

Problem 4: Two scientists measure the daytime temperature of the moon using two different instruments. The first instrument gives a reading of +107 C while the second instrument gives +221 F.

a. What are the equivalent temperatures on the Kelvin scale?

b. What is the average daytime temperature on the Kelvin scale?

Problem 5: Humans can survive without protective clothing in temperatures ranging from 0 F to 130 F. In what, if any, locations from the table above can humans survive?

Solutions

Problem 1: First convert to C:  C = 5/9 (212-32) = +100 C. Then convert from C to K: K = 273 + 100 = 373 Kelvin.

Problem 2: First convert to Celsius:    0 = 273 + C so C = -273. Then convert from C to F: F = 9/5 (-273) + 32 = -459 Fahrenheit.

Problem 3: K = 273 – 100 = 173 Kelvin.

Problem 4:

a. 107 C becomes K = 273 + 107 = 380 Kelvin.  221 F becomes C = 5/9(221-32) = 105 C, and so K = 273 + 105 = 378 Kelvin.

b. (380 + 378)/2 = 379 Kelvin

Problem 5:

First convert 0 F and 130 F to Celsius so that the conversion to Kelvin is quicker. 0 F becomes C = 5/9(0-32) = -18 C (rounded to the nearest degree) and 130 F becomes C = 5/9 (130-32) = 54 C (rounded to the nearest degree).

Next, convert -18 C and 54 C to Kelvin. -18 C becomes K = 273-18 = 255 and 54 C becomes k = 273 + 54 = 327 K.

None of the locations on the table have temperatures between 255 K and 327 K, therefore humans could not survive in any of these space locations.

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A. How can this topic be used in your students’ future courses in mathematics or science?

This topic is one of the first experiences students have with algebra. Since algebra is the point from which students dive into more advanced mathematics, this topic will be used in many different areas of future mathematics. After mastering the use of one variable, with the basic operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division, students will be introduced to the use of more than one variable. They may be asked to calculate the area of a solid whose perimeter is given and whose side lengths are unknown variables. Or in a more advanced setting, they may be asked to calculate how much money will be in a bank account after five years of interest compounded continuously. In fact, the use of variables is present and important in every mathematics class from Algebra I through Calculus and beyond. There very well may never be a day in a mathematics students’ life where they will not see a variable after variables have been introduced.

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B.  How does this topic extend what your students should have learned in previous courses?

 In basic arithmetic, probably in elementary or early middle school math classes, students learn how to do calculations with numbers using the four basic operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication and division. They also learn simple applications of these basic operations by calculating the area and perimeter of a rectangle, for example. Introducing variables and expressions is a continuation of those same ideas except that one or more of the numbers is now an unknown variable. Students can rely on the arithmetic skills they already possess when learning this introduction to algebra with variables and expressions.

Students are familiar with calculating the area and perimeter of figures like the one on the left before they are introduced to variables. Later, they may see the same figure with the addition of a variable, as shown on the right. The addition of the variable will come with new instructions as well.

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The difficulty of problems using variables is determined by the information given in the problems. For instance, the problem on the right can be a one step equation if an area and perimeter are given so that students only need to solve for w. The difficulty can be increased by giving only a perimeter so that students must solve for w and then for the area.