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Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . 1. How did your learning experience prepare you to teach maths? 2. What is going on in classrooms with respect to learning maths from your perspective? 3. Can students learn maths without talking? Support your response. 4. Can students learn maths without real world application? Support your response. Before the January content day please read
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Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach maths ?

Feb 24, 2016

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Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach maths ? What is going on in classrooms with respect to learning maths from your perspective? Can students learn maths without talking? Support your response. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach  maths ?

Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2.

1. How did your learning experience prepare you to teach maths?

2. What is going on in classrooms with respect to learning maths from your perspective?

3. Can students learn maths without talking? Support your response.

4. Can students learn maths without real world application? Support your response.

Before the January content day please read chapter 3 and 4 in What’s MATH Got to do with it?, by Jo Boaler.

Page 2: Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach  maths ?
Page 3: Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach  maths ?

Operations with Fractions

Page 4: Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach  maths ?
Page 5: Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach  maths ?

Operations with FractionsUse pictures, not computation, to solve the following problems. Be prepared to explain your thinking. 1. Sherry is making brownies and has cup of butter. If the

recipe calls for cup of butter, does she have enough to make a batch? If she has enough butter, how much will she have remaining after making one batch of brownies? If she does not have enough butter, how much more will she need?

Page 6: Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach  maths ?

Operations with FractionsUse pictures, not computation, to solve the following problems. Be prepared to explain your thinking. 2. Renae has yards of ribbon to make three bows for

birthday packages. How much ribbon should she use for each bow if she wants to use the same length of ribbon for each?

Page 7: Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach  maths ?
Page 8: Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach  maths ?

Operations with FractionsUse pictures, not computation, to solve the following problems. Be prepared to explain your thinking. 3. Jennifer has a goal of walking 5 miles each week. If she

walked miles on Tuesday and miles on Wednesday, did she meet her goal? If she did not meet her goal, how much more will she need to walk? If she met her goal, by how much did she exceed it?

Page 9: Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach  maths ?

Operations with FractionsUse pictures, not computation, to solve the following problems. Be prepared to explain your thinking. 4. Kevin has chocolate bars to make S’mores. Each

S’more requires three-fourths of a candy bar. How many S’mores will he be able to make? How much of a candy bar is left? How much more of a candy bar does he need to make one more s’more?

Page 10: Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach  maths ?
Page 11: Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach  maths ?

Operations with FractionsUse pictures, not computation, to solve the following problems. Be prepared to explain your thinking. 5. For those of you who don’t know, Hope has an amazing

collection of stuffed bears. She decides to give ALL her bears with red ribbons and some of her bears with blue ribbons to her granddaughter. If she gives of her bears to her granddaughter and the granddaughter discovers that half the bears she received have red ribbons, what fractional part of Hope’s original collection were wearing red ribbons?

Page 12: Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach  maths ?
Page 13: Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach  maths ?

Operations with FractionsUse pictures, not computation, to solve the following problems. Be prepared to explain your thinking. 6. Chris has hours to schedule two meetings. He figures

the Math Task Force meeting will last hours. How much time will remain for the SCMP2 meeting?

Page 14: Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach  maths ?
Page 15: Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach  maths ?

Operations with FractionsIn your groups write your own problems to go with the following expressions:

Page 16: Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach  maths ?
Page 17: Homework reading Chapter 1 and 2 . How did your learning experience prepare you to teach  maths ?

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