The Problem
What is the purpose of
developmental mathematics?
From AMATYC’s
               Beyond Crossroads
The curriculum of developmental mathematics programs should:

0 develop mathematical knowledge and skills so students can
 successfully pursue their career goals, consider other career
 goals, and function as successful citizens.

0 develop students’ study skills and workplace skills to enable
 them to be successful in other courses and in their careers.

0 help students progress through their chosen curriculum as
 quickly as possible.
RVC Developmental Math Redesign
The good:
Consistent, strong pass rates

Students best prepared for
college algebra; significant
improvement long-term

Not lab-based


The not so good:
Same content

Poor retention and application

No options for non-STEM

No improvement in non-STEM
class performance
The Problem: One Size Fits All
0 Does Intermediate Algebra make sense for all students?
  0 Is developmental math just a checklist of skills to master?
  0 Is the Calculus path right for everyone?


0 Could we do something different but just as rigorous?
Looking Forward, Looking Back
 0 Developmental math is not about looking back and
  recreating high school.

 0 Developmental math is about looking forward to
  prepare for college level coursework that the student
  will take.

 0 We shouldn’t let history guide all future decisions.
A Solution: MLCS
A New Course, A Simple Goal
In one semester, Mathematical Literacy for College Students
gives a student at the beginning algebra level the
mathematical maturity to be successful in statistics, liberal
arts math, or intermediate algebra.
Timeline for Change
2009   AMATYC New Life initiative began.

2010   New Life led to the Statway and Quantway (Mathway),
       funded by Carnegie.

2011   19 Carnegie grant schools currently piloting Statway.

2011   Rock Valley College currently piloting MLCS.

2012   8 Carnegie grant schools will pilot MLCS.
Carnegie          AMATYC
           MLCS
Quantway          New Life
Components of MLCS
0 Critical thinking
0 Reading & writing
0 Connections
0 Retention & understanding
0 21st century skills
0 Student success
0 Realistic situations
0 Rigor and high standards

Goal:   Students will have the mathematical maturity and study skills to be
        successful in their first college-level math class.
Using lessons learned through redesign
                                         In-course advising
Cut scores




Intentional
design, assessment, c                          Variety of methods
ontinual
improvement


                        MML, student groups,
                        instructor help
Using research and experience
0 Researched schools, programs, and countries who are
 effectively teaching mathematics (not just algebra)

0 Read and incorporated information on how the brain learns


0 Incorporated lessons learned in our redesign
   0 Training sessions and materials
   0 Advising
   0 Materials
   0 Online resources
   0 Continual Assessment
A New Approach
It is the story that matters not just
the ending.

                          - Paul Lockhart
A New Perspective
0 Using the MLCS objectives, we wanted to build a developmental
  course as we imagined it could be.

0 What would that look like?
  0 Students doing and experiencing mathematics.
  0 Skills are present but as a means to a greater end.
  0 Situations are compelling, interesting, and real.

0 If this student goes to a statistics or general education math
  class, what do we need them to know?

0 Throw out the old conventions and take a new perspective.

              Mathematics is not a checklist; it’s an adventure.
Traditional Approach
0 Theory, then
  applications if time

0 Each strand done




                                                          Proportions
                                              Functions
  separately to



                          Numbers


                                    Algebra
  completion

0 Algebra is primary
  focus

0 Skill based

0 Examples of every
  possible variation of
  skill
  (problem recognition)
New Approach
0 Applications to
  motivate, then theory
  as needed




                                                               Proportions
                                                   Functions
                          Numbers

                                      Algebra
0 Strands addressed
  each unit in an
  integrated fashion
  going deeper each
  time

0 Equal time on each
  strand

0 Concepts-based
                              Undercurrent of geometry, statistics,
0 Fewer skills, more         student success, mathematical success
  connections
Rules of Four: Approaches
0 Content
   0 Numeracy, proportional
     reasoning, algebraic
     reasoning, functions

0 Problem solving (Polya)
   0 Understand-Plan-Do-Look Back
   0 Open-ended problem per unit
   0 Each lesson

0 Representations
   0 Verbal, numeric, algebraic, graphic
Content
The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the
rational mind is a faithful servant. We have
created a society that honors the servant
and has forgotten the gift.

                             - Albert Einstein
Numeracy, then Algebra
0 The premise of using algebra to
 illuminate how numbers work
 doesn’t work. It obscures the            THEME
 point.
                                         Emphasize
                                      units. Numbers
0 Start with numbers and stay there    are quantities.
 for a while. Then generalize when
 it makes sense to.

0 Stay concrete; stay tangible.
Algebraic Reasoning
0 Avoid naked problems (problems
 without context) whenever
 possible.
                                            THEME

0 Use numeric methods until               Judging when
 students want and value the             algebra makes
                                         sense and how
 algebraic method.                           to use it


0 Strive for meaningful situations and
 variables.
Functional Focus
0 Functional relationships occur in
 every unit.

0 We work on numeracy, algebraic             THEME
 reasoning, and proportions all the
 while developing function               Moving between
 understanding.                          tables, graphs, a
  0 Constant vs. variable                  nd equations
                                              fluidly
  0 Independent vs. dependent variable
  0 Input values that make sense


0 We let students see that many
 functions are not linear.
Proportional Reasoning
0 Proportional reasoning is much more than

    “If 1 inch = 5 miles on a map, what does
    7.5 inches equal?”

    and                                           THEME

    “Cross multiply and divide.”               Writing rates
                                               with units and
                                               scaling them
0 It’s a world of fractions, rates, making
  sense of them, and seeing them in multiple
  places in many ways.

0 Ratios and proportions have occurred in
  nearly every lesson.
Choices, Choices
Less emphasis on…         More emphasis on…
 0 Factoring techniques    0 Numeracy
 0 Worst-case scenario     0 Modeling
   expressions and         0 Non-linear
   equations                 functions, particularly
 0 Naked problems            exponential
 0 Repetition              0 Messy, poorly framed
                             problems
What about factoring?
   0 Could not cover all traditional algebra
      content and do real-life problems in any
      depth

   0 Let some traditional topics go in favor of
      more meaningful skills

   0 Specific examples
      0 Factoring GCF only
      0 Build a quadratic function model
      0 Build a rational function model
      0 Develop statistical base from which to build


More advanced topics are addressed at an exposure level from a functions and
numerical perspective. Students can take intermediate algebra if more depth is
needed later.
Intentional Development
  0 Slow and steady
     0 By the time a topic is formalized, students have nearly
       mastered it.


  0 See a topic in multiple ways, multiple times, in multiple
    contexts

  0 Skills, concepts, applications in equal proportion

Example: Slope-intercept form was not introduced until after students had
         numerous experiences generalizing a relationship from a table of data.
A New Perspective
0 We should not act as though these students have
   never seen algebra because most have for years.

0 Instead, we approach content in new ways with a new
   focus:
    0 How does it work?
    0 How can I use this?
    0 When does this technique make sense?


Example: Most of our students could simplify an expression, but could not
         write the expression from a situation.
Is this approach valuable?
0 Adjustment for everyone involved but the payoff is real

0 Doing real mathematics, not just skills
  0 Open-ended problems, tough questions, Excel


0 Gone is the question, “When am I ever going to use this?”

0 Doing college-level work at a slower pace. Not high school
 all over again.

0 Students seem to enjoy and appreciate the realism.
STEM vs. non-STEM
0 Course was built for the non-STEM student


0 Valuable to all students, especially STEM-bound ones


0 Developing scientific literacy
  0 View topics through a math lens
  0 “If you know the rules, you can play the game.”
  0 Examples from chemistry, biology, physics
Seeing Mathematics
Students’ Preconceived Notions
 0 “I already know all this.”

 0 “I shouldn’t be expected to do
   it unless you’ve shown me 10
   examples like it.”

 0 “You should be spelling
   everything out more.”

 0 “I shouldn’t have to work
   more than an hour outside of
   class each week.”
Teachers’ Preconceived Notions
 0 Class is too easy and
   will have high pass
   rates.

 0 Students aren’t learning
   enough algebra and
   won’t be ready for a
   college-level course.

 0 If you’re not doing all
   the algebra, you’ve
   lowered standards.

 0 These students aren’t
   capable of doing real
   problems.
Approaching Content
0 Which skills will students need?


0 Where will they need to apply them?


0 How are these skills connected?
Integers and order of operations
        Before             After

                   Understand
Simplify:          variation, build the
                   standard deviation
                   formula, use it to find
-3 – 2(-6 – 8)     s.d. for a data
                   set, interpret it in
                   context
                              ( x mean)2
                      s
                                 n 1
Evaluating Expressions
      Before                  After

Evaluate:             Program cells in
                      Excel to do a task

3x – 2 when x = - 4
Linear Equations
      Before                     After

Find slope,              Build a cost model for
y-intercept, and         a Kindle and Nook to
graph:                   compare against the
                         cost of a hardcover
                         book. When is each
y = -5x + 6              worth it? Use
                         graphs, equations, an
                         d tables.
                         N=179 + 12.99B
                         K=79 + 12.99B
                         H=35B
Plotting Points to Graph
      Before                               After
                         Build a model. Plot points by
Make a t-table and
                         hand or Excel. Determine
graph a line:
                         shape and analyze.
                             Hours to pay for gallon of gas
                     7

                     6

                     5

                     4

                     3

                     2

                     1

                     0
                         0         10      20       30        40
Geometry
      Before                       After

Find the volume of a       If we overfill a medical
right circular cylinder    measuring cup/spoon
whose height is 4 cm       by 1 mm, which would
and diameter is 2 cm.      produce a greater
                           overdose error?
                           Estimate volume in cc’s
                           and find actual and
                           percentage change.
The Role of Skills
A skill is not introduced until students see a need for it.

Online homework provides skill practice in a traditional
way, with and without context.

Skill questions without context still appear on
assessments to ensure students can perform them.

We spend less time on skills to have more time for
applications.
Attractive Mathematics
Useable
Examples: Biology, business, chemistry

Relevant
Example: Statistics through job figures

Interesting
Examples: Outwit & Outlast, viral videos

Outcome: MOTIVATION
Instruction
Don’t tell me the moon is shining; show
me the glint of light on broken glass.

                          - Anton Chekhov
Show, Don’t Tell
Lesson and Unit Protocol:

0 MOTIVATE: Explore an
  interesting situation or hook

0 DEVELOP: Learn more about it
  through activities, mini-lecture
  (theory) , hands-on activities, etc.

0 CONNECT: Associate concepts
  back and forward

0 REFLECT: Wrap-up topic                 Self-similarity

0 PRACTICE: online for
  skills, paper for concepts &
  applications
Addressing Quantway Goals
Engagement               0 Students actively work on
                           rich problems, both closed
                           and open-ended.
Connections              0 Students make sense of
                           topics in the given setting and
                           others.
Productive persistence   0 Students are allowed to
                          struggle, but assistance is
                          provided when necessary.
Deliberate practice      0 Students complete
                           homework assignments
                           which forge connections and
                           deepen conceptual
                           understanding.
Technology for the                      21st   Century
 0 Mental arithmetic is encouraged
  whenever possible.

 0 Calculators are used when they are
  needed.

 0 Excel is used for analyzing patterns and
  making graphs.
Striking the right balance
Need           Engagement       Frustration
enough
structure to
give
students         Contextual      Theoretical
comfort but
not so much                      Paper HW/By
that it is     Online HW/Tech
                                     hand
monotonous
                Group Work         Lecture


                Open-ended      Single solution
A Look Into MLCS
The Class




Heather working with a group of
students.
                                  Students working together.
The Class
We still have whole class time
and some direct instruction.
What does a lesson
   look like?

Snapshots of a strand
Topic: Solving equations

         Lead up:

         Built expressions and
         equations

         Graphed them

         Solved numerically, with
         Excel, or proportionally

         Need more powerful
         techniques as situations
Packet   grow more complex
Goal:

Understand the
logic of the
equation
solving process
Goal:

Build and
solve 1-step
equations




                 Online
               homework
Statistically
Goal:                   3.10 On the rise     using Pareto
                                             charts, mean, med
Connect 1-step          Read an article      ian, standard
equations to other      about food price     deviation
situations and skills   inflation/package
                        reduction and        Algebraically
                        analyze it 3 ways.   by building and
                                             solving equations
                                             to find original
                                             prices and sizes
                                             Geometrically
                                             by analyzing changes
                                             in
   Online homework &
    paper homework                           dimensions, volume,
                                             and surface area.
3.11 Hands-On Equations

Goal:

Solve 2-step and
multi-step linear
equations

Build approach
to equation
solving




                                          Online
                                        homework
Goal:

Build equations to     3.12
solve in an applied
setting

Connect equation
solving to previous   Quarter
skills
                       Wing
                       Night
Numerically
Goal:                      3.13 Eastbound           using table of
                           and Down                 values
Visualize equations
and their qualities on a   More expensive gas or    Algebraically
graph                      cheaper gas with a car   by building
                           wash?                    models and
                                                    determining when
                           Analyze two gas price    the price would
                           options 3 ways.          be the same
                                                    Graphically
                                                    by graphing the
                                                    functions and
     Online homework &                              interpreting the
      paper homework
                                                    solution to the
                                                    equation visually
The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.

                                  -John Heywood
What does it feel like?

           Participate in Quarter Wing Night lesson.




Packet
Outcomes
Unexpected twists and turns

Unusual combinations of content

Fun
A Look Into MLCS
Pilot: Our students
0 The grades are not as high as a typical beginning algebra
   course.
  0 Not about skills; it’s about problem solving.

0 Students swing from overconfident to overwhelmed in a
  heartbeat.
   0 Structured lessons in ways that reduce this.

0 They’re used to mimicking. We’re asking them to make sense
  of mathematics.

0 They have to be taught how to study and succeed in this type of
  course, which is like a college level class.

0 Students resisted at first, but are cooperative now.
Lessons from the Pilot:
             A Charade
0 Traditional courses allow us to
 maintain a distance.

0 When you probe beyond that, it
 is disturbing how little they
 really know.

0 Students learn to play the        Mastery learning on online systems
 game, but they’re not              means little.
 necessarily learning                   Prerequisite quizzing example
                                        Application of skills issues
 mathematics.
Lessons from the Pilot:
    A Depressing Reality
0 Most of our students have taken 4 – 6 years of
 algebra and yet placed into Beginning Algebra.

0 This course shows them what they do and do not
 know.

0 We cannot help them all.
  0 Low cognitive abilities
  0 Some students need 1 year in developmental math
    (but not all).
Lessons from the Pilot
0 A frame of reference and context go a long way in improving
 connections and understanding.

0 Reflection is necessary to make sense of a lesson in the larger
 scheme.

0 Letting things develop organically instead of prescriptively is
 more engaging to students.

0 Students need accessible challenges to maintain interest.

0 Numbers are hard but helpful; generalizing is difficult but
 necessary.

0 We are essentially “flipping” the classroom, which is refreshing.
Implementation
Considering redesign?

   Consider MLCS
Implementation Ideas

Replace Beginning Algebra
                                              STEM
                            Intermediate     College
                               Algebra     Level Math


 Prealgebra     MLCS

                                           Non-STEM
                                             College
                                           Level Math
                                           (Statistics, Libe
                                            ral Arts Math)

 Packet
Implementation Ideas

Use MLCS lessons in an emporium for once-weekly
problem solving sessions


                   Beginning   Intermediate           College
    Prealgebra
                    Algebra       Algebra           Level Math


 0 Previews content for some, connects for others
 0 Everyone engaged
 0 More than just skills
Implementation Ideas
Augment traditional sequence with MLCS
as a non-STEM alternative preparation
for statistics/liberal arts math.

                                                            STEM
                      Beginning           Intermediate     College
                       Algebra               Algebra     Level Math

  Prealgebra

                                                         Non-STEM
                         MLCS                              College
                                                         Level Math
                                                         (Statistics, Libe
                                                          ral Arts Math)
 Students who change their major can take
 intermediate algebra as a bridge to STEM courses.
RVC Flowchart
How big, how much?
0 Course is 3 – 6 credit hours depending on your state
 and school requirements.

0 Some topics (systems of linear equations, quadratic
 modeling, rational modeling) are optional.

0 Great flexibility in terms of lessons and coverage.
Making MLCS Happen
0 Writing materials
  0 Living textbook approach (sample in handouts)
  0 Online & paper homework
  0 Instructor notes throughout based on pilot so that anyone can
    teach it

0 Team teaching (collaboratory)
   0 Consider this if trying a pilot

0 Attractive, simpler option in a redesign

0 Addressing articulation
Q&A
For more information
Kathleen Almy
kathleenalmy@gmail.com
http://almydoesmath.blogspot.com

Heather Foes
Heather.foes@gmail.com




Packet

MLCS AMATYC Workshop 2011 (zoom free)

  • 2.
  • 3.
    What is thepurpose of developmental mathematics?
  • 4.
    From AMATYC’s Beyond Crossroads The curriculum of developmental mathematics programs should: 0 develop mathematical knowledge and skills so students can successfully pursue their career goals, consider other career goals, and function as successful citizens. 0 develop students’ study skills and workplace skills to enable them to be successful in other courses and in their careers. 0 help students progress through their chosen curriculum as quickly as possible.
  • 5.
    RVC Developmental MathRedesign The good: Consistent, strong pass rates Students best prepared for college algebra; significant improvement long-term Not lab-based The not so good: Same content Poor retention and application No options for non-STEM No improvement in non-STEM class performance
  • 6.
    The Problem: OneSize Fits All 0 Does Intermediate Algebra make sense for all students? 0 Is developmental math just a checklist of skills to master? 0 Is the Calculus path right for everyone? 0 Could we do something different but just as rigorous?
  • 7.
    Looking Forward, LookingBack 0 Developmental math is not about looking back and recreating high school. 0 Developmental math is about looking forward to prepare for college level coursework that the student will take. 0 We shouldn’t let history guide all future decisions.
  • 8.
  • 9.
    A New Course,A Simple Goal In one semester, Mathematical Literacy for College Students gives a student at the beginning algebra level the mathematical maturity to be successful in statistics, liberal arts math, or intermediate algebra.
  • 10.
    Timeline for Change 2009 AMATYC New Life initiative began. 2010 New Life led to the Statway and Quantway (Mathway), funded by Carnegie. 2011 19 Carnegie grant schools currently piloting Statway. 2011 Rock Valley College currently piloting MLCS. 2012 8 Carnegie grant schools will pilot MLCS.
  • 11.
    Carnegie AMATYC MLCS Quantway New Life
  • 12.
    Components of MLCS 0Critical thinking 0 Reading & writing 0 Connections 0 Retention & understanding 0 21st century skills 0 Student success 0 Realistic situations 0 Rigor and high standards Goal: Students will have the mathematical maturity and study skills to be successful in their first college-level math class.
  • 13.
    Using lessons learnedthrough redesign In-course advising Cut scores Intentional design, assessment, c Variety of methods ontinual improvement MML, student groups, instructor help
  • 14.
    Using research andexperience 0 Researched schools, programs, and countries who are effectively teaching mathematics (not just algebra) 0 Read and incorporated information on how the brain learns 0 Incorporated lessons learned in our redesign 0 Training sessions and materials 0 Advising 0 Materials 0 Online resources 0 Continual Assessment
  • 15.
  • 16.
    It is thestory that matters not just the ending. - Paul Lockhart
  • 17.
    A New Perspective 0Using the MLCS objectives, we wanted to build a developmental course as we imagined it could be. 0 What would that look like? 0 Students doing and experiencing mathematics. 0 Skills are present but as a means to a greater end. 0 Situations are compelling, interesting, and real. 0 If this student goes to a statistics or general education math class, what do we need them to know? 0 Throw out the old conventions and take a new perspective. Mathematics is not a checklist; it’s an adventure.
  • 18.
    Traditional Approach 0 Theory,then applications if time 0 Each strand done Proportions Functions separately to Numbers Algebra completion 0 Algebra is primary focus 0 Skill based 0 Examples of every possible variation of skill (problem recognition)
  • 19.
    New Approach 0 Applicationsto motivate, then theory as needed Proportions Functions Numbers Algebra 0 Strands addressed each unit in an integrated fashion going deeper each time 0 Equal time on each strand 0 Concepts-based Undercurrent of geometry, statistics, 0 Fewer skills, more student success, mathematical success connections
  • 20.
    Rules of Four:Approaches 0 Content 0 Numeracy, proportional reasoning, algebraic reasoning, functions 0 Problem solving (Polya) 0 Understand-Plan-Do-Look Back 0 Open-ended problem per unit 0 Each lesson 0 Representations 0 Verbal, numeric, algebraic, graphic
  • 21.
  • 22.
    The intuitive mindis a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift. - Albert Einstein
  • 23.
    Numeracy, then Algebra 0The premise of using algebra to illuminate how numbers work doesn’t work. It obscures the THEME point. Emphasize units. Numbers 0 Start with numbers and stay there are quantities. for a while. Then generalize when it makes sense to. 0 Stay concrete; stay tangible.
  • 24.
    Algebraic Reasoning 0 Avoidnaked problems (problems without context) whenever possible. THEME 0 Use numeric methods until Judging when students want and value the algebra makes sense and how algebraic method. to use it 0 Strive for meaningful situations and variables.
  • 25.
    Functional Focus 0 Functionalrelationships occur in every unit. 0 We work on numeracy, algebraic THEME reasoning, and proportions all the while developing function Moving between understanding. tables, graphs, a 0 Constant vs. variable nd equations fluidly 0 Independent vs. dependent variable 0 Input values that make sense 0 We let students see that many functions are not linear.
  • 26.
    Proportional Reasoning 0 Proportionalreasoning is much more than “If 1 inch = 5 miles on a map, what does 7.5 inches equal?” and THEME “Cross multiply and divide.” Writing rates with units and scaling them 0 It’s a world of fractions, rates, making sense of them, and seeing them in multiple places in many ways. 0 Ratios and proportions have occurred in nearly every lesson.
  • 27.
    Choices, Choices Less emphasison… More emphasis on… 0 Factoring techniques 0 Numeracy 0 Worst-case scenario 0 Modeling expressions and 0 Non-linear equations functions, particularly 0 Naked problems exponential 0 Repetition 0 Messy, poorly framed problems
  • 28.
    What about factoring? 0 Could not cover all traditional algebra content and do real-life problems in any depth 0 Let some traditional topics go in favor of more meaningful skills 0 Specific examples 0 Factoring GCF only 0 Build a quadratic function model 0 Build a rational function model 0 Develop statistical base from which to build More advanced topics are addressed at an exposure level from a functions and numerical perspective. Students can take intermediate algebra if more depth is needed later.
  • 29.
    Intentional Development 0 Slow and steady 0 By the time a topic is formalized, students have nearly mastered it. 0 See a topic in multiple ways, multiple times, in multiple contexts 0 Skills, concepts, applications in equal proportion Example: Slope-intercept form was not introduced until after students had numerous experiences generalizing a relationship from a table of data.
  • 30.
    A New Perspective 0We should not act as though these students have never seen algebra because most have for years. 0 Instead, we approach content in new ways with a new focus: 0 How does it work? 0 How can I use this? 0 When does this technique make sense? Example: Most of our students could simplify an expression, but could not write the expression from a situation.
  • 31.
    Is this approachvaluable? 0 Adjustment for everyone involved but the payoff is real 0 Doing real mathematics, not just skills 0 Open-ended problems, tough questions, Excel 0 Gone is the question, “When am I ever going to use this?” 0 Doing college-level work at a slower pace. Not high school all over again. 0 Students seem to enjoy and appreciate the realism.
  • 32.
    STEM vs. non-STEM 0Course was built for the non-STEM student 0 Valuable to all students, especially STEM-bound ones 0 Developing scientific literacy 0 View topics through a math lens 0 “If you know the rules, you can play the game.” 0 Examples from chemistry, biology, physics
  • 33.
  • 34.
    Students’ Preconceived Notions 0 “I already know all this.” 0 “I shouldn’t be expected to do it unless you’ve shown me 10 examples like it.” 0 “You should be spelling everything out more.” 0 “I shouldn’t have to work more than an hour outside of class each week.”
  • 35.
    Teachers’ Preconceived Notions 0 Class is too easy and will have high pass rates. 0 Students aren’t learning enough algebra and won’t be ready for a college-level course. 0 If you’re not doing all the algebra, you’ve lowered standards. 0 These students aren’t capable of doing real problems.
  • 36.
    Approaching Content 0 Whichskills will students need? 0 Where will they need to apply them? 0 How are these skills connected?
  • 37.
    Integers and orderof operations Before After Understand Simplify: variation, build the standard deviation formula, use it to find -3 – 2(-6 – 8) s.d. for a data set, interpret it in context ( x mean)2 s n 1
  • 38.
    Evaluating Expressions Before After Evaluate: Program cells in Excel to do a task 3x – 2 when x = - 4
  • 39.
    Linear Equations Before After Find slope, Build a cost model for y-intercept, and a Kindle and Nook to graph: compare against the cost of a hardcover book. When is each y = -5x + 6 worth it? Use graphs, equations, an d tables. N=179 + 12.99B K=79 + 12.99B H=35B
  • 40.
    Plotting Points toGraph Before After Build a model. Plot points by Make a t-table and hand or Excel. Determine graph a line: shape and analyze. Hours to pay for gallon of gas 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 0 10 20 30 40
  • 41.
    Geometry Before After Find the volume of a If we overfill a medical right circular cylinder measuring cup/spoon whose height is 4 cm by 1 mm, which would and diameter is 2 cm. produce a greater overdose error? Estimate volume in cc’s and find actual and percentage change.
  • 42.
    The Role ofSkills A skill is not introduced until students see a need for it. Online homework provides skill practice in a traditional way, with and without context. Skill questions without context still appear on assessments to ensure students can perform them. We spend less time on skills to have more time for applications.
  • 43.
    Attractive Mathematics Useable Examples: Biology,business, chemistry Relevant Example: Statistics through job figures Interesting Examples: Outwit & Outlast, viral videos Outcome: MOTIVATION
  • 44.
  • 45.
    Don’t tell methe moon is shining; show me the glint of light on broken glass. - Anton Chekhov
  • 46.
    Show, Don’t Tell Lessonand Unit Protocol: 0 MOTIVATE: Explore an interesting situation or hook 0 DEVELOP: Learn more about it through activities, mini-lecture (theory) , hands-on activities, etc. 0 CONNECT: Associate concepts back and forward 0 REFLECT: Wrap-up topic Self-similarity 0 PRACTICE: online for skills, paper for concepts & applications
  • 47.
    Addressing Quantway Goals Engagement 0 Students actively work on rich problems, both closed and open-ended. Connections 0 Students make sense of topics in the given setting and others. Productive persistence 0 Students are allowed to struggle, but assistance is provided when necessary. Deliberate practice 0 Students complete homework assignments which forge connections and deepen conceptual understanding.
  • 48.
    Technology for the 21st Century 0 Mental arithmetic is encouraged whenever possible. 0 Calculators are used when they are needed. 0 Excel is used for analyzing patterns and making graphs.
  • 49.
    Striking the rightbalance Need Engagement Frustration enough structure to give students Contextual Theoretical comfort but not so much Paper HW/By that it is Online HW/Tech hand monotonous Group Work Lecture Open-ended Single solution
  • 50.
  • 51.
    The Class Heather workingwith a group of students. Students working together.
  • 52.
    The Class We stillhave whole class time and some direct instruction.
  • 53.
    What does alesson look like? Snapshots of a strand
  • 54.
    Topic: Solving equations Lead up: Built expressions and equations Graphed them Solved numerically, with Excel, or proportionally Need more powerful techniques as situations Packet grow more complex
  • 55.
    Goal: Understand the logic ofthe equation solving process
  • 56.
  • 57.
    Statistically Goal: 3.10 On the rise using Pareto charts, mean, med Connect 1-step Read an article ian, standard equations to other about food price deviation situations and skills inflation/package reduction and Algebraically analyze it 3 ways. by building and solving equations to find original prices and sizes Geometrically by analyzing changes in Online homework & paper homework dimensions, volume, and surface area.
  • 58.
    3.11 Hands-On Equations Goal: Solve2-step and multi-step linear equations Build approach to equation solving Online homework
  • 59.
    Goal: Build equations to 3.12 solve in an applied setting Connect equation solving to previous Quarter skills Wing Night
  • 60.
    Numerically Goal: 3.13 Eastbound using table of and Down values Visualize equations and their qualities on a More expensive gas or Algebraically graph cheaper gas with a car by building wash? models and determining when Analyze two gas price the price would options 3 ways. be the same Graphically by graphing the functions and Online homework & interpreting the paper homework solution to the equation visually
  • 61.
    The whole isgreater than the sum of its parts. -John Heywood
  • 62.
    What does itfeel like? Participate in Quarter Wing Night lesson. Packet
  • 63.
    Outcomes Unexpected twists andturns Unusual combinations of content Fun
  • 64.
  • 65.
    Pilot: Our students 0The grades are not as high as a typical beginning algebra course. 0 Not about skills; it’s about problem solving. 0 Students swing from overconfident to overwhelmed in a heartbeat. 0 Structured lessons in ways that reduce this. 0 They’re used to mimicking. We’re asking them to make sense of mathematics. 0 They have to be taught how to study and succeed in this type of course, which is like a college level class. 0 Students resisted at first, but are cooperative now.
  • 66.
    Lessons from thePilot: A Charade 0 Traditional courses allow us to maintain a distance. 0 When you probe beyond that, it is disturbing how little they really know. 0 Students learn to play the Mastery learning on online systems game, but they’re not means little. necessarily learning Prerequisite quizzing example Application of skills issues mathematics.
  • 67.
    Lessons from thePilot: A Depressing Reality 0 Most of our students have taken 4 – 6 years of algebra and yet placed into Beginning Algebra. 0 This course shows them what they do and do not know. 0 We cannot help them all. 0 Low cognitive abilities 0 Some students need 1 year in developmental math (but not all).
  • 68.
    Lessons from thePilot 0 A frame of reference and context go a long way in improving connections and understanding. 0 Reflection is necessary to make sense of a lesson in the larger scheme. 0 Letting things develop organically instead of prescriptively is more engaging to students. 0 Students need accessible challenges to maintain interest. 0 Numbers are hard but helpful; generalizing is difficult but necessary. 0 We are essentially “flipping” the classroom, which is refreshing.
  • 69.
  • 70.
  • 71.
    Implementation Ideas Replace BeginningAlgebra STEM Intermediate College Algebra Level Math Prealgebra MLCS Non-STEM College Level Math (Statistics, Libe ral Arts Math) Packet
  • 72.
    Implementation Ideas Use MLCSlessons in an emporium for once-weekly problem solving sessions Beginning Intermediate College Prealgebra Algebra Algebra Level Math 0 Previews content for some, connects for others 0 Everyone engaged 0 More than just skills
  • 73.
    Implementation Ideas Augment traditionalsequence with MLCS as a non-STEM alternative preparation for statistics/liberal arts math. STEM Beginning Intermediate College Algebra Algebra Level Math Prealgebra Non-STEM MLCS College Level Math (Statistics, Libe ral Arts Math) Students who change their major can take intermediate algebra as a bridge to STEM courses.
  • 74.
  • 75.
    How big, howmuch? 0 Course is 3 – 6 credit hours depending on your state and school requirements. 0 Some topics (systems of linear equations, quadratic modeling, rational modeling) are optional. 0 Great flexibility in terms of lessons and coverage.
  • 76.
    Making MLCS Happen 0Writing materials 0 Living textbook approach (sample in handouts) 0 Online & paper homework 0 Instructor notes throughout based on pilot so that anyone can teach it 0 Team teaching (collaboratory) 0 Consider this if trying a pilot 0 Attractive, simpler option in a redesign 0 Addressing articulation
  • 77.
  • 78.
    For more information KathleenAlmy kathleenalmy@gmail.com http://almydoesmath.blogspot.com Heather Foes Heather.foes@gmail.com Packet