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Borkovitz, Debra K.; Haferd, Thomas – Mathematics Teacher, 2017
Clock Buddies is our favorite first-day-of-class activity. It starts as a nonthreatening icebreaker activity that helps students learn one another's names, but it soon asks students to find their own strategies for solving a real-world scheduling problem. Even highly math phobic students work with others and succeed. Students gain insight from…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Activities, Arithmetic, Problem Solving
Samuels, Jason – Mathematics Teacher, 2017
Calculus has frequently been called one the greatest intellectual achievements of humankind. As a key transitional course to college mathematics, it combines such elementary ideas as rate with new abstract ideas--such as infinity, instantaneous change, and limit--to formulate the derivative and the integral. Most calculus texts begin with the…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Calculus, Graphs, Problem Solving
Ghosh, Jonaki B. – Mathematics Teacher, 2018
The Tower of Hanoi is an old, popular, and engaging puzzle. It is an exceptional puzzle too considering how effective it can be in engendering multiple valuable outcomes when used as a tool for learning. One of the fundamental goals of mathematics teacher preparation is to enable the prospective teacher to develop mathematical habits of mind and…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Puzzles, Preservice Teachers
Moore, Kevin c.; LaForest, Kevin R. – Mathematics Teacher, 2014
How do students think about an angle measure of ninety degrees? How do they think about ratios and values on the unit circle? How might angle measure be used to connect right-triangle trigonometry and circular functions? And why might asking these questions be important when introducing trigonometric functions to students? When teaching…
Descriptors: Trigonometry, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, Mathematical Logic
Kimani, Patrick; Engelke, Nicole – Mathematics Teacher, 2012
An important concept in mathematics, yet one that is often elusive for students, is the concept of rate. For many real-life situations--those involving work, distance and speed, interest, and density--reasoning by using rate can be an efficient strategy for problem solving. Students struggle with the concept of rate, despite the many possible…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, Concept Formation
Fonger, Nicole L. – Mathematics Teacher, 2014
How can the key concept of equivalent expressions be addressed so that students strengthen their representational fluency with symbols, graphs, and numbers? How can research inform the synergistic use of both paper-and-pencil analysis and computer algebra systems (CAS) in a classroom learning environment? These and other related questions have…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, Computer Uses in Education, Algebra
Coburn, John W. – Mathematics Teacher, 2010
Students who otherwise seem unreachable through traditional approaches to algebra require some alternative teaching methods. So do teachers who seek to add elements of freshness and innovation to their classrooms or who simply appreciate variety. This article offers some unconventional techniques for teaching a few conventional algebra topics.…
Descriptors: Algebra, Teaching Methods, Mathematics Instruction, Problem Solving
Lo, Jane-Jane; Kratky, James L. – Mathematics Teacher, 2012
Students frequently have difficulty determining whether a given real-life situation is best modeled as a linear relationship or as an exponential relationship. One root of such difficulty is the lack of deep understanding of the very concept of "rate of change." The authors will provide a lesson that allows students to reveal their misconceptions…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Mathematics Instruction, Concept Teaching, Mathematical Concepts
Allen, Kasi C. – Mathematics Teacher, 2013
Today, beginning algebra in the high school setting is associated more with remediation than pride. Students enroll by mandate and attend under duress. Class rosters in this "graveyard" course, as it is often referred to, include sophomores and juniors who are attempting the course for the second or third time. Even the ninth graders…
Descriptors: Algebra, Mathematics Instruction, High School Students, Secondary School Mathematics
Cory, Beth – Mathematics Teacher, 2010
National Council of Teachers of Mathematics' (NCTM's) (2000) Connections Standard states that students should "recognize and use connections among mathematical ideas; understand how mathematical ideas interconnect ...; [and] recognize and apply mathematics in contexts outside of mathematics" (p. 354). This article presents an in-depth…
Descriptors: Graphs, Physics, Calculus, Mathematics Instruction
Ellis, Mark W.; Bryson, Janet L. – Mathematics Teacher, 2011
The absolute value learning objective in high school mathematics requires students to solve far more complex absolute value equations and inequalities. When absolute value problems become more complex, students often do not have sufficient conceptual understanding to make any sense of what is happening mathematically. The authors suggest that the…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Equations (Mathematics), Teaching Methods, Secondary School Mathematics
Trinter, Christine P.; Garofalo, Joe – Mathematics Teacher, 2011
Nonroutine function tasks are more challenging than most typical high school mathematics tasks. Nonroutine tasks encourage students to expand their thinking about functions and their approaches to problem solving. As a result, they gain greater appreciation for the power of multiple representations and a richer understanding of functions. This…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Mathematics, Problem Sets, Mathematical Applications
Baltus, Christopher – Mathematics Teacher, 2010
Mathematics may be inconceivable without its diagrams and symbols--its representations. Mathematical representations help individuals organize their thinking; they bring a visual component to abstract ideas and serve as templates for computation with understanding. But the inevitability of representations is no guarantee that they are used…
Descriptors: Symbols (Mathematics), Graphs, Algebra, Mathematics Instruction
Lassak, Marshall – Mathematics Teacher, 2010
When teaching mathematics with technology, the author does so in the belief that technology enables students to experience mathematical ideas in a way that might not otherwise be possible. However, teachers must be careful: Sometimes technology does not produce results in the way that they or their students expect. Rather than allowing unexpected…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Calculators, Mathematics Instruction, Educational Technology
Bosse, Michael J.; DeUrquidi, Karen A.; Edwards, David L.; Nandakumar, N. R. – Mathematics Teacher, 2008
Under the backdrop of the investigation of rational functions and their respective curved asymptotes, the reader is invited to experience the mathematical process alongside the authors and observe the application of the NCTM Process Standards and the use of multiple representations in the investigation and solution of a problem. (Contains 9…
Descriptors: Mathematical Concepts, Problem Solving, Mathematics Instruction, Algebra