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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
Henderson, Christie – Mathematics Teacher, 2019
Embedding mathematics in a relatable context has changed the way Christie Henderson's elementary students view the subject. In this article, Henderson discusses how presenting mathematics through a relatable context enables students to visualize the math and make a pictorial representation to aid them in solving it. When relevant and relatable…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Elementary School Students, Elementary School Mathematics, Mathematics Teachers
Dibbs, Rebecca; Beach, Janessa; Rios, Daniel – Mathematics Teacher, 2018
Rich mathematical modeling activities are crucial to giving students agency and making mathematics meaningful. Proportional reasoning and transitional algebraic reasoning are the primary topics in the prealgebra curriculum, so a need exists for meaningful modeling activities using proportional reasoning in addition to geometric modeling. In…
Descriptors: High School Freshmen, Grade 9, Mathematics Education, Mathematics Activities
McGraw, Rebecca – Mathematics Teacher, 2017
The task shared in this article provides geometry students with opportunities to recall and use basic geometry vocabulary, extend their knowledge of area relationships, and create area formulas. It is characterized by reasoning and sense making (NCTM 2009) and the "Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others"…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Geometric Concepts, Mathematical Formulas, Mathematics Skills
Alhammouri, Ahmad M.; Foley, Gregory D.; Dael, Kevin – Mathematics Teacher, 2018
In this article, the authors describe how a theoretical framework--the modeling cycle of Bliss, Fowler, and Galluzzo (2014)--came to life in their classroom as students struggled with an open-ended modeling task. The authors share their high school students' work--warts and all. They explain how they used their students' ideas and errors to help…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Secondary School Mathematics, Problem Solving, Learner Engagement
Hurdle, Zach; Warshauer, Max; White, Alex – Mathematics Teacher, 2016
The desire to persuade students to avoid strictly memorizing formulas is a recurring theme throughout discussions of curriculum and problem solving. In combinatorics, a branch of discrete mathematics, problems can be easy to write--identify a few categories, add a few restrictions, specify an outcome--yet extremely challenging to solve. A lesson…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Activities, Mathematical Formulas, Computation
Cloft, Kristal – Mathematics Teacher, 2018
Many ways exist to engage students without detracting from the mathematics. Certainly some are high-tech options, such as video games, online trivia sites, and PowerPoint® presentations that follow the same model as Jeopardy; but sometimes low-tech options can be just as powerful. One exciting way to connect with students is by incorporating…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Learner Engagement, Mathematics Activities, Educational Games
Hsiao, Joy – Mathematics Teacher, 2015
Paper folding, or origami in Japanese, is a traditional craft that has been enjoyed by both children and adults for hundreds of years. Mathematicians have long studied the mathematics of paper folding. They use square papers to construct mathematical shapes (for example, folding an equilateral triangle from a square paper or trisecting an angle),…
Descriptors: Handicrafts, Geometric Concepts, Geometry, Problem Solving
Shaw, Doug J.; Miller, Catherine M. – Mathematics Teacher, 2015
Since 1950, the Prisoner's Dilemma has intrigued economists and amused fans of mathematics. It presents a situation in which two players acting to their own advantage do not do as well together as two players whose actions oppose their individual interests--hence, the dilemma. Variations of the Prisoner's Dilemma have appeared in diverse…
Descriptors: Game Theory, Mathematics Education, Mathematics Activities, Mathematical Logic
McDowell, Eric L. – Mathematics Teacher, 2016
By the time they reach middle school, all students have been taught to add fractions. However, not all have "learned" to add fractions. The common mistake in adding fractions is to report that a/b + c/d is equal to (a + c)/(b + d). It is certainly necessary to correct this mistake when a student makes it. However, this occasion also…
Descriptors: Fractions, Number Systems, Number Concepts, Numbers
Day, Lorraine – Mathematics Teacher, 2015
A challenge for teachers is to incorporate the Standards for Mathematical Practice (CCSSI 2010) throughout their teaching of mathematics so that the Common Core Standards do not revert back to a purely content-driven curriculum. One way to achieve this is through the use of mathematically rich, investigative tasks. These tasks encourage students…
Descriptors: Algebra, Mathematics Activities, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods
Greenwell, Raymond N.; Seabold, Daniel E. – Mathematics Teacher, 2014
The Gale-Shapley stable marriage theorem is a fascinating piece of twentieth-century mathematics that has many practical applications--from labor markets to school admissions--yet is accessible to secondary school mathematics students. David Gale and Lloyd Shapley were both mathematicians and economists who published their work on the Stable…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Secondary School Mathematics, Mathematical Concepts, Mathematics Activities
Huey, Maryann E.; Baker, Deidra L. – Mathematics Teacher, 2015
Many teachers of required secondary school mathematics classes are introducing statistics and probability topics traditionally relegated to college or AP Statistics courses. As a result, they need guidance in preparing lesson plans and orchestrating effective classroom discussions. In this article, the authors will describe the students' learning…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Causal Models, Secondary School Mathematics, Probability
Allen, Kasi C. – Mathematics Teacher, 2013
In line with the Common Core and Standards for Mathematical Practice that portray a classroom where students are engaged in problem-solving experiences, and where various tools and arguments are employed to grow their strategic thinking, this article is the story of such a student-initiated problem. A seemingly simple question was posed by…
Descriptors: Geometry, Geometric Concepts, Problem Solving, Mathematics Instruction