+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Decimals and Percentages

Decimals and Percentages

Date post: 21-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: maj
View: 40 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Decimals and Percentages. Marie Hirst , Numeracy Facilitator, [email protected] Mathematics Lead Teacher Symposium Waipuna Conference Centre September 2011. To be a proportional thinker you need to be able to think multiplicatively. How do you describe the change from 2 to 10?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
48
Decimals and Percentages Marie Hirst, Numeracy Facilitator, [email protected] Mathematics Lead Teacher Symposium Waipuna Conference Centre September 2011
Transcript
Page 1: Decimals and Percentages

Decimals and Percentages

Marie Hirst, Numeracy Facilitator, [email protected]

Mathematics Lead Teacher SymposiumWaipuna Conference CentreSeptember 2011

Page 2: Decimals and Percentages

To be a proportional thinker you need to be able to think multiplicatively

How do you describe the change from 2 to 10?

Additive Thinking: Views the change as an addition of 8

Multiplicative Thinking:Views the change as multiplying by 5

Page 3: Decimals and Percentages

Proportional Thinking

A sample of numerical reasoning test questions as used for the NZ

Police recruitment

Page 4: Decimals and Percentages

½ is to 0.5 as 1/5 is to

a. 0.15

b. 0.1

c. 0.2

d. 0.5

Page 5: Decimals and Percentages

1.24 is to 0.62 as 0.54 is to

a. 1.08b. 1.8c. 0.27d. 0.48

Page 6: Decimals and Percentages

If a man weighing 80kg increased his weight by 20%, what would his weight be now?

a. 96kgb. 89kgc. 88kgd. 100kg

Page 7: Decimals and Percentages

Developing Proportional thinking

Fewer than half the adult population can be viewed as proportional thinkers

And unfortunately…. We do not acquire the habits and skills of proportional reasoning simply by getting older.

Page 8: Decimals and Percentages

Objectives

• Understand common decimal place value misconceptions and how to address these.

• Develop content knowledge of how to add, subtract and multiply decimals.

• Develop content knowledge of calculating percentages

• Become familiar with useful resources

Page 9: Decimals and Percentages

At what stage of the Number Framework are decimals first

introduced to students?

Page 10: Decimals and Percentages
Page 11: Decimals and Percentages

Decimals

Decimals are special cases of equivalent fractions where the denominator is always a

power of ten.

Page 12: Decimals and Percentages

Misconceptions with Decimal Place Value:

How do these children view decimals?

1. Bernie says that 0.657 is bigger than 0.7

(decimals are 2 separate whole number systems separated by a decimal point, 657 is bigger than 7, so 0.675 is bigger than 0.7)

2. Sam thinks that 0.27 is bigger than 0.395

(the more decimal places, the tinier the number becomes, because thousandths are really small)

3. James thinks that 0 is bigger than 0.5

(decimals are negative numbers)

4. Adey thinks that 0.2 is bigger than 0.4 (direct link to fractional numbers , i.e. ½ = 0.2, ¼ = 0.4)

5. Claire thinks that 10 x 4.5 is 4.50 (when you multiply by 10, just add a zero)

Page 13: Decimals and Percentages

Addressing Misconceptions

Page 14: Decimals and Percentages

Use decipipes, candy bars, or decimats to

understand how tenths and hundredths

arise and what decimal numbers ‘look like’

Use materials to develop an understanding of decimal tenths and hundredths place value

3 ÷ 5

Page 15: Decimals and Percentages

3 chocolate bars shared between 5 children.

30 tenths ÷ 5 =

0 wholes + 6 tenths each = 0.6

0 6

Page 16: Decimals and Percentages

Now try this:

5 ÷ 4

Page 17: Decimals and Percentages

Connecting the Place Value

1 2

5 ÷ 4 = 1 whole + 2 tenths + 5 hundredths

5

•Understand how tenths and hundredths arise •express remainders as decimals

Page 18: Decimals and Percentages

BIG IDEA

The CANON law in our place value system is that ONE unit must be split

into TEN of the next smallest unit AND NO OTHER!

Read, Say, Make

Page 19: Decimals and Percentages

What is 1 quarter as a decimal?

Using Decipipes: Book 7 p.38-41

(Understanding how tenths and hundredths arise)

View children’s response to this task:

Page 20: Decimals and Percentages

Make and compare decimals

• Which is bigger: 0.6 or 0.43?

• How much bigger is it?

Page 21: Decimals and Percentages

Add and subtract decimals

Rank these questions in order of difficulty.

a)0.8 + 0.3,

b)0.6 + 0.23

c)0.06 + 0.23,

Exchanging ten for 1

Mixed decimal place values

Same decimal place values

Page 22: Decimals and Percentages

Add and Subtract decimals (Stage 7)

1.5 - 0.9

Tidy Numbers Place Value

Equal Additions Reversibility

Standard written form (algorithm)

Page 23: Decimals and Percentages

Add and Subtract decimals (Stage 7)

1.6 - 0.98

Tidy Numbers Place Value

Equal Additions Reversibility

Standard written form (algorithm)

Page 24: Decimals and Percentages

Decimal Keyboard

Page 25: Decimals and Percentages

When you multiply the answer always gets bigger.

True False

0.4 x 0.3Which is the correct answer?

0.12 1.2 0.012

Page 26: Decimals and Percentages

Multiplying Decimals by a whole number(Stage 7)

5 x 0.8

Tidy Numbers Place Value

Proportional Adjustment

Convert to a fraction, e.g. x 0.25 = ¼ of

Standard written form (algorithm)

Page 27: Decimals and Percentages

Ww

w

0 1

1

0.3

0.4

Multiplying a decimal by a decimal (Stage 8) using Arrays

0.4 x 0.3

Page 28: Decimals and Percentages

Ww

w

0 1

1

0.3

0.4

Using Arrays0.4 x 0.3 = 0.12

0.12

Page 29: Decimals and Percentages

1.3 x 1.4 1

1

0.3

0.4

Page 30: Decimals and Percentages

1.3 x 1.4 1

1

0.3

1

0.3

0.4

0.12

= 1.82

0.4

Page 31: Decimals and Percentages

1.3 x 1.4 1

0.3

1

0.3

0.4

0.12

0.4

1

Page 32: Decimals and Percentages

0.7 x 1.6

0.7 0.7

0.0

0.42

0.6

0

1

0= 1.12

Page 33: Decimals and Percentages

It is a method of comparing fractions by giving both fractions a common denominator i.e. hundredths. So it is useful to view percentages as hundredths.

Why calculate percentages?

=

Page 34: Decimals and Percentages

Applying PercentagesTypes of Percentage Calculations at Level 4 (stage 7)

• Estimate and find percentages of amounts,

e.g. 25% of $80

• Expressing quantities as a percentage

(Using equivalence)

e.g. What percent is 18 out of 24?

Page 35: Decimals and Percentages

Estimate and find percentages of whole number amounts.

25% of $80

35% of $80

Using benchmarks like 10%, and ratio tablesFIO: Pondering Percentages NS&AT 3-4.1(p12-13)

Using common conversions halves, thirds, quarters, fifths, tenths

Book 8:21 (MM4-28) , Decimats. Bead strings, slavonic abacus

Practising instant recall of conversionsBingo, Memory, I have, Who has, Dominoes,

Page 36: Decimals and Percentages

100%

Find __________ (using benchmarks and ratio tables)

Page 37: Decimals and Percentages

100%

$80

Find 35% of $80

$80

Page 38: Decimals and Percentages

100%

$80

Find 35% of $80

$80

Page 39: Decimals and Percentages

100%

$80

Find 35% of $80

Page 40: Decimals and Percentages

100%

$80

Find 35% of $80

$8

10%

$8

35%

$28

$4

5%

$4

$8$8

30%

$24

Page 41: Decimals and Percentages

Now try this…46% of $90

100%

$90

Page 42: Decimals and Percentages

46% of $90100% 10% 40% 5% 1% 6% 46%

$90 $9 $36 $4.50 $0.90 $5.40 $41.40

Is there an easier way to find 46%?

46% of 90

Page 43: Decimals and Percentages

Estimating Percentages16% of 3961 TVs are found to be faulty at the factory and need repairs before they are sent for sale. About how many sets is that?

(Book 8 p.26 - Number Sense)

About 600

Page 44: Decimals and Percentages

Decimal Games and Activities

1. First to the Draw2. Four in a Row Decimals3. Beat the Basics4. Decimal Keyboard Games5. Target (Figure It Out)6. Decimal Jigsaw7. Percents8. Decimal Sort

What is this game aimed at?

How could you adapt it to make it easier / harder?

Page 45: Decimals and Percentages

http://mathsleadteachers.wikispaces.com/

http://teamsolutions.wikispaces.com/

Page 46: Decimals and Percentages

What do you know now that you didn’t know before?

What parts of this workshop could you share back with your staff?

Objectives• Understand common decimal place value

misconceptions and how to address these. • Develop content knowledge of how to add, subtract

and multiply decimals. • Develop content knowledge of calculating percentages• Become familiar with useful resources.

Page 47: Decimals and Percentages

Thought for the day

A DECIMAL POINT  

When you rearrange the letters becomes

I'M A DOT IN PLACE

Page 48: Decimals and Percentages

Problem Solving from nzmaths


Recommended