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Rme 2011 presentation quadratics

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Line times line equals parabola Length times width equals area and Incorporating two RME models into a cohesive learning trajectory for quadratic functions Fred Peck, University of Colorado and Boulder Valley School District Jennifer Moeller, Boulder Valley School District
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Page 1: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

Line times line equals parabola

Length times width equals area

and

Incorporating two RME models into a cohesive learning trajectory for quadratic functions

Fred Peck, University of Colorado and Boulder Valley School District

Jennifer Moeller, Boulder Valley School District

Page 2: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

Agenda

• Realistic Mathematics Education

• A learning trajectory for quadratic functions

• Student work

• Extensions and open questions

Page 3: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

“Mathematics should be thought of as the human activity of

mathematizing - not as a discipline of structures to be transmitted, discovered, or even constructed, but as schematizing,

structuring, and modeling the world mathematically.”

Hans Freudenthal (as quoted in Fosnot & Jacob, 2010)

Page 4: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

Five principles of RME (Treffers, 1987) • Mathematical exploration should take place within a

context that is recognizable to the student.

• Models and tools should be used to bridge the gap between informal problem-solving and formal mathematics

• Students should create their own procedures and algorithms

• Learning should be social, and students should share their solution processes, models, tools, and algorithms with other students.

• Learning strands should be intertwined“Progressive formalization”

Page 5: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

Progressive formalization• Students begin by mathematizing contextual

problems, and construct more formal mathematics through guided re-invention

• Three broad levels:– Informal: Models of learning: Representing mathematical

principles but lacking formal notation or structure (Gravemeijer, 1999)

– Preformal: Models for learning: Potentially generalizable across many problems (Gravemeijer, 1999)

– Formal: Mathematical abstractions and abbreviations, often far removed from contextual cues

Page 6: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

5 + 2 = 7

5 25 2 3

7f o r m a l n o t a t i o n s t o p o f t h e i c e b e r g

fl o a t i n gc a p a c i t y

5 + 2 = 7

5 25 2 3

7f o r m a l n o t a t i o n s t o p o f t h e i c e b e r g

fl o a t i n gc a p a c i t y

5 + 2 = 7

5 25 2 3

7f o r m a l n o t a t i o n s t o p o f t h e i c e b e r g

fl o a t i n gc a p a c i t y

5 + 2 = 7

5 25 2 3

7f o r m a l n o t a t i o n s t o p o f t h e i c e b e r g

fl o a t i n gc a p a c i t y

5 + 2 = 7

5 25 2 3

7f o r m a l n o t a t i o n s t o p o f t h e i c e b e r g

fl o a t i n gc a p a c i t y

© F.M.- N.B.

informal,experiential

preformal,structured

The Iceberg Metaphor (Webb, et al., 2008)

Page 7: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

The difficulty of applying RME principles to quadratic functions

• In a word: context.

• We need a realistic context that students can mathematize using informal reasoning, but that can be re-invented into pre-formal models and tools

• Why not projectile motion?

• Two alternative models:

1. Length times width equals area (Drijvers et al., 2010)

2. Line times line equals parabola (Kooij, 2000)

Page 8: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

x

y

Formal

Pre-formal

Informal

l

w

0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2 t

1

2

3

4

5

h( t)

x y

Page 9: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics
Page 10: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

That’s an interesting graph…

http://viewpure.com/VSUKNxVXE4E

Page 11: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

Length

Width Area

0 10 01 9 92 8 163 7 214 6 245 5 256 4 247 3 218 2 169 1 910 0 0

What patterns do you see in this table?

Page 12: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

Input (x)

Width (w)

0 10

1 9

2 8

3 7

4 6

5 5

6 4

7 3

8 2

9 1

10 0

Input (x)

Length(l)

0 0

1 1

2 2

3 3

4 4

5 5

6 6

7 7

8 8

9 9

10 10

Input (x)

Area(A)

0 0

1 9

2 16

3 21

4 24

5 25

6 24

7 21

8 16

9 9

10 0

Page 13: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

5 10 x

5

10

15

20

25

30y Line times Line equals Parabola

Page 14: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

Explore what happens when you multiply two linear functions.

Is this always true?

Do you always get a parabola?

What patterns do you notice?

Page 15: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics
Page 16: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

The x-intercepts of the parabola are the same as

those of the two lines

The

concavityof the

paraboladepends

on the slopeof the

two lines

The

vertexof the

parabolais halfwaybetweenthe two

x-intercepts

Page 17: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

the What’s My Equation? game

There’s a parabola graphed on the next slide.

It’s your job to find the linear factors, and then write the equation for the parabola.

Use your calculator to help!

Page 18: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8–1–2–3–4–5–6–7–8 x

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

–1

–2

–3

–4

–5

–6

–7

–8

y

What’s my equation?

Page 19: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

What’s my equation?

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11–1–2–3–4–5–6–7–8–9–10–11 x

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

–1

–2

–3

–4

–5

–6

–7

–8

–9

–10

–11

y

Page 20: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

What’s my equation?

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11–1–2–3–4–5–6–7–8–9–10–11 x

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

–1

–2

–3

–4

–5

–6

–7

–8

–9

–10

–11

y

Page 21: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

Student work…

Page 22: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

x

y

Formal

Pre-formal

Informal

l

w

0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2 t

1

2

3

4

5

h( t)

x y

Page 23: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

We use a JAVA applet from the Freudenthal Institute to explore the connections between

Line times line equals parabola

and

Length times width equals area

Page 24: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

Use Google to search for “wisweb applets”

Select “Geometric algebra 2D”

Here, we can explore what line times line equals parabola means in terms of our first model: length times width equals area

Can you figure out how to construct an area model for our last parabola:

Page 25: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

Fromstandard form

to factored form

Page 26: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

x

y

Formal

Pre-formal

Informal

l

w

0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2 t

1

2

3

4

5

h( t)

x y

Page 27: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

Where do you see parabolas in the real world?

How many parabolas do you see in this movie?

http://viewpure.com/cnBf6HTizYc

Page 28: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

The height (h) of the trampoline jumper at time t can be modeled using the function:

Page 29: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

x

y

Formal

Pre-formal

Informal

l

w

0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2 t

1

2

3

4

5

h( t)

x y

Page 30: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

Students have multiple representations for quadratic functions, and multiple methods to convert between representations.

Page 31: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

x

y

0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2 t

1

2

3

4

5

h( t)

Formal

Pre-formal

Informal

l

w

x y

Page 32: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

From graph to equation:Line times line equals parabola

Length times width equals area

Page 33: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

From equation to graph:

Page 34: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics
Page 35: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics
Page 36: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

Solving quadratic equations

Page 37: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

Solving quadratic equations

Page 38: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

In their own words… Do the models that we’ve learned help

you solve problems?

Often

Sometimes

Almost never

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%

Page 39: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

In their own words… Do the models that we’ve learned help you understand formal mathematics?

Often

Sometimes

Almost never

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%

Page 40: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

Group discussion •Extensions

•Questions we have

Complete the square and vertex form

Polynomials

Why is standard form compelling?

What are the downsides? How are students impoverished?

Page 41: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

ReferencesDrijvers, P., Boon, P., Reeuwijk, M. van (2010). Algebra and Technology. In P. Drijvers

(ed.), Secondary Algebra Education: Revisiting Topics and Themes and Exploring the Unknown. Rotterdam, NL: Sense Publishers. pp. 179-202

Fosnot, C. T., & Jacob, B. (2010). Young Mathematicians at Work: Constructing Algebra. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemenn.

Gravemeijer, K. (1999). How emergent models may foster the constitution of formal mathematics. Mathematical Thinking and Learning, 1(2), 155-177.

Kooij, H. van der (2000). What mathematics is left to be learned (and taught) with the Graphing Calculator at hand? Presentation for Working Group for Action 11 at the 9th International Congress on Mathematics Education, Tokyo, Japan

Treffers, A. (1987). Three dimensions, a model of goal and theory description in mathematics instruction-the Wiskobas Project. Dordrecht, The Netherlands: D. Reidel.

Webb, D. C., Boswinkel, N., & Dekker, T. (2008). Beneath the Tip of the Iceberg: Using Representations to Support Student Understanding. Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 14(2), 4. National Council of Teachers of Mathematics.

Page 42: Rme 2011 presentation   quadratics

Contact

AcknowledgementsWe thank David Webb and Mary Pittman for introducing us to Realistic Mathematics Education, and Henk van der Kooij and Peter Boon for guiding us in the creation and implementation of this unit.

Fred: [email protected]

Jen: [email protected]

Web: http://www.RMEInTheClassroom.com


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