Tessellate This Final June 24
Tessellate This Final June 24
Tessellate This Final June 24
INTRODUCTORY TRAINING
PREPARED BY:
Ghelani Pavan
WEEK 1: Introduction, KWL
Chart, Overview of programme
• Aims
(I am passionate about helping students unlock their
potential to develop their critical thinking skills.
I am keenly excited about this course and eager to
learn from experts all over the world).
• KWL Chart
Effective Mathematics
Teaching Practice:
Video
Establish Mathematics Goals to
Focus Learning
Tessellate This
Lesson Alignment to the West Virginia
College- and Career-Readiness Standards
M.8.16
Verify experimentally the properties of rotations, reflections and translations:
a. Lines are taken to lines, and line segments to line segments of the same length.
b. Angles are taken to angles of the same measure.
c. Parallel lines are taken to parallel lines.
M.8.17
Understand that a two-dimensional figure is congruent to another if the second can
be obtained from the first by a sequence of rotations, reflections and translations; given
two congruent figures, describe a sequence that exhibits the congruence between
them.
M.8.18
Describe the effect of dilations, translations, rotations and reflections on two-
dimensional figures using coordinates.
M.8.19
Understand that a two-dimensional figure is similar to another if the second can be
obtained from the first by a sequence of rotations, reflections, translations and
dilations; given two similar two-dimensional figures, describe a sequence that exhibits
the similarity between them.
WV Classroom Video - Tessellate This
Goals to focus learning should be written in student-
friendly language
Upon successful completion, students will:
• Create tessellations and designs with rotational
symmetry using rigid transformations.
• Explain (orally and in writing) the rigid
transformations needed to move a tessellation
or design with rotational symmetry onto itself.
• Determine a sequence of rigid motion
transformations that maps a figure onto a
congruent figure.
• Repeatedly use rigid transformation to make
interesting repeating patterns of figures.
Establish Mathematics Goals
to Focus Learning
Tessellate This
Tessellate This
Tessellate This
Facilitate Meaningful
Mathematical Discourse
Facilitate Meaningful Mathematical
Discourse
Mathematical discourse should:
• Build on and honor students’ thinking;
• Provide students with the opportunity to share ideas,
clarify understandings, and develop convincing
arguments; and
• Advance the math learning of the whole class.
Mathematical discourse includes the purposeful exchange of ideas
through classroom discussion, as well as through other forms of verbal,
visual and written communication. The discourse in the mathematics
classroom gives students opportunities to share ideas, clarify
understandings, construct convincing arguments, develop language for
expressing mathematical ideas, and learn to see things from other
perspectives.
Facilitate Meaningful Mathematical
Discourse
Set up classroom norms so that everyone knows
their role in the classroom.
Tessellate This
Effective Mathematics
Teaching Practice:
Build Procedural
Fluency from
Conceptual Understanding
Build Procedural Fluency from
Conceptual Understanding
Effective teaching of mathematics builds
fluency with procedures on a foundation of
conceptual understanding so that students,
over time, become skillful in using procedures
flexibly as they solve contextual and
mathematical problems.
A rush to fluency undermines students’
confidence and interest in mathematics and is
considered a cause of mathematics anxiety.
(Ashcraft 2002; Ramirez Gunderson, Levine, & Beilock, 2013)
Build Procedural Fluency from
Conceptual Understanding
Procedural Fluency should:
• Build on a foundation of conceptual
understanding
• Over time (months, years), result in known
facts and generalized methods for solving
problems
• Enable students to flexibly choose among
methods to solve contextual and
mathematical problems.
Build Procedural Fluency from
Conceptual Understanding
Tessellate This
Effective Mathematics
Teaching Practice:
Elicit and Use Evidence of
Student Thinking
Elicit and Use Evidence of
Student Thinking
Effective teaching of mathematics uses
evidence of student thinking to assess
progress toward mathematical
understanding and to adjust instruction
continually in ways that support and
extend learning.
Elicit and Use Evidence of
Student Thinking
Evidence should:
• Provide a window into students’ thinking
• Help the teacher determine the extent to which
students are reaching the math learning goals
• Be used to make instructional decisions during the
lesson and to prepare for subsequent lessons