beyond slope and points david harris, escondido usd/k12 alliance susan gomez zwiep, csu long...

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Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available: Science Teacher Magazine (March 2013 Issue)

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Page 1: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Beyond Slope and Points

Beyond Slope and Points

David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 AllianceSusan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12

Alliance

CMC Palm SpringsOct, 2013

Lesson Available: Science Teacher Magazine (March 2013 Issue)

David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 AllianceSusan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12

Alliance

CMC Palm SpringsOct, 2013

Lesson Available: Science Teacher Magazine (March 2013 Issue)

Page 2: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

We will…We will…Experience part of a lesson series

Connect to the CCSS Math

Discuss the Cross-Cutting Connections to Science

Experience part of a lesson series

Connect to the CCSS Math

Discuss the Cross-Cutting Connections to Science

Page 3: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

(Observationn)

Use your powers of observation to describe this.

Looking at this object, assume you were describing it to someone who had common knowledge of the world but did not know what this was and could not see it as you describe it. How would you describe it?

Page 4: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Objective 1

• Given a relationship between two variables in a real situation, I can connect the qualitative description of that relationship to quantitative description.

Page 5: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Sort Of Describe It

Take what you have in the envelope and sort by putting together those you see as belonging together.

(No need to over-think this)

Page 6: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

I want to Belong

Consider that a new rectangle is dropped on your table. Describe what would make it fit into each, but not all, category.

Page 7: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Common Two Categories

Page 8: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Categorization by shape:

Required using more than one quantitative attribute to describe the category of rectangles

Used a ratio of two measures as a category’s defining characteristic

One length alone would not define a category

Page 9: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Objective 2

• I can explain what a point (x, y) on the graph of a relationship means in terms of the situation from which the data points were derived.

Page 10: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Graphic stack of a Category

• On a piece of paper, prepare an x-y coordinate grid. For the sake of time we will define the length as the longer side of a rectangle.

• Take one rectangle and place it on the grid such that one vertex is tucked into the origin of the graph.

Page 11: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

And, your point is...?

• What data points could you derive from this display?

• Which of these points describe the shape best?

Page 12: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Plot

• Plot the data points from each rectangle of the category for which (x, y) represents (length, width). There does not need to be any numbers to do this.

• If there is one, sketch a line of best fit.

Page 13: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Repeat

• Follow the same steps for the other set(s) of rectangles. You may make a new set of axes or use the same one as before.

Page 14: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Mathematical Similarity

• Figures that have the same shape but not necessarily the same size.

• Ratios internal to and between two similar figures are equal.

Page 15: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Our Story

Page 16: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

What if…

Page 17: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Further Applications

There are concepts in science and math where the quantitative description is a relationship between two variables (bivariate data) rather than a single measure.

Page 18: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Does volume have to go on the x axis (or time)?

Why do we put time on the x-axis for motion graphs and volume for density graphs?

How does a science concept and slope suggest the axis for each measure?

Page 19: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Our Story Board

Page 20: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Objectives 3 and 4

• Participants can describe the equation and graphic representation of a linear relationship.

• Participants can determine from data points whether a relationship is linear or nonlinear.

Page 21: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Common Core Back Map

We will start from 8th grade Common Core standards and map back to 6th to

analyze connections to the activity.

Page 22: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Common Core Standards for Mathematics

Two Types of Standards

• Mathematical Practice (recurring throughout the grades)

• Mathematical Content (different at each grade level)

Page 23: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Standards for Mathematical Content K-8

How the grade level standards are organized

• Standards • Clusters • Domains

Page 24: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Standards for Mathematical Practice

1. Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them.

2. Reason abstractly and quantitatively.

3. Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others.

4. Model with mathematics.

5. Use appropriate tools strategically.

6. Attend to precision.

7. Look for and make use of structure.

8. Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning

Page 25: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

8th Grade

Page 26: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

8th Grade

Page 27: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

8th Grade

Page 28: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

8th Grade

Page 29: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Analyze the Progression

Given Standards 8.F.5; 8.SP.1 and 8.SP.2 as the

Standards connected to our learning targets, what content standards from 7th

and then 6th were part of a student’s progression to exploring these

standards?

Page 30: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Algebra 1Critical Area #4

• Building upon their prior experiences with data, students explore a more formal means of assessing how a model fits data. Students use regression techniques to describe approximately linear relationships between quantities. They use graphical representations and knowledge of context to make judgments about the appropriateness of linear models. With linear models, they look at residuals to analyze the goodness of fit.

Page 31: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Analyze the Practices

Which of the mathematical Practice standards (MPS) best describes the type

of work a student would be doing in these activities?

Page 32: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Analyze the Practices

Which of the mathematical Practice standards (MPS) best describes the type

of work a student would be doing in these activities?

Choose one of the MPS. What types of prompts would a teacher give to focus

student work/thinking on that particular mathematical practice?

Page 33: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Assessing an Objective

• Learning Target:

Given a qualitative description involving the relationship between two variables I can give a quantitative representation in words, numbers and graphs.

Assessment

Page 34: Beyond Slope and Points David Harris, Escondido USD/K12 Alliance Susan Gomez Zwiep, CSU Long Beach/K12 Alliance CMC Palm Springs Oct, 2013 Lesson Available:

Assessing an Objective

• Learning Target:

Participant can explain what a point (x, y) on the graph of a relationship means in terms of the situation from which the data points were derived.

Assessment