Sunday, November 15, 2020

Assignment 2: Group curricular microteaching

Title

The Linear Equation

Grade

10

Date

13 Nov 2020

TC

Cheryl, Annie, Ben, Marius

Subject

Math

Time

20 min

Learning Intentions

(SWBAT)

Understand (big ideas)

Know (content)

Do (skills)

Linear relationships can be identified and represented in many connected ways to identify regularities and make generalizations.

- Meaning of slope and y-intercept in the context of word problems.

- To create a linear equation for a given situation.

- To solve a linear equation with one variable. 

- To show a formal check for a solution. 

-Identify linear equation

Essential Questions

Factual

Conceptual

Debatable

- What is the graph of a linear equation?

- How many solutions can a linear equation have?

-What’s the definition of a linear equation?

-What’s the definition of a function?

- How to interpret the symbols in a general linear equation?

-How does slope and y-intercept affect the graph of the linear equation?

-How did ancient mathematicians solve linear equations?

- How many variables can a linear equation have?

Preparation

Materials/Resources

Organization (setup, pre-made things, classroom management, etc.)

Powerpoint Presentation

Internet connection

Google slides

Zoom

Learning Engage- ments

Opening (provocation, APK/S, mental set)

Time

Set the tone for the lesson

- Introduction

- Share agenda : Overview

- Warm-up: The importance of the graph 

3-5mins

Strategy

Time

  1. Introduction to functions

Provide a brief example of how functions work. Provide the definition of a function. 

2.       Definition of a line

Provide intuition on the definition of a line.

3.       Introduction to linear equations

Provide brief examples, introduce y=mx+b and its graph.

Solutions to linear equations. Special cases. Quick knowledge check.

4.       History

False position and double false position.

5.       Class Activity

Playing with Desmos. Get students to explore in real time the parameters “m” and “b”.

15 mins



4 comments:

  1. Thanks Annie, Cheryl, Ben and Marius! Looks like lots of interesting activities and ideas in your lesson.

    Some suggestions:(a)You have not broken the 15 minutes of the main lesson into times for each part. This is essential, so that you know whether you're allowing enough time (and not too much time) for each section. (b) Since you are co-teaching, you need to indicate what each person's role will be in different parts of the lesson. (c) Using slides? You should share these as well! (d) Using a Desmos game? Please describe it! (e) Think about a brief assessment of learning near the end, and how you will wrap things up. (f) Throughout the lesson plan, it would be very helpful to add a column that says/ considers what the students will be doing, as well as what you'll be doing!

    Generally, some great large-scale ideas that are not defined well enough in your lesson plan. If I were your SA, I would ask you to hand in a more detailed plan so that I could picture more clearly what you were planning for the class!

    ReplyDelete

  2. Ah, and now I've seen the slides via Ben's blog -- thanks Ben! Comments: You have TOO MUCH in this lesson -- all of it fascinating, but way too much for a 20 minute lesson! 22 slides with so many new ideas is overloading the time and the students' ability to understand.

    I suggest dropping the definition of functions (that's another lesson) -- ditto the idea of linear functions in one, two and three variables. I love that you're using the ancient Egyptian idea of false position, but do make sure that it is essential to the lesson you want to teach. Otherwise, it can be confusing or distracting. When you say that y=mx+b is the 'mother of all functions', remember that the students have NEVER seen this before, and they don't know what this equation signifies at all! Help them learn what this means... I think that might be part of the essential learning here. Overall, beware of trying to 'tell' everything very fast. It's not about you saying it -- it's about the students learning something meaningful, and encountering new ideas for the first time. The teacher saying something does NOT mean you've 'covered' the topic!!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for your constructive comments, Prof Gerofsky. I agree with you on these points. I will think about them in my future teaching practice.

      Delete
    2. And another good thing I want to say is that my SA is also teaching me Team-teaching now. I think today's microteaching experience will help me in the future.

      Delete

Unit Plan Final Version

In PDF version: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1aCtag7yoVAF7GWE4Kp5deXF-QYwpnhSp/view?usp=sharing In Microsoft Word version: https://docs.g...