key strategies for teaching elementary mathematics

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Key Strategies for Teaching Elementary Mathematics

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Key Strategies for Teaching Elementary Mathematics. Where Are the Cookies?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

Key Strategies for Teaching

Elementary Mathematics

Page 2: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

Where Are the Cookies?

Mrs. James left a tray of cookies on the counter early one morning. Larry walked by before lunch and decided to take 1/3 of the cookies on the tray. Later that afternoon Barry came in and ate 1/4 of the remaining cookies. After supper Terry saw the tray of cookies and ate 1/2 of the cookies remaining at that time. The next morning Mrs. James found the tray with only 6 cookies left. How many cookies were on the tray when Mrs. James first left it on the counter?

Georgia Formative Assessment tasks

Page 3: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

Visual representations are critical for learning.Mrs. James found the tray with only 6 cookies left.

Terry ate 1/2 of the cookies remaining.

Barry ate 1/4 of the remaining cookies.

Larry took 1/3 of the cookies.

6

6 6

12

6 Terry’s

remaining

remaining

Barry 4 4

16starting

44

Larry

Page 4: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics
Page 5: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

There are 338 players on a soccer team. 186 are girls and the rest are boys. How many boys are on the soccer team?

Misha has 34 dollars. How many dollars does she have to earn to have 47 dollars?

186 ?338

Page 6: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

Visual representations for multiplication

Page 7: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

Visual representations translate to symbolic (CRA)

Page 8: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

Estimate: 1.4 x 1.3 is somewhere between 1 and 4

Distributive Property: 1.4x 1.3 0.12 0.3 0.4 1 1.82

Page 9: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics
Page 10: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics
Page 11: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

Knowing the reasons behind a procedure is as important as being fluent with it.

Page 12: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

Reason?

13 13 x 8 x 8104 24 +80 104

8 3 + 8 10 = 8(3+10)∙ ∙a b + a c = a(b+c) ∙ ∙

8

10 3

2

Page 13: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

Reason?

Page 14: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics
Page 15: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

What problem does this illustrate?

Page 16: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

Students should work things out with their hands.

Page 17: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics
Page 18: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

Division by Partitioning354 photos to share among 3 children

Page 19: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

Work with manipulatives also translates to procedures354 ÷ 3(300 + 50 + 4) ÷ 3 = 100 + 10 + 1 r 21

100 + 10 + 1 + 7

Try this with 251 ÷ 8. Partition base 10 blocks, then write a corresponding algorithm.

Page 20: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

Problem-solving is enhanced by knowing the structures of word problems.Part-whole where a part is unknownThere are 23 players on a soccer team. 18 are girls and the rest are boys. How many boys are on the soccer team?

Joining (adding to) where the change is unknownMisha has 34 dollars. How many dollars does she have to earn to have 47 dollars?

18 ?23

Page 21: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

Equal groupsEach person on a relay race team runs 5/8 of a mile. There are 4 people on the team. How long is the total race?

Multiplicative comparisonThe tree is 40 times taller than the person. If the person is 5 feet tall, how tall is the tree?

Page 22: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

Measurement division Our class baked 225 cookies for a bake sale. We want to put them in bags with 6 in each bag. How many bags can we make?

225 – 60 = 165 10 bags165 – 60 = 105 10 bags105 – 60 = 55 10 bags45 – 30 = 15 5 bags15 – 12 = 3 2 bags 37 bags with 3 cookies left over

Try this with 251 ÷ 8. What’s a corresponding word problem?

Page 23: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

A recipe that makes 20 cookies needs ¾ cup of sugar. How much sugar is needed to make 100 cookies?

Measurement divisionHow many groups of 20 are in 100? (repeated subtraction, or 20 x what = 100?)

Equal groupsHow much is 5 groups of 3 fourths?(Skip count on a number line)

Page 24: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

If a serving size for Cheerios is 3/4 cup, how many servings are in a box that has 12 1/2 cups?

While division by a fraction is in the 6th grade curriculum, this example shows how important it is to understand the underlying structure of word problems.

Page 25: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

Alternative ways of solving a problem should be celebrated. T-shirts with the school logo cost $8 wholesale. The Pep Club has saved $496. How many t-shirts can they buy for their fund-raiser?

Page 26: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

Mental Math is Important

Number Talks

32 x 15

Page 27: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

64-38 26

14

4

Page 28: Key Strategies  for Teaching  Elementary Mathematics

Practice and drill are essential for developing fluencyDo these multiplication problems as quickly as you can using the partial product method.25 x 164 562 x 36 285 x 102

Practice makes perfect: Frequent cumulative review is the most underused method for ensuring long-term retention.