So I went back to thinking about when I start the second day of class with mathematics, I want there to be context in what the students see and do in math. In my last post about Representations of Relations I received this comment:
They changed the focus of that first lesson to make the rest of the year one cohesive goal.
As part of the curriculum group for Advanced Algebra, we set the pacing guide and decided that representations of relations along with the distributive property should be taught first. One thing I want to get across to students that first week is everyone having their voices heard and problem solving.
So each wall of the classroom will have the same layout from the previous post,
- one wall will have ordered pair along with a piece of butcher paper with notice/wonder at the top.
- second wall will have a mapping with a different piece of butcher paper with notice/wonder.
- third wall will have a table with butcher paper labeled the same way.
- fourth wall will have the New York Times graph and butcher paper.
I want to have students stand (and gather by the board) and take 1 minute to look and 2 minutes to discuss with a partner what they see. I will ask what students notice first, then wonder. At the end I want them to discuss what was similar or different with the four different relations.
I still have to cover distributive property at the end, but as an exit ticket I want them to reflect on the experience and answer the following question:
Why did the New York Times select a graph to represent this relation?I want a connection more to relations, what question should I ask that encompasses what they learned and that representing functions is useful?
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