HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International...

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HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007

Transcript of HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International...

Page 1: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education32 Le Loi St.

APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007

Page 2: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

A LESSON THAT MAY DEVELOP MATHEMATICAL THINKING

OF PRIMARY STUDENTS IN VIETNAM

Dr. Tran VuiHue University, Vietnam

APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007

Page 3: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

FIND TWO NUMBERS THAT THEIR SUM AND

A RESTRICTED CONDITION ARE KNOWN

APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007

12 bottles containing 33 liters

Page 4: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

Find and such that:

+ = 12.

and

2 + 5 = 33 (Condition)

x y

x y

Teachers’ Mathematics Background

Page 5: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

Teachers’ Mathematics Background in Solving System of Equations

x + y = 12 (1)

2x + 5y = 33

2x + 2y = 24

2x + 5y = 33

3y = 9

Time (1) by 2 means that:

If all ... are ... , ... then

Page 6: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

SOCIAL-CULTURAL CONTEXT

MATHEMATICAL THINKING

(UNIVERSAL)

TMTSMT

Page 7: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

How Do TEACHER

DEVELOP

STUDENTS’ Mathematical Thinking

In a CLASSROOM Setting?

(with Teacher’s Background in Solving System of Equations and Beliefs)

Page 8: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

SOME BACKGROUNDS ON THE REFORM OF

VIETNAMESE EDUCATION BEFORE DISCUSSING THE RESEARCH

LESSON

Page 9: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.
Page 10: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

2006

2001

2000

1995

CHANGING CURRICULUM & TEXTBOOKS

1985

Current Cur. Less Academic, Skills, Techniques

Old Cur.: Academic, Logic, Proof, Algorithms

Reform Cur. Problematic Situation, Mathematical Thinking through PS.

5-year Pilot Study

Page 11: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

Students’ mathematical thinking can be:

- defined, - taught, - observed, - tested, - evaluated, and - reported

THROUGH its products: the students’ works, talks and representations when they solve mathematical problems.

WE BELIEVE FOLOWING PRINCIPLES

Page 12: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

Challenging between Teachers and

Students

Teaching algorithms, procedures, techniques, rules to solve difficult problems (Practicing)

Finding answers for structured problematic situations (Solving)

Page 13: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

Mathematical Thinking Process

Con

ten

t K

now

led

ge

Refor

m C

urricu

lum

VIETNAMESE REFORM CURRICULUM

15%-25%

Step by Step REFORM

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COMM

UNICATING

INVESTIGATING

P.SO

LVIN

Gexercising

exploring

LOGIC

AL

REASO

NIN

G

MATHEMATICAL thinking

St.

Page 15: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

CREATIVE

critical

basic

recall Passive

Active

Student

HIERARCHY OF MATHEMATICAL THINKING

Problem Solving

Practicing Skills

&

Algorithm

Stephen Krulik, 1993

Page 16: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

OUTPUTinput processing

MATHEMATICAL THINKING

Observing

Inquiring

Recalling

Summarizing

Symbolizing

Exploring

Analyzing Applying

Logic ReasoningInducingDeducing

Problem SolvingInvestigatingGeneralizing

Reflecting

Evaluating

Questioning

Synthesizing

understanding manipulating generating

Page 17: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

BACK TO THE RESEARCH LESSON

At the end of Grade 4, students know how to solve and express solutions of problems having three operations of natural numbers.

Example. A toy train has 3 wagons with the length of 2 cm, and 2 wagons with the length of 4 cm. Find the length of the train?

Answer. 3 2 + 2 4 = 14 (cm).

PRACTICING

Page 18: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

SETTING THE PROBLEM IN A REVERSE WAY

A toy train has two types of wagon: 2 cm-wagons and 4 cm-wagons. This train has the length of 14 cm including 5 wagons. Find the numbers of 2 cm-wagons and 4 cm-wagons of the train.

Find and such that:

+ = 5.

and

2 + 4 = 14 (Condition)

Page 19: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

ANALYSIS OF INTRODUCTORY TASK Open-ended Task

Use 2 cm-cards and 4 cm-cards to make a toy train of 5 wagons?

PLAYING AROUND AND OBSERVING

Pupils can arrange the cards to make a train, use the strategy "guess and check" to get many answers

Page 20: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

MAKE A SYSTEMATIC LIST

N. of reds 0 1 2 3 4 5

N. of blues 5 4 3 2 1 0

The length 20 18 16 14 12 10

Page 21: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE LENGTH AND THE NUMBERS OF REDS AND BLUES

If the number of red wagons increases one, then the length of the train decreases 2 cm.

If the length of the train is given then we can find exactly the N. of reds wagons and N. of blues.

The length of the train is understood as a restricted condition

Page 22: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

T: How many red wagons and blue wagons in your train?

S: 3 and 2. We have 3 2 + 2 4 = 14 cm.

Page 23: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

ANALYSIS OF TASK 1Open-ended Task

Make a train with the length of 16 cm.

MANIPULATING AND OBSERVING

Pupils can arrange the cards to make a train, use the strategy "guess and check" to get many answers

Page 24: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

MAKE A SYSTEMATIC LIST

N. OF REDS

N. OF BLUES

TOTAL

Students analysed number 16 as follows:

16 = 8 2 + 0 4 16 = 2 2 + 3 4

16 = 6 2 + 1 4 16 = 0 2 + 4 4

16 = 4 2 + 2 4

Page 25: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE LENGTH AND THE NUMBERS OF REDS AND BLUES

• The number of red wagons is always

even. ?• If the number of wagons of the train is

given then we can find exactly the N. of reds wagons and N. of blues.

•The number of wagons of the train is understood as “a restricted condition”.

Page 26: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

LOGICAL REASONING

T: If the train has 6 wagons, how many red wagons and blue wagons in this train?

S: From the table I saw that this train has 4 red wagons and 2 blue wagons.

T: If we do not make the table, can you explain your solution?

S: If all 6 wagons are red, the train's length decreases 4 cm. So I got 2 blue wagons.

T: Who can express the answer by using mathematical operations?

S: (16 - 6 2) ÷ 2 = 4 ÷ 2 = 2 (blue wagons).

Page 27: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

ANALYSIS OF TASK 2Inducing

A train with the length of 50 cm including 20 wagons, how many red wagons and blue wagons are there? The teacher guided students to induce a procedure by using the temporary assumption to solve the problem.

T: If 20 wagons are red, what is the length of the train?S: 40 cm.T: Why does the length decrease?S: Because we replaced blue wagons by red wagons?T: How many blue wagons did we replace?S: 5 blue wagons. T: How did you get 5?S: (50 - 40) ÷ 2 = 5.

Page 28: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

ANALYSIS OF TASK 3Generalization

A train with the length of 100 cm including 36 wagons, how many red wagons and blue wagons are there? The teacher guided students to generalize the procedure by using the temporary assumption to solve the problem.

Students applied the procedure to solve Task 3.N. of blue wagons: (100 - 36 2) ÷ 2 = 14 (wagons). The number of red wagons: 36 - 14 = 22 (wagons).

Page 29: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

OBSERVATIONS

GENERALIZATION

INDUCTION

INDUCTION

Page 30: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

Creative thinkingInductive, generalizing, conjecturing...

GOAL 1

GOAL 2

STARTDivergent

Page 31: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

ANALYSIS OF QUIZApplication

There are 33 liters of fish sauce contained in 2-liter bottles and 5-liter bottles. The number of bottles used is 12. Find the number of 2-liter bottles and 5-liter bottles used. Known that all bottles are full of fish sauce.

Page 32: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

ANALYSIS OF QUIZApplication

2

5

3 : Difference

The number of 5-liter bottles: (33 - 122) ÷ 3 = 3.

Page 33: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

With this kind of teaching, teacher helps students dig deeply into a textbook problem and build up a habit of unsatisfying with achieved results;

Encourage students to be interested in investigating and seeking for another solutions, and creative in learning mathematics.

Teacher helps students develop their mathematical thinking.

Page 34: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

INVESTIGATING TASKS

SOLVING “PROBLEMS”

PRACTICING EXERCISES, SKILLS

EXPLORING & RECALLING FACTS, PRINCIPLES, PROCEDURES

MATHEMATICAL THINKING DEFINED IN VN CURRICULUM

Page 35: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

FOUR MAIN ACTIVITIES IN A LESSON THAT TEACHERS SHOULD FOLLOW TO DEVELOP STUDENTS’ MATHEMATICAL THINKING (MOET 2006):

Activity 1. Examine and Consolidate the previous knowledge involved with new lesson;

Activity 2. Teacher facilitates students explore mathematical knowledge and construct new knowledge by themselves.

Activity 3. Students practice the new knowledge by solving exercises and problems in the textbook and exercise book.

Activity 4. Teacher concludes what students have learnt from new lesson and assigns the homework.

Page 36: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

ENGAGING TO THE LESSON, THE PUPILS WILL HAVE OPPORTUNITIES TO SHOW THEIR MATHEMATICAL THINKING THROUGH:

•The ability of observing, predicting, rational reasoning and logical reasoning;

•Knowing how to express procedures, properties by language at specific levels of generalization (by words, word formulas);

•Knowing how to investigate facts, situations, relationships in the process of learning and practicing mathematics;

•Developing ability on analyzing, synthesis, generalization, specifying; and starting to think critically and creatively.

Page 37: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

The level of difficulty and complexity of a problem is defined by the achievement objectives in the standard curriculum for each strand of mathematics.

The exercises in the practice lessons are ranked:

-   From easy to difficult, -   From simple to complicated, - From direct practice to flexible and

combined applications.

Page 38: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.

It is possible and desirable to call upon pupils’ Mathematical thinking powers by offering challenging and meaningful

Questions

Exercises

Problems

to work on

Page 39: HUE City, Vietnam Hue University’s College of Education 32 Le Loi St. APEC-Khon Kaen International Symposium August 2007.