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It’s Not Just a Graphing Calculator by: David M. Usinski usinski@ecc.edu. An Introduction to the TI- Nspire Handheld:. Overview. Research: Action-Consequence in Microworlds Resources for the TI-Nspire Lessons and Activities. Research.
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It’s Not Just a Graphing Calculator by: David M. Usinski usinski@ecc.edu An Introduction to the TI-Nspire Handheld:
Overview • Research: Action-Consequence in Microworlds • Resources for the TI-Nspire • Lessons and Activities
Research Students learn mathematics by doing mathematics, engaging in tasks and activities, mediated by the teacher. Technology’s influence on students’ mathematical learning is either amplified or limited through the kinds of mathematical tasks and activities teachers provide. The newest generation of handheld technologies can provide unique opportunities for students to do mathematical tasks in new ways that have the potential to foster learning and develop understanding. The role of handheld technology in teaching and learning secondary school mathematics • Gail Burrill, Michigan State University
Research • New technologies such as TI-Nspire bring together both of these environments in one handheld, providing the opportunity to create an even wider variety of dynamic linked representations, where a change in one representation is immediately and visibly reflected in another. The role of handheld technology in teaching and learning secondary school mathematics • Gail Burrill, Michigan State University
Research • To exploit this dynamic environment, just as with handhelds and dynamic geometry software, students need to have adequate opportunities to conjecture, reflect, explain, and justify. Thus, what the teacher asks students to do and to think about is critical if the technology is to be a tool for learning mathematics as well as doing mathematics. The role of handheld technology in teaching and learning secondary school mathematics • Gail Burrill, Michigan State University
Research • Activities should have a clear focus on important mathematical ideas. • Activities should allow students to deliberately take mathematically meaningful actions on objects and to immediately see the mathematically meaningful consequences of those actions. • Activities should include inquiry tasks of high cognitive demand. The role of handheld technology in teaching and learning secondary school mathematics • Gail Burrill, Michigan State University
Resources for the TI-Nspire • Video Tutorials – FREE • www.atomiclearning.com • www.ti-nspire.com • Free online courses • TI-Nspire Lessons • www.timath.com • More classroom activities • www.mathbits.com
Lessons and Activities • Algebra – What’s My Rule – 8256 • Algebra 2 – Exponential Growth – 8254 • Prealgebra – Where’s the Point? – 8247 • Statistics – What’s Normal, Anyway – 8556 • Calculus – The Art Gallery Problem – 8300 • Statistics – Mobile Regressions – 8262 • Geometry – Loci: Keeping Constant – 8263
Thank you! • You can download this PowerPoint at: • http://city.ecc.edu/usinski/presentations.html