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Concepts vs Skills: A Bogus Dichotomy. NCTM Regional Meeting Richmond, VA October 2007 Dr. Eric Milou Rowan University Department of Mathematics milou@rowan.edu 856-256-4500 x3876. Overview. National News in Mathematics Education Conceptual vs. Procedural Debate
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Concepts vs Skills: A Bogus Dichotomy NCTM Regional Meeting Richmond, VA October 2007 Dr. Eric Milou Rowan University Department of Mathematics milou@rowan.edu 856-256-4500 x3876
Overview • National News in Mathematics Education • Conceptual vs. Procedural Debate • Number Sense & Computation Proficiency
NCTM Focal Points (9/12/06) • Not Back to Basics at All • Press articles did not represent the substance or intent of the focal points. • The focal points are not about the basics; they are about important foundational topics. NCTM has always supported learning the basics. • Students should learn and be able to recall basic facts and become computationally fluent, but such knowledge and skills should be acquired with understanding.
Education Week 11/1/06 • We cannot afford to waste time on polarization. What is important is that we pragmatically address critical target areas to improve mathematics education. We cannot be distracted from our primary mission—to match tactical initiatives in other, newly technological societies that are snatching our competitive advantage in innovation—while we bicker over modest differences in approach. (Jere Confrey)
Compute the following: 4 x 9 x 25 How many ounces are in a gallon? 50 ÷ 1/2
Third International Math & Science Study (TIMSS) Proceduresvs. Concepts
Math Lessons • Demonstrates a procedure • Assigns similar problems to students as exercises • Homework assignment • Presents a problem without first demonstrating how to solve it • Individual or group problem solving • Compare and discuss multiple solution methods • Summary, exercises and homework assignment
We need a BALANCE • Pedagogical Balance • Content Balance • Conceptual Understanding • Algorithmic Proficiency • These are NOT Dichotomous
Conceptual Understanding • 24 ÷ 4 = 6 • 24 ÷ 3 = 8 • 24 ÷ 2 =12 • 24 ÷ 1 = 24 • 24 ÷ 1/2 = ??
Fractions - Conceptually The F word More than 1 or Less than 1 Explain your reasoning
Which is larger? • (2/3 + 3/4 + 4/5 + 5/6) OR 4 • 12.5 x 45 OR 4.5 x 125 • (1/3 + 2/4 + 2/4 + 5/11) OR 2
Where’s the Point? • 2.43 x 5.1 = 12393 • 4.85 x 4.954 = 240269 • 21.25 x 1.08 = 2295 • 1.25 x 64 = 80 • 4.688 x 1.355 = 635224 • 46.88 x 1.355 = 635224 • 4.688 x 135.5 = 635224 • 46.88 x 13.55 = 635224
1.49 1000 Computational Balance • 1000 ÷ 1.49 = 671.1409396 = Torture! • Big Macs Sell for $1.49, how many Big Macs can I buy for $10.00? • 1 is $1.50 • 2 are $3 • 4 are $6 • 6 are $9 Mental Mathematics is a vital skill
Computation is Important • Engaging & Active • Less passive worksheets • More thinking & reasoning
Name That Number - Computational Practice Target #: 6 3 3 17 1 8
Active Computation • Fifty (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and addition) • Buzz (3) • Product Game • Wipe Out • Software: Math Arena
0 9 1 8 2 7 3 6 4 5 Multiplication Wheels 4 Facts
Conceptual & Contextual • 8+ 7 = ? • How do we teach this? x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x
17 - 8 = 0 17 / / 1 7 - 8 2 7 8 --> --> 10 --> --> --> --> --> --> --> 17
1000 - 279 = ? 279 +1 = 280 + 20 = 300 +700 = 1000
Multiplication • 13 x 17 = ? 10 7 2 10 3 1 3 x 1 7 1 0 0 7 0 ------- 3 0 2 1 9 1 1 3 0 ------- 2 2 1 221
Conceptual approach leads to ? • Algebra: (x + 3) (x + 7) = x 7 x 3 x2 7x 3x 21
Contextual Problem Solving • Not more traditional word problems • Placing mathematical lessons into settings • Giving students a reason to learn the skill
Example 1: Sneakers SECOND purchase Nike Converse Reebok F I R S T Nike Converse Reebok
100 Students • 50 1st time Nike buyers • 30 1st time Converse buyers • 20 1st time Reebok buyers • How many would buy Nike the second time? • 50 x .4 + 30 x .2 + 20 x .1 = 28
Example 2: Game Show • You must select one spinner. Both spinners above will be spun once. • The spinner with the higher number showing wins $1,000,000 for that person. • Which spinner will you select?
Spinner Example 4 5 6 5 8 5 4 9 6 9 8 9
Fact #1 A
Fact #2 B
Fact #3 C
Fact #4 D
Fact #5 E
Fact #6 F
Fact #7 G
Fact #8 H
Fact #9 I
What is this? F A C E
What If? C A B F D E I G H
Try Again D E C A D E
Isolated Facts Less likely to retain information Connected Facts, Patterns, Facts in Context More likely to retain information What’s the Point?
Characteristics of a good mathematics program • CONCEPTUAL • CONTEXTUAL • CONSTRUCTIVISM • COMPUTATION
Thank You Dr. Eric Milou Rowan University milou@rowan.edu http://www.rowan.edu/colleges/las/departments/math/facultystaff/milou/eric.html