Showing posts with label YouTube. Show all posts
Showing posts with label YouTube. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

PEMDAS and the Number-Gobbling Dragon

By Erica Simon, RME Project Specialist

In our digital world, creativity and a little storytelling can be a powerful mnemonic to understanding a basic principal of mathematics that all students need to be successful. Many students love to watch YouTube videos, and now, the new TED Ed site has organized these educational videos to allow teachers to find them and "flip" the videos into lessons. These videos are displayed on lesson pages already created with multiple-choice quizzes, open ended questions, and links to more information about the topic. A teacher can create her own lesson with any YouTube video by simply "flipping" it!

So how does this work? Let's look at a mathematics content example. PEDMAS – the well-known acronym for parenthesis, exponents, division, multiplication, addition and subtraction, is taught as students are introduced to problem solving strategies for equations and word problems. Although many a “trick” has been used to help students understand the order of operations, the clever folks at TED Ed(ucation) have used the power of animation and storytelling to deliver a swashbuckling tale of the Land of Pi where the numbers run wild. But only with the sequential attack of the mathematical symbols for the operations, are the numbers tamed and “order” is restored. Puff, the number-gobbling dragon is squashed by the symbolic musketeers who attack with precision and order to save the Land of Pi.



After students watch the video, there is a lesson already created if a teacher doesn't create her own. There are five multiple-choice questions and three open ended questions, including one where students must work to simplify an expression using PEMDAS. Last there are three resources where students can "dig deeper."

The IES Practice Guide for Problem Solving in Grades 4-8 provides recommendations that support procedural knowledge and flexibility as students develop skills to efficiently and correctly solve math problems. By tapping students’ prior knowledge of mathematical operations and supporting a solid understanding of the order in which operations are used, teachers help students become comfortable with symbols and correctly use them in their problem solving.

By sharing this whimsical approach to the order of operations with your class as a support for honing procedural knowledge, conceptual understanding and procedural flexibility, students will see mathematical rules come to life in a way that exemplifies why the order of operations matters when solving math problems.

Let us know what you think and how you could use TED Ed videos in your classroom.

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

So, your students hate math...?

By Savannah Hill, RME Professional Development Coordinator and Erica Simon, RME Project Specialist

Maybe I am the only math teacher that ever had at least three students (times a lot) tell me they hated math. I like to believe that one reason is that they had never had anyone put math into context for them. I did everything I could to be a resource for my students and to put math into context, but sometimes, it is difficult. So, where do you look to find resources for the resource?

These days, it seems to be YouTube, Twitter, and Google to name a few.

I found a great website on Twitter that many teachers would find very helpful to introduce to their students. Its called Numberphile.
As one of the first original series funded by YouTube, Numberphile presents "videos about numbers and stuff." The videos present mathematical concepts in a captivating and well explained way using intelligent questioning and editing.

For example, take this video, "Calculating Pi with Pies." The measuring unit is an actual pie. They determine how many pies it takes to calculate the circumference and diameter of a large circle drawn on the ground. Through modeling the formula circumference divided by diameter (C/d), the quotient is approximately 3.14 or pi! This visual representation is a great way of putting math into context.



Many students hate math because they don't see how it is used in the real world, don't like how it is taught, or just don't get it. Numberphile can be a fantastic resource for bell ringers, test problems, or a math project-based learning activity in a classroom. Parents can also introduce it to their children as a fun way to explore mathematical concepts!

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Twisting, Turning, Doodling, and Games

By Erica Simon, RME Project Specialist

Middle school math students are voracious doodlers, as any teacher of the 11-13 year old set will tell you. But what if all those doodles could teach you about mathematical concepts? What if doodles made math cool?

Sierpinski’s Triangle and Candy Corn
A series of You Tube videos has introduced the world to Vi Hart, the young creative mathmusician, as she calls herself. Although not formally trained in mathematics, but music rather, she LOVES math! And by making it fun with doodles (graph theory), stars (geometry and polygons), and triangles (Sierpinski’s Triangle and candy corn), Vi Hart has engaged young boys and girls to think about prime numbers, binary trees, and fractal patterns and see them as cool. “It’s mathematics that anyone can do.” Said Ms. Hart (New York Times, Jan. 17, 2011).

Ms. Hart does all this doodling with a pencil and a sharpie and records herself “thinking aloud.” Although her musings seems rather stream of consciousness, she is teaching her viewers to make connections and see the elegance of mathematics. She creatively and comically humanizes the father of mathematics theory and proportions (Pythogoras hated beans!) but helps the viewer see the logic behind what the squares in that formula a2+b2=c2 really mean.

Click below for the YouTube video about Pythagoras.
What was up with Pythagoras?

Although we never see anything beyond the hands of Ms. Hart as she is exploring the wonders of Sierpinski’s Triangle and using candy corns to explain the theory, the viewer listens to a young, confident, and gifted mathematician who is infectious about her fascination with the ways in which mathematics surrounds us. And by showing us only her hands, the viewer feels confident that they can do this too!

Did you know about Borromean rings?

Click below for the YouTube video about Borromean rings.
Doodling in Math Class: Snakes and Graphs

Now you do. And you can draw cool snakes!

Share Vi Hart's videos with your students and let us know what you think! vihart.com