Today we talked about different representations of the same growing pattern.
@simon-gregg
Primary teacher at the International School of Toulouse - back in Grade 4 this year! Also, teacher with responsibility for maths at IST Primary. Often tweet & blog maths, play and Early Years https://followinglearning.blogspot.com/
Today we talked about different representations of the same growing pattern.
A king once ordered that a prisoner be killed. When the prisoner knew he was about to die, he became very upset. He shouted angry words in his own language, which the king did not understand. The king asked his helpers,βWhat is that man saying?β One kind and wise helper said, βHe is saying that good people stay calm and forgive.β When the king heard this, his anger went away. He chose to forgive the prisoner and let him live. But another helper said, βThat is not true! The prisoner was insulting you and saying bad things.β The king replied, βI like the kind lie better than the cruel truth. The lie saved a life, but the truth would have led to a death.β
Here is the fable, simplified for the students. It needed a couple of read-throughs. I asked the students what they thought the moral of the story might be.
around the image of the story, the students have annotated their thoughts
Lots of thoughtful observations
It's this image, which I think is probably of the first story
www.artic.edu/artworks/131...
What do you see? What do you think? What do you wonder?
G4 students respond to a 16th century image of a 12th century fable by Sa'di of Shiraz.
Yes... of course... π²=π
I like this graph
Another pair's pattern involved doubling the previous term in the pattern and adding two. They kept going for ages, and also went back and fixed it when it went wrong.
These two (and some other pairs) were keen to go way beyond the points represented in the physical pattern
Entering the numbers in the pattern into a table in @desmos.com graphing
Over several desks students have created a growing pattern of connecting cubes. On the left the pattern has just one green cube, with each step towards the right, there's one more green cube.
Grade 4: Creating a growing pattern with multilink cubes
I think it was something like this one:
Today's Which One Doesn't Belong? with pairs of shapes
#wodb
Cuisenaire rods in a staircase formation, missing the brown rod. Alongside a picture in a book with a similar staircase with the same rod missing.
Making progress towards the picture on the book.
Me: Are you sure that staircase is right?
4yo: Yep, Iβm making the picture in the book.
@simon-gregg.bsky.social
Yangma Tetrahedrons and the origami box that seems like its too small to hold them
Been teaching a flurry of polyhedron-related classes to artists, revisiting some favorite forms, like chiral boxes with deep diagonal pockets that @simon-gregg.bsky.social pointed me towards years ago, and the Liu Hiu solids via Jen Silverman www.jensilvermath.com/presentation... #mathart #mtobs
At least it was in some students' range of possibilities!
A glass pots with a large number of pebbles in it.
This was our estimation thing today - how many pebbles?
I let everyone feel the pot of pebbles first, as well as seeing the picture. None of us, including me, estimated a big enough number.
Lesson - There are more than you think - (?)
Student: 'We need to check it.'
Some more big factor trees, created in pairs, using a calculator where useful.
The finished factor three
- now that I look at these like this, it could be a good 'Which one doesn't belong?' for next week! #wodb
Today G4 made flags with each quarter a different colour
One student, M, asked if we could make a really big factor tree for the classroom wall. I suggested we start with the prime factors - which the class chose - and multiply them all together with a calculator. We plan to make the tree next week. Watch this space...
My Grade 4 students have been making factor trees.
'How many?' with the Grade 4 students today. It's a good opportunity to see the same thing from multiple perspectives, and also to communicate exactly what is being counted.
Nice. Here's a similar one from my #wodb collection
goo.gl/photos/xL8tG...
There's lots more of these here. I think we should do another one soon. #wodb
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interna...
Which one doesn't belong? with international maritime signal flags #wodb
My Grade 4 students had lots of interesting ideas.
This thread reminds me of activities we've developed and called Excursions: www.terc.edu/mathequityfo...
... and my students from India got to share their writing in Kannada and Tamil. One of them watched The Man Who Knew Infinity at home too!
and by exploring partitions...