Title: Standard 2'5 Mathematical Problem Solving
1Standard 2.5Mathematical Problem Solving
Communication
- Open-Ended Questions in Math
2Todays Agenda
- Analyze past PSSA results for open-ended items
- What is an open-ended item and how is it
addressed on the PSSA - Learn tips on solving open-ended items
- Learn where to find open-ended items or how to
create your own - Learn ways to use open-ended items in your
classroom/curriculum
35th, 8th and 11th Grade PSSA
- Each student has 4 open ended items on the PSSA
- 3 on the common form
- 1 on the matrix form
-
4PSSA
- Each open-ended item has a maximum value of 5
points - Therefore, open-ended items account for
approximately 18 of the students score for 5th,
8th and 11th grades and 14 for the 3rd grade
PSSA - Responses to open-ended items are graded using a
rubric (0 to 5 points)
5Open-ended Results From 2001-2002
6Grade 5
7Grade 8
8Grade 11
9What Is an Open-Ended Item?
10What is Problem Solving?
- Reasoning, communication and making connections
- Why?
- How do you know?
- Convince me
- Explain that
11Sample 5th Grade Open-ended Items
- Rename a number in a variety of ways
- Sort data using Venn diagrams
- Develop a tree diagram ands list the elements
- Draw geometric shapes
- Draw and label the parts of a right triangle
12Sample 5th Grade Open-ended Items
- Display data using tables, charts, lists, tallies
or graphs - List all possible combinations
- Continue a pattern
- Do simple transformations of figures
- See the 5th grade standards for more
possibilities
13Explanations
- At the 3rd and 5th grade levels, open-ended items
may - Require no explanation
- Require an explanation that focuses on
mathematical concept knowledge - Require an explanation that tells why each step
was taken - Required by all 8th 11th grade open-ended
items
14Open-ended Items
- If an open-ended item is straight problem solving
(computational type) it will have the following
directions - Show each step of your math work
- Explain WHY you chose each step
15Scratch Paper
- If students use scratch paper for open-ended
items, make sure they transfer ALL of their work
to the test booklet. - It may be helpful to have students NOT use
scratch paper for the open-ended items.
16Labels
- Answers must be labeled correctly
- Especially money and measurement
- Ex) 57 cents can be written as 0.57 or 57?
- NOT as 0.57? or 0.57?
- Perimeter in, cm, etc
- Area sq in, cm2, etc
17Calculator Usage
- Calculators can be used for all open-ended items
on the 5th, 8th and 11th grade PSSA - Students need to be familiar with using the
specific calculator before the test! - Calculators are NOT permitted
- on the 3rd grade PSSA
18Sample 5th Grade
19Sample 5th Grade Question
- Some 5th graders competed in a field-day race.
The 5th grade results for the 50-meter race are
shown in the chart. - (Standards 2.1, 2.5, 2.6)
20Sample 5th Grade Item
21Sample 5th Grade Item
- List the runners from fastest to slowest.
REMEMBER the runner completing the race in the
least amount of time is the winner. - CALCULATE the average time for the 5th grade.
Which runners time was closest to the average
for 5th grade? CALCULATE by how much time this
students time differed from the average.
22The Directions
- For full credit, you must do the following
- Show OR describe each step of your work, even if
you did it in your head (mental math) or used a
calculator - Write an explanation stating the mathematical
reason(s) why you chose each of your steps
23Solving Open-ended Items
24Solving Tips from Teachers
- Show and number each step of the work
- Even/especially if the work was done in the
students head or calculator
25Tips for Solving
- Make 2 columns
- Put work on the left
- Put explanation on the right
work
explanation
26The Work (a students response)
- A)
- 1) Fastest 1. Tia 7.68 sec
- 2. Rose 7.86 sec
- 3. Andrew 8.05 sec
- 4. Matt 8.28 sec
- 5. Donna 8.72 sec
- Slowest 6. José 8.98 sec
27The Work (a students response)
- 2) 7.68 7.86 8.05 8.28 8.72
8.98 49.57 sec - 3) 49.57 6 8.26 sec (average)
- 4) Matts time 8.28 sec is the closest
- 5) 8.28 8.26 .02 sec
28Explanation Tips
- Make sure ALL steps are explained in words
- Encourage your students NOT to use the words to
find the answer - The words the answer do not explain what the
answer represents
29Explanation Tips
- Encourage students to EXPLAIN their work - not
DESCRIBE it - Description
- I divided 49.57 by six which equals 8.26
- Explanation
- I divided the total time by the number of
runners TO FIND the average time
30Explanation Tips
- Explain which operation was performed and what
each number means - Start each step with I added
- I subtracted
- I multiplied, etc
- Then explain what each number represents
- I divided the total time by the number of
runners
31Explanation Tips
- Use magic words in the explanation
- These are words that gear students to explain
their work rather than describe it - Article on Magic Words can be found in the
math assessment handbook
32What are the Magic Words?
- To find
- To get
- To see
- To figure out
- To show
- To determine
- Because
- Since
- Therefore.
33The Explanation(a students response)
- I ordered the runners from fastest to slowest.
Tia won the race. The runners up in order were
Rose, Andrew, Matt, Donna and last was José. - I added all the runners times together TO FIND
the total time.
34The Explanation (a students response)
- 3) I divided the total time by the number of
runners TO GET the average time for 5th grade. - 4) I compared the runners time to the average
and I see that Matts time was the closest to the
average. -
- 5) I subtracted the average time from Matts
time TO FIGURE OUT how much he differed from the
average.
35The Final Product
- work
- A) 1) Fastest 1. Tia 7.68 sec
- 2. Rose 7.86 sec
- 3. Andrew 8.05 sec
- 4. Matt 8.28 sec
- 5. Donna 8.72 sec
- Slowest 6. José 8.98 sec
- B) 2) 7.68 7.86 8.05 8.28 8.72 8.98
49.57 sec - 3) 49.57 6 8.26 sec (average)
- 4) Matts time 8.28 sec is the closest
- 5) 8.28 8.26 .02 sec
- explanation
- 1) I ordered the runners from fastest to
slowest. Tia won the race. The runners up in
order were Rose, Andrew, Matt, Donna and last was
José. - 2) I added all the runners times together TO
FIND the total time. - 3) I divided the total time by the number of
runners TO GET the average time for 5th grade. - 4) I compared the runners time to the average
and I see that Matts time was the closest to the
average. -
- 5) I subtracted the average time from Matts
time TO FIGURE OUT how much he differed from the
average time.
36Open-ended Items
37Where to Find Open-Ended Problems
- Mathematics Assessment handbook Released Items
Handbook - www.pde.state.pa.us
- Click on K-12 Schools
- Click on Assessment Testing
- Click on Assessment Handbooks
-
- Mathematics Instructional Rubrics (Primary thru
High School) - www.pde.state.pa.us
- Click on K-12 Schools
- Click on Curriculum Instruction
- Click on Mathematics
- Click on Whats New
-
38Where to Find Open-Ended Problems
- Open-ended problems created at the 2002 Math
Governors Institutes - www.pde.state.pa.us
- Click on K-12 Schools
- Click on Curriculum Instruction
- Click on Mathematics
- Click on Professional Education
- PSSA Practice Tests (5th, 8th 11th)
39Where to Find Open-Ended Items
- Text resource books
- Multi-step word problems from your textbook
- Teacher-made questions
- Internet resources
40Suggested Resources from Teachers
- Measuring Up books
- 1-800-822-1080 or www.patesthelp.com
- PSSA Mathematics Coach books
- 1-800-221-9372 or www.educationaldesign.com
- Continental Press PAM Prep
- 1-800-233-0759
- Exemplars
- www.exemplars.com
41Hints on Creating Your Own Open-Ended Problems
- Make sure problems address a standard at or near
your grade level - Make sure all problems require more than 1 step
(or part) to solve - Use your students names, other teachers names
and your schools name to make the problems more
interesting to your students
42Ways to Use Open-Ended Items in Your Classroom
- Put a problem on every test or quiz
- Homework
- Math journal
- Open-ended portfolio..
- DO NOT use only as extra credit
43Tips for Beginners
- Provide time for students to solve problems
individually - Share answers/ideas with partners or in small
groups - Discuss as a class
44Practice, Practice, Practice
- Practice should occur the entire year
- Open-ended questions should be addressed about
once a week - Incorporate these types of questions into ALL
grade levels - Eventually open-ended questions should become an
integrated part of the math curriculum at ALL
grade levels
45Curriculum
- Your Goal
- Open-ended items should become a part of your
math curriculum - NOT just an added activity to do if you have time
at the end of the chapter or on days before
vacation! - Your Districts Goal
- To develop a district-wide plan on the the
implementation of open-ended items in math
classrooms, kindergarten through 12th grade
46Tips for Rubric Use
- Copy the rubric on the back of an open-ended item
and circle or highlight where their score falls - Have students correct lower scoring papers to
make them a 5 - Have students grade their own solutions or
another classmates solution using the rubric
47The Importance of
48- Numerous studies reveal that a knowledge of
mathematics vocabulary directly affects
achievement in arithmetic, particularly problem
solving. - Barton, M.L. Heidema, C. (2002) Teaching
Reading in Mathematics 2nd Ed.
49Math Vocabulary Development
- Insist that students use correct mathematical
vocabulary in their explanations (when
developmentally appropriate) - Refer to the Terms to Know in the math
standards (all grade levels) or page 26 in the
2000-2001 math handbook (for grade 5)
50Math Vocabulary Development
- Math vocabulary bulletin board - add new words to
it year-round - Math Word Wall
- Student developed math vocabulary notebook
- Math word-of-the-day
51Conclusion
- Incorporating open-ended questions in your math
curriculum will not only help improve your PSSA
scores, but will also help improve your students
understanding, and the ability to communicate
that understanding
52Good luck to you and your students!!