Title: Can you find the MATH in your every day
1Can you find the MATH in your every day?
- Slope Unit
- Covering Standards EA- 4.1, 5.2, 5.5, 5.6, and
5.7
2Little Notes from the authors
- Time we tried not to assign YOUR time in the
unit overview due to the differences between
traditional and block scheduling. As one part
ends, just let another begin. - Teacher prompts we give prompts, but we only
intend these to be suggestions. - Worksheets and rubrics we offer these, but feel
free to make them your own.
3Pre-Skills Assessment
- You do not have to use this, because it is not IN
our 4E X 2. We are moving into this slope unit
after the students have been introduced to
graphing functions on graphing calculators. They
can identify a function, graph a function and
verify their results with a graphing calculator.
We designed this for groups of two. - Teacher see worksheet Pre-skills assessment
4- Before getting started, have your students in
groups. Our resources that we offer work around
groups of three, but you may vary them as needed.
Here are the hyperlinks to the various cellular
companies if you need to research plans in order
to add a plan to our worksheets. - Alltel http//www.alltel.com/personal/wireless/p
lans/plans_individual.html - Sprint http//nextelonline.nextel.com/NASApp/onl
inestore/en/Action/DisplayPlans - T-Mobile http//www.t-mobile.com/shop/plans/
- Verizon - http//www.verizonwireless.com/b2c/store
/controller?itemplanFirstactionviewPlanListsor
tOptionpriceSorttypeId1subTypeId1catId323
51, Engage What do you know about cellular phone
plans?
- Teacher This will vary with every class. Give
them a piece of paper for them to jot down what
they know individually about cell phone plans.
Then, in their groups, combine what they know.
Now, as a class, you will highlight the
similarities. You are wanting to focus in on the
idea that if you go over on minutes, it will cost
.
62, Explore What do you know about cellular
phone plans?
- With the students in their group, hand out the
phone plans. Each group will get a different
carrier. Each person within that carrier should
pick their own plan, to explore what happens when
they have overage. Every student should receive
their own Inquiry into phone bills worksheet. - Teacher See worksheets
- Phone Plans- Inquiry into phone bills.
73, Explain What do you know about cellular
phone plans?
- The groups will display their data.
- At this time, it depends on what the students
give you. We want to investigate data through a
table and a graph. If one group gives any of
this, we lead each group to give us this
information. They will add this to their existing
data, we want one graph per group with each plan
a different line. The students explaining their
data will lead the them to the next explore
writing a linear equation. - Teacher prompts Once all groups have a graph
and table on display, you can ask for any
similarities and differences. Where does your
data start? Does your data end? What is
realistic? How many points did you pick and why?
Is this data linear? What about predicting
their bill. Could they do this with their graph?
82, Explore Writing linear equations.
- Teacher see worksheet Explore writing linear
equations. We want the students to realize that
they have seen these types of equations, and are
capable of writing their own equations. - After individual/group exploration, have at least
one equation written on their graphs to share
with the class. Let these equations be incorrect
if they are. We will address their thoughts in
the next explain writing linear equations. - Teacher prompts What do you need in an
equation? () What could you have on each side
of the equality sign?
93, Explain Linear equations(This is mostly
teacher oriented.)
- As a teacher, identify their variables, their
base plan cost, and their constant rate of change
in their given equations. - Teacher prompts Ask them what makes a line? (
at least 2 points ) What do you need for a
point? ( an x and y coordinate) Do you have two
points? What are they? If you plug these points
in, will your equation still be true? These are
some questions to help identify their variables.
- If they leave out the base plan cost, you could
ask them all you owe the phone company is
overage? Where is your initial cost in your
equation? These are some questions to help
identify the y-intercept. - To help them identify the constant rate of
change, you could point at a graph and ask, What
is different between these two lines? What made
them different or steeper? - Now, we introduce the slope-intercept form of the
equation of a line and using the procedure
to find slope. - Teacher see worksheet Explain writing linear
equations homework. - (This may be a time that you assign problems from
their textbooks or other resources.)
104, Extend To the x-intercept.
- Teacher Our equation includes a y variable, a
slope, an x variable, and a y-intercept. What is
the y-intercept? (an ordered pair, )
- We want to lead to the fact that the x coordinate
is zero in the y-intercept, so that we can lead
them into the next explore concerning the
x-intercept.
112, Explore The x-intercept
- Teacher Look again at your graph. Find the
coordinates of the x-intercept. - Teacher prompt This explore may need more
prompting as you walk around the room. - You can reflect back to the fact that the
x-coordinate is zero in the y-intercept. (0, y)
What would you think would be true of an
x-intercept? How would we write the x-intercept?
How would we find the x-intercept from an
equation?
123, Explain The x-intercept
- The groups will add at least one of their
x-intercepts to their graphs by the ordered pair. - They will explain how they found it.
- Teacher Does this x-intercept make sense in our
problem? - We discuss as a class, that this x-intercept does
not make sense in this situation, because we will
never have negative minutes. - Teacher see worksheet Explain x-intercept.
134, Extend x-intercept makes sense
- Teacher In groups, we ask the students to find a
situation/problem, where the x-intercept does
make sense. This will lead them into the next
explore x-intercept makes sense. - Teacher prompts In order for your y-coordinate
to be zero, (x,0), your x-axis will have to
represent a situation that can either start at
zero, or become zero. What kind of variables can
be zero? (money, temperatures, time, sea level,
)
142, Explore x-intercept makes sense
- Now, individually, the student will write this
situation into a problem, make a table, and
transfer this into a graph. This individual work
will be assessed. You may want to supply the
paper, but we have not supplied a worksheet,
because we want to see how the student will
present the problem and data. - Teacher see assessment create your own linear
scenario rubric - Teacher prompts Weekly pay checks and wages, a
submarine is built and lowered into the water, a
scuba diver entering the water, paying back a
loan over time (paying your parents back for your
overage), temperatures,
153, Explain x-intercept makes sense
- You can use this last explain to tie in the
textbook and the EOC. We have tried to offer
worksheets that give them some exposure to what
the EOC might have. You can point out the
effects of changes in slope and the y-intercept
on the graph of
16- Our goal for this slope unit was to have our
students realize that a linear equation is
nothing more than figuring out how much trouble
they are going to be in for going over 62 minutes
on their cell plan. - We hope it works!
- Thank you in advance for any feedback,
- Julie Davis (Berea High), Jason Fellers
(Woodmont High), Elaine Romano (Greer High), and
Becky Bryant (Greenville High)