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Title: The Integration of HandHeld Technology in the Classroom ITC:


1

Greater Cleveland Council of Teachers of
Mathematics Nov. 29, 2006Cleveland, OH
  • The Integration of Hand-Held Technology in the
    Classroom (ITC)
  • Lessons learned,
  • New students results what to learn from this
    trend
  • Research findings implications for classroom
    practice,
  • Antonio R. Quesada
  • The University of Akron
  • Department of Theoretical Applied Mathematics
  • Akron, Ohio 44325-4002 aquesada_at_uakron.edu

2
Scholastics use to define the terms before a
dialogue, so as Alice sayslets start at the
beginning
  • What is Mathematics?
  • The science of structure, order, and relation
    that has evolved from elemental practices of
    counting, measuring, and describing the shapes of
    objects.
  • Encyclopedia Britannica
  • A large majority of our population have serious
    misconceptions about what is mathematics and what
    is it that mathematicians do.
  • Mathematical notation (symbols) the syntax
    (rules) needed to manipulate this notation have
    traditionally been the big obstacles for people
    to get to know mathematics.

3
Public vision Math as a Foreign Language
4
Mathematics is the language of the sciences!
  • True, but lets not forget that notation is to
    mathematics like grammar is to writing.
  • Grammar and notation are the necessary evils!
  • You cannot be a good writer without grammar, but
    knowledge of grammar does not make you a novelist
    or a poet.
  • Similarly, to do mathematics you need to be able
    to do calculations and to express your analysis
    algebraically/analytically, but mathematics is
    much more than that.
  • Regrettably, many good students are lost in the
    notation and never get to know mathematics!

5
Who can do Mathematics?
  • Another generalized misconception is that either
    you can do math or you cannot! You are born with
    the gift!
  • Thinking in this way is like saying that nobody
    can play basketball unless you play like an NBA
    player.
  • The reality is that many students can do a lot
    better in mathematics, but like in any area of
    human knowledge you have to believe you can do it
    being willing to work hard consistently.
  • Genius is 1 inspiration 99 perspiration (A.
    Einstein)
  • I often remind my students of Polyas words,
    problem solving involves frustration, otherwise
    you are doing an exercise not a problem...

6
What is mathematics about?
  • Mathematics is about problem solving (modeling
    real-life and abstract situations to answer
    questions that we or others raise, finding and
    explaining patterns, exploring)
  • Hence, it permeates not only all sciences but
    every area of human knowledge!
  • Often our solutions are templates or models that
    apply to completely different examples.

7
Prior to the Integration of Technology in the
Classroom (ITC)
  • The accessibility of various topics in secondary
    level was fairly linear. In the US, problems were
    categorized as belonging to algebra I, algebra
    II, geometry, precalculus or calculus. Thus,
    optimization problems for example were first
    studied in calculus, since they typically
    required trigonometry and differential calculus.
  • The introduction to functions and their
    properties was mainly analytical, graphs were
    better addressed in calculus, and very little was
    done numerically.
  • Topics studied were in part limited by the
    constraints imposed by the extent of the
    algorithms/calculations needed and time they
    required. Therefore topics such as
    approximations, non-linear regression, recursion,
    and matrix applications were not (and could not
    be) included in secondary level.
  • Mastering algorithmic calculations was essential
    to finish problems correctly. Hence, mechanics
    often took precedence over conceptual
    understanding, applications, and exploration and
    discovery.
  • Teaching tended to be more teacher centered.

8
Goals of this presentation
  • To share some lessons learned from our research
    practice over the last 15 years on ITC,
    particularly on the use of handheld technology
    (HT).
  • To review key research results and
    recommendations from these results about the use
    of handheld graphing technology (HGT).
  • If time allows we will answer this question
  • Can secondary students do new mathematics?

9
In the beginning there were paper and pencil,
then
10
Technologys Impact on Mathematics Instruction
  • The integration of technology in the teaching
    learning of mathematics impacts every aspect of
    instruction course content, teaching methods,
    classroom activities, and assessment.
  • Assumptions about mathematics curricula made in a
    time prior to the integration of technology in
    the classroom (ITC) are, in some cases, no longer
    valid.
  • Thus, topics such as optimization, matrix
    applications, linear and nonlinear regression,
    recursion etc. are now accessible to students in
    earlier grades (prior to calculus).

11
Some lessons learned from our research for the
last 15 years on the use of HT
  • Calculators facilitate the use of the scaffolding
    method at every level

12
Some lessons learned The scaffolding method
used at every level via technology allows to
  • Bridge over cumbersome calculations when that is
    not our focus, facilitating
  • Access to relevant algorithms traditionally
    excluded from our curriculum,
  • More problem solving, more applications, more
    exploration
  • A reduction on the time spent and numerical
    mistakes made in the implementation of
    algorithms.

13
Some lessons learned Examples of the
scaffolding method
  • In elementary school
  • 1st level
  • Learn to multiply (using manipulatives),
  • memorize rules (using calculators via guess
    check),
  • practice by paper pencil
  • then 2nd level
  • Explore patterns Solve many applied problems
    (using calculators and estimation)
  • In secondary school
  • 1st level
  • Learn algorithms to solve equations or systems of
    equations, practice by paper pencil
  • then 2nd level
  • Explore Solve many applied problems (using
    calculators)
  • Or, learn to solve problems bypassing the
    calculations input data, observe tendency, test
    different models until finding the best.

14
Some lessons learned
  • The rule of four
  • Use algebraic, graphical, numerical, and verbal
    methods
  • Pay attention to how students learn (Hands-on,
    exploring, conjecturing, communicating)
  • Use multiple approaches to a concept

15
Some lessons learned
  • The teacher can always find the way of asking
    questions such that the students need mainly
    conceptual understanding to answer, no HT. Thus,
    one may ask
  • In how many different ways can Joe, Mary, Paul
    seat in a row?
  • Find the zeros of p(x)(x-a)(xb)2
  • Find a polynomial of degree 3 whose zeros are 1,
    2, and -5
  • Of course, there is nothing wrong by saying
  • Memorize the trigonometric ratios for 300,450,600
  • (No calculators allowed in tomorrows quiz!)

16
Some lessons learned
17
Some lessons learned If a calculator is
allowed, then we should require at least 2-digit
precision!
  • But boss, l Just left out a decimal point.
    Don't I get at least partial credit? THOMA
    S

18
Some lessons learned Visualization complements
the traditional algebraic explanation for many
problemsimproving students understanding
  • Traditional textbook solution of

19
Graphical explanation(A good picture is worth a
thousand words!)
20
Some lessons learnedSolving inequalities force
us to think graphically!
  • In 1992 less than 10 of Precalculus textbooks
    included some inequalities involving functions
    other than quadratic and rational functions
    (unpublished). The situation has not improved
    much (Quesada Smith, 2006)
  • However, we know that thinking graphically
    algebraically increases conceptual understanding
    while reducing calculations and errors.
  • Thus after teaching the algebraic approach to
    solve a new kind of equation, ask the students to
    solve inequalities. Ask them to solve

21
Some lessons learned
  • HT facilitates studying families of functions via
    transformations. Thus the graph of
    is obtained from the graph of the parent
    function by performing

a horizontal shift to the right followed by a
vertical shift down
22
Some lessons learned
  • Multiple representations provide a global
    approach for solving equations. (Solving an
    equation involving a continuous function is
    finding the zeros of the function.)
  • Can we estimate from the table or the graph the
    solution of this anonymous equation of a
    continuous function?

23
Some lessons learned HT creates the need for
awareness about the limitations of technology.
Consider a students question The two graphs
represent the given function, how is this
possible?
24
Some lessons learned
The misleading 2nd graph is obtained by using a
window that exceeds the precision of the
calculator, producing truncation
error! Exposing students to these
limitations of technology, helps to demystify it!
25
Does this create more work initially?In the
mid-nineties, when I commented about the amount
of additional work required from in-service
teachers to update in content, methods,
assessment, and integration of technology a
friend sent me this
Somewhere, someone, works more than teachers do
26
Some lessons learnedRecommendations for
teachers interested in integrating HT into their
courses
  • Start little by little! One or several chapters
    at a time. Learn, correct, and increase the scope
    of your change. Dont try to change your course
    in one semester.
  • If possible work as part of a team. Share ideas
    and tasks. Network with colleagues.
  • Learn from those preceding you (avoid
    rediscovering the wheel).
  • Remember There is a wealth of knowledge
    available on the net!

27
Some lessons learned On the use of inquiry in
the mathematics classroom
  • We strongly recommend using inquiry-based
    activities at every level. However, our research
    shows that understanding and/or being familiar
    with a topic does not automatically guarantee
    successful application nor retention of key
    ideas. For that to happen, students also need to
  • Verbalize what they have learned (asking them to
    write in a journal the key concepts properties
    learned after each inquiry-based activity helps)
  • Memorize key definitions, properties, and
    algorithms
  • Practice (it is hard to memorize algorithms
    without practice! HOMEWORK is essential!)
  • Example We are all familiar with coins, but do
    we know the answer to these questions?
  • Is the head on a penny looking to its left or to
    its right? Where is the date imprinted?
  • Can you generalize your answers to a nickel, to a
    dime, or to a quarter?

28
Check your answers!
29
Lesson learned The impact of HT is enhanced by
using teamwork!Prospective employers, i.e.,
business industry have asked for it, research
favors it!
Students learn from each other and learn to work
together!
30
Nowadays even pirates have retirement problems!
  • A pirate hid a treasure in a tiny island
    when he was young. The island had a palm tree and
    two big rocks one was falcon shaped while the
    other looked like an owl.
  • To hide the treasure, the pirate counted his
    paces as he was walking straight from the palm
    tree to the falcon-shaped rock. He then turned a
    quarter circle to the right and walked the same
    number of paces placing a stick in the ground. He
    returned to the palm tree and repeated the
    process, counting his paces while walking
    straight to the owl-shaped rock, turning a
    quarter circle to the left, and walking the same
    distance before placing a second stick in the
    ground. Finally he connected the sticks with a
    rope and buried his treasure beneath the
    midpoint.

Years later, concerned about the SS reform, the
pirate returned to the island looking for his
treasure and found that the two rocks remained
but the palm tree has long since died. Can the
reaches still be unearthed?
31
(No Transcript)
32
After the ITC
  • The distinction between activities appropriate to
    students at various courses and ability levels
    becomes less clear.
  • The ability to bridge over cumbersome
    calculations via technology allows students at
    various levels to
  • use technology to meaningfully explore concepts
    and problems previously proposed only to the most
    advanced mathematics students,
  • and to extend the breadth and depth treatment of
    these concepts.
  • It is feasible to change the focus to a more
    conceptual one, with relevant applications, and
    increased exploration.
  • Teaching is becoming more student centered, with
    inquiry playing an increasingly bigger role.

33
The mere formulation of a problem is often far
more essential than its solution, which may be a
matter of mathematical or experimental skill. To
raise new questions, new possibilities, to regard
old problems from a new angle requires creative
imagination and marks real advances in science.
Albert Einstein
34
Are ordinary secondary students, i.e., other
than geniuses such as Gauss or Pascal,capable
of finding new results in mathematics?
35
  • 2. Some new results produced by students during
    the last 10 years

36
There are numerous examples of mathematical
discoveries by secondary students during the last
ten years!
  • We may wonder about not having these kind of
    students
  • Or we may ask
  • Are there common underlying factors on these
    students discoveries?
  • Am I creating/promoting these factors in my
    classes?

37
After looking at these findings and interviewing
some of the people involved I found the following
threads
  • Common thread 1 Use of HT in particular of
    Dynamic Geometry Software (DGS). But, why?
  • When properly used HT DGS facilitates the
    inquiry-based approach promoting this model

38
Common thread 2 Students who find new
results invariablyhave been challenged by their
teachers!
  • There are many ways of consistently challenge
    our students
  • Do we ask our students to try to generalize their
    solutions to the problems we give them?
  • Do we encourage our students to ask new questions
    and try to solve them, rewarding them for these
    efforts?
  • Do we dare to ask to our students true
    challenging questions, questions for which we may
    not have an answer?
  • If we dont challenge them, risking not knowing
    the answer to some of their own questions, we'll
    be perpetuating the myth of the teacher knows
    everything we will hardly be rewarded with
    their discoveries!
  • We need to learn to say I dont know, let me
    think about it!
  • (I can attest to the fact that the world does
    not end when you say this)

39
RememberTeach your scholar to observeyou will
soon raise his curiosity. Put the problems before
him and let him solve them himself. Let him know
nothing because you have told him, but because he
has learned by himself. Undoubtedly the notions
of things acquired by oneself are clearer and
much more convincing than those acquired from the
teaching of others

Jean-Jacques Rousseau
40
Problem A developer is building a new mall P
close to Akron, Barberton, and Cuyahoga Falls.
Find the location of the mall, such that the sum
of distances to the three cities is
minimal.(You may assume that the appropriate
place to build the warehouse is vacant!)
41
Traditional Solution
42
Solution by Bridget Connie (Arnie Egerbrensten
students)Reflect one vertex B upon the segment
connecting the centers of the equilateral
triangles constructed on sides
43
The GlaD Construction Charles H. Dietrich
teacher at Greens Farms Academy, pose to his 8th
grade honor students Dave Goldenheim Dan
Litchfield the well known problem of how to
subdivide a given segment in n equal segments.
However, he added the condition of doing it
without using a compass. (June, 1995)
44
Dave Goldenheim Dan Litchfield solution
45
Can we find points on the real plane whose
coordinates are the real and imaginary parts of
the complex solutions of a quadratic equation?
46
Solution by Shaun Piper, 12th grade, St.
Pauls School, Concord, NH
  • Reflect the parabola upon y5 (line of symmetry)
  • 2. Find the zeros of the new parabola
  • 3. Rotate 90 the segment determined by these zeros

47
Frank D. Nowosielski (Patapsco H. S., Baltimore
Cty, Mariland) asked his 9th grade students to
confirm MARION WALTERS THEOREM. If the
trisection points of the sides of any triangle
are connected to the opposite vertices, the
resulting hexagon has area one-tenth the area of
the original triangle.
48
Ryan Morgan, after verifying the theorem, became
interested in finding out what would it happen if
the sides of the triangle were n-sected
(partitioned into n equal parts)
49
  • Ryan Morgans conjecture
  • For n odd, if the central n-section points
    of the sides of any triangle are connected to the
    opposite vertices, the ratio of the area of the
    original triangle to the area of the resulting
    hexagon is
  • (9n2 - 1)/8 to 1

50
  • 3. Research findings implications for classroom
    practice.

51
Interesting Facts on the use of HT in the
classroom
  • More than 25 of what was taught in mathematics
    changed after the introduction of the scientific
    calculator.
  • As of the year 2000, over 80 of high school
    teachers in the US used HT in their classrooms
  • Very controversial topic in education, however
    research on HT is still sparse
  • Uncertainty and many unanswered questions still
    exist

52
Differences in how HGT is used in classrooms and
in how its impact is measured contribute to
serious disagreements about the role of HGT in
mathematics education, its effect on students
  • understanding,
  • ability to perform routine procedures,
  • facility with algebraic skills.
  • attitudes toward mathematics
  • as well as its pedagogical implications.

53
The Three Meta-Analyses used as references for
this presentation
  • Handheld graphing technology in secondary
    mathematics Research findings implications for
    classroom practice.
  • Gail Burrill et all, 2002
  • Sources chosen from 180 reports and 43 were
    used.
  • A Meta-Analysis of the Effects of Calculators on
    Students Achievement and Attitude Levels in
    Precollege Mathematics Classes.
  • Aimee J. Ellington, 2003
  • Sources chosen from 86 studies 54 were used.
  • The Graphics Calculator in Mathematics
    Education
  • A Critical Review of Recent Research.
  • Marina Penglase Stephen Arnold, 1996
  • 103 studies used.

54
Framework for synthesizing the research included
  • How teachers students use HGT?
  • What beliefs, knowledge, skills are learned
    applied?
  • What is gained by HGT use?
  • The existence of a treatment and control group
  • What impact does HGT have on the performance of
    students from different gender, racial,
    socio-economic status, and achievement groups?

55
Synopsis of the resultsI. How do teachers use
HGT and how is this use related to their
knowledge and beliefs about technology,
mathematics, and teaching mathematics?
  • Teachers Philosophy guides calculator use
  • Rule-based teachers are likely to perceive HGT by
    the affective reaction of students not as an
    enhancement to instruction
  • Non-rule based teachers perceive HGT as an
    integral part of instruction and focus on the
    cognitive student reactions
  • Teachers' beliefs methods highly influence how
    students use technology
  • There is a shared belief that there are
    limitations to HGT and the importance of
    understanding the meaning of the numbers in an
    equation

56
Synopsis of the resultsII. With what kinds of
mathematical tasks do students choose to use HGT?
  • Students used HGT as a tool for
  • computations
  • transformations
  • data collection and its analysis
  • moving among different representations
  • checking their answers!
  • Students primary use of HGT was to graph,
    minimal use on tasks that did not require
    graphing.

57
Synopsis of the results III. What
mathematical knowledge and skills are learned by
students who use HGT?
  • Students who used HGT with curriculum materials
    supporting its use had a better understanding
    (than those who did not use the technology) of
  • functions,
  • variables,
  • solving algebra problems in applied contexts,
  • creating and interpreting graphs
  • Students gains are directly proportional to the
    time they spend using HGT
  • Students tend to use HGT with the methods taught
    and preferred by their teachers
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