A Story of Functions

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© 2012 Common Core, Inc. All rights reserved. commoncore.org NYS COMMON CORE MATHEMATICS CURRICULUM A Story of Functions A Story of Functions A Close Look at Grade 9 Module 4

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A Story of Functions. A Close Look at Grade 9 Module 4. Opening Exercise. Answer the following and discuss your responses with a neighbor: Why should students spend so much time studying quadratics? Why are quadratics (polynomials of degree 2) called quadratics anyway? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of A Story of Functions

Page 1: A Story of Functions

© 2012 Common Core, Inc. All rights reserved. commoncore.org

NYS COMMON CORE MATHE MATICS CURRI CULUM A Story of Functions

A Story of FunctionsA Close Look at Grade 9 Module 4

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© 2012 Common Core, Inc. All rights reserved. commoncore.org

N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Opening Exercise

Answer the following and discuss your responses with a neighbor:• Why should students spend so much time studying

quadratics?• Why are quadratics (polynomials of degree 2) called

quadratics anyway?• Can any u-shaped graph be represented by a

quadratic function?

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© 2012 Common Core, Inc. All rights reserved. commoncore.org

NYS COMMON CORE MATHE MATICS CURRI CULUM A Story of Functions

A Story of FunctionsA Close Look at Grade 9 Module 4

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Participant Poll• Classroom teacher• Math trainer• Principal or school leader• District representative / leader• Other

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Session Objectives• Experience and model the instructional approaches to

teaching the content of Grade 9 Module 4 lessons. • Articulate how the lessons promote mastery of the focus

standards and how the module addresses the major work of the grade.

• Make connections from the content of previous modules and grade levels to the content of this module.

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

AgendaOrientation to Materials (if needed)A Foundation for the Study of QuadraticsExamination and exploration of:• Topic A • Fluency Exercises – The Rapid White Board Exchange• Mid-Module Assessment• Topic B• Topic C• End of Module Assessment

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

What’s In a Module?Teacher Materials• Module Overview• Topic Overviews• Daily Lessons• AssessmentsStudent Materials• Daily Lessons with Problem SetsCopy Ready Materials• Exit Tickets • Fluency Worksheets / Sprints• Assessments

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Types of Lessons1. Problem Set

Students and teachers work through examples and complete exercises to develop or reinforce a concept.

2. SocraticTeacher leads students in a conversation to develop a specific concept or proof.

3. ExplorationIndependent or small group work on a challenging problem followed by debrief to clarify, expand or develop math knowledge.

4. ModelingStudents practice all or part of the modeling cycle with real-world or mathematical problems that are ill-defined.

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

What’s In a Lesson?Teacher Materials Lessons• Student Outcomes and Lesson Notes (in select lessons)• Classwork

• General directions and guidance, including timing guidance• Bulleted discussion points with expected student responses• Student classwork with solutions (boxed)

• Exit Ticket with Solutions• Problem Set with SolutionsStudent Materials• Classwork• Problem Set

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

AgendaOrientation to Materials (if needed)A Foundation for the Study of QuadraticsExamination and exploration of:• Topic A • Fluency Exercises – The Rapid White Board Exchange• Mid-Module Assessment• Topic B• Topic C• End of Module Assessment

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

A Foundation for the Study of Quadratics: Part 1 – A look back at sequencesWhat is the next number in the sequence?• 4, 7, 10, 13, 16, …• 4, 5, 8, 13, 20, 29, …• 2, 4, 9, 22, 48, 102, …What does the leading diagonal look like for each of the following:• 1: 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, ….• n: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, …• n2: 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, …• n3: 1, 8, 27, 64, 125, 216, …• n2 +n:

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

A Foundation for the Study of Quadratics: Part 2 – Why such fascination?• Do heavier objects fall through the air faster than lighter

objects of the same shape and size? Consider a real elephant and a life-sized paper Mache model of an elephant.

• What Galileo hoped to do was prove they fall at the same rates and with a constant acceleration.

• Imagine what experiment / data he would need?• How do we measure speed? Acceleration?• Based on our work in Part 1, if acceleration is constant, the

formula defining the height at time , must be a quadratic.

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

A Foundation for the Study of Quadratics: Part 3 – A closer look at u-shaped curves1. Tape the ends of the chain so that the lowest part of the chain

falls right at the origin.2. Identify several other points that the chain goes through. 3. Create a quadratic equation that goes through the points you

identified.

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

AgendaOrientation to Materials (if needed)A Foundation for the Study of QuadraticsExamination and exploration of:• Topic A • Fluency Exercises – The Rapid White Board Exchange• Mid-Module Assessment• Topic B• Topic C• End of Module Assessment

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Flow of Module 4• Topic A: Quadratic Expressions, Equations, Functions, and

their Connection to Rectangles• Reversing multiplication yields factored expressions (recall

geometric models); practice factoring of quadratics.•When combined with the Zero Product Property we have a

new power to solve quadratic equations.•What does the graph of a quadratic equation look like? It’s

symmetric (and u-shaped).• Factored form + symmetry makes graphing simple.• Relating quadratic equations and their graphs to real-world

context, giving contextual interpretations of key features.

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Flow of Module 4• Topic B: Using Different Forms for Quadratic Functions• Other ways to see structure in quadratics – solving by

completing the square; the quadratic formula.•Why does completing the square yield something we call

“vertex form”? The relationship between vertex form and transformations; the helpfulness of vertex form in graphing. • Further examination of quadratic functions and their graphs

in context.

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Flow of Module 4• Topic C: Function Transformations and Modeling• The square root function and its relationship to the basic

quadratic function; the cube root and cubic functions.• Transformations of all of these types of functions.• Analyzing and comparing functions represented in different

forms, all done in context.

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

What are students coming in with?• Experience multiplying with polynomials using the distributive

property (G9-M1)• Experience relating the distributive property to an area model

or an modified area model (the tabular method) (G9-M1)• Experience writing a sum as a product of two factors (G7-M3)

and factoring out a greatest common factor (G6-M2)• Experience transforming graphs, transforming functions and

relating the transformed function to the transformed graph (G9-M3)

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Topic A – Lesson 1• Opening Exercise• Example 1

• Extension: Is there another option? How many possible answers are there?

• The language of p. 19 may prove difficult; scaffolding suggestions:• Prime numbers can be related to ‘counting by’ instead of factors • (Before presenting the given description) How can we describe what

we mean by a factor being prime? How could I describe what it means when you can’t factor it any more than you already have?• Write a simple binomial. Now write that binomial as a product of two

other polynomials. (Remember, even a simple integer is a polynomial)

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Topic A – Lesson 2• Why are they called quadratics anyway?

• Note the scaffold box at the top of page 31

• Exercises 7-8

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Topic A – Lessons 3-4• Lesson 3 Opening Exercise

• Continue to use the tabular model as needed.

• Encourage students to verbalize their process of finding factors that work.

• Lesson 4 Problem Set #3, an example of MP.1

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Topic A – Lessons 5-7• Lesson 5 Opening Exercise, Exercises 1-4 lead students to know

and apply the zero product property. • Example 1 provides context for its application.• Reasoning through a problem is still a valid approach.

Factoring is only one means to the end.• Lesson 7 calls upon students to build their own equations from

context. (Work through exercises 5-7.)

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Topic A – Lessons 8• Scaffold: If needed, begin this lesson with an opportunity to

graph a selection of relatively simple quadratic functions, allowing students to work in pairs on a problem of appropriate complexity.

• What do you notice about these graphs? Allow students to notice the symmetry, and begin with an informal description of the vertex.

• This lesson brings up the question, are all u-shaped curves represented by quadratics.

• Work the Extension question after Exploratory Challenge 2.

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Topic A – Lessons 9-10• Lesson 9 Opening Exercise• Lesson 9 Example 2. Pose the questions to students, how on

earth did they come up with this formula. • Scaffold in formal terms by using contextual everyday language

and then repeating with more formal words.• Lesson 10 Example 1. Ask the students to think critically about

the reasonableness of this graph for this situation.• Lesson 10 Example 2. Spend ample time challenging the

students with the ‘How do you know’ question.

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Key Points – Topic A• Consider having students come up with their own summaries for

how they approach factoring /solving / graphing a quadratic.• It’s better to study deeply a given application problem and the

analysis of its graph’s features than to do multiple problems.• Introduce concepts like domain, range, increasing, decreasing,

average rate of change, etc. by using words that feel natural in the context, and then repeat the statement or question using the more formal words.

• Scaffolds are a critical tool for successful implementation. In addition to those given in the module, consider the ones we explored in this session. (Take time now to reflect and take note of them.)

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

AgendaOrientation to Materials (if needed)A Foundation for the Study of QuadraticsExamination and exploration of:• Topic A • Fluency Exercises – The Rapid White Board Exchange• Mid-Module Assessment• Topic B• Topic C• End of Module Assessment

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Rapid White Board Exchange

Factoring trinomials

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

AgendaOrientation to Materials (if needed)A Foundation for the Study of QuadraticsExamination and exploration of:• Topic A • Fluency Exercises – The Rapid White Board Exchange• Mid-Module Assessment• Topic B• Topic C• End of Module Assessment

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Mid-Module Assessment

Work with a partner on this assessment

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Scoring the Assessment

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

AgendaOrientation to Materials (if needed)A Foundation for the Study of QuadraticsExamination and exploration of:• Topic A • Fluency Exercises – The Rapid White Board Exchange• Mid-Module Assessment• Topic B• Topic C• End of Module Assessment

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Topic B – Lesson 11• A valuable scaffold even with the opening exercise is to use a

geometric model of a square. Knowing that that you are attempting to factor it such that you are creating a perfect square develops students capacity to do so.

• Example 1. • Alternative for opening Lesson 11:

• Solve by inspection: , , ,

• Discourage use of the sign. Instead model less abstract ‘or’ that emulates our thinking. “If something squared is 9, then either that something equals 3 or that something equals -3. “ This scaffold helps students follow their own thinking all the way through to a final answer.

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Topic B – Lessons 12-13• What strategies can we offer up for completing the square of

• Try Lesson 12 Examples 1 and 2. • An optional scaffold again relies on the context of solving

quadratic equations.• Using this scaffold means students won’t have the benefit of

being able to use their completing the square skill to get into vertex form when working with a quadratic function. (However, there are ways to get into vertex form.)

• Try Lesson 13 Exercises 1-4

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Topic B – Lesson 14• Deriving the quadratic formula• Algebraic approach.• Using geometric square model scaffold.

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Topic B – Lessons 15-16• Lesson 15: Exercises 1-5 & Discussion: Students are asked to reflect on

the quadratic formula to generalize about how many real solutions a quadratic equation will have; they then relate their findings to features of graphs.

• Lesson 16: Starting with simple horizontal and vertical translations students explore the graph of the function and transformations thereof.

• Students discover this ‘vertex form’ makes identifying the vertex a simple task. • Ask students to summarize, challenging their capacity to articulate

the somewhat counter-intuitive nature of horizontal translations.• Note the scaffold at the bottom of page 172.

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Topic B – Lesson 17• Lesson 17:

• Work the Opening Exercise, then challenge students to develop their own ‘general strategy’ for graphing a quadratic function before reviewing what is provided before Example 1.

• Example 1 provides another opportunity to ask, ‘How do you suppose the math class was able to determine this formula?’

• It is not explicitly asked or stated, but is suggested, ‘How can I put a function into vertex form?’

• Have students to come up with their general approach to graphing on their own before considering the approach provided.

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Key Points – Topic B• Completing the square has a geometric meaning.• A scaffold for completing the square when the leading coefficient is

not 1 involves multiplying the equation through first by the leading coefficient (if not already a perfect square) and then by the factor , if the coefficient of the term is not easily halved.

• This same scaffold used with the geometric model provides an alternative to the purely algebraic derivation of the quadratic formula.

• The final lesson should include a reflection on the student’s general strategy for graphing quadratic functions.

• Lessons 16-21 in Topics B and C provide a second opportunity for students to master transformations of functions.

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

AgendaOrientation to Materials (if needed)A Foundation for the Study of QuadraticsExamination and exploration of:• Topic A • Fluency Exercises – The Rapid White Board Exchange• Mid-Module Assessment• Topic B• Topic C• End of Module Assessment

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Topic C – Lesson 18• Exercise 1• Exercise 2• Exercise 3• Suggestion: Don’t give away the relationship between the graphs

of these inverse functions. Ask the question, then spend ample time letting students contemplate and articulate to the best of their ability what they notice.

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Topic C – Lessons 19-20• Make use of technology to demonstrate and apply previous

understanding of transformations of functions.• Completing the square when working with a function or an

equation in two variables.

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Topic C – Lessons 22-24• Lesson 22, Exercises 1-3• Lesson 23, the mathematics of objects in motion.

• All free-falling objects on Earth accelerate toward the center of the earth (downward) at a constant rate (rate of acceleration, not rate of speed).

or • For this reason, the leading coefficient for a quadratic function that models the

position of a falling, launched, or projected object must be or .• Reflection: note the phrase, “without a power source”. Were the dolphins in

Lesson X without a power source?

• Lesson 23 Example 1• Lesson 23 Example 2• Lesson 24 Opening Exercise

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Key Points – Topic C• Comparing features of functions provided in different forms

deepens and consolidates student understanding of the relationship between the structure of expressions and equations, the graphs of equations and functions, and the contexts they model.

• Students should walk away from quadratics understanding that a primary use of these functions is in modeling height over time of projectile objects, that they are naturally related to rectangular area problems, and that there are also used in an early study of business applications.

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Opening ExerciseAnswer the following and discuss your responses with a neighbor:• Why should students spend so much time studying

quadratics?• Why are quadratics (polynomials of degree 2) called

quadratics anyway?• Can any u-shaped graph be represented by a quadratic

function?

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Key Points – Module 4 Lessons• Students are called upon to Look for and make use of

structure (MP.7) as they choose equivalent forms of quadratics to gain insight into the function’s behavior and its graph.

• Students are called upon to reason abstractly and quantitatively (MP.2) as they decontextualize and work with quadratic equations representing real-world contexts and then re-contextualize as they analyze and interpret the key features of the function and its graph in the context of the problem.

• Note that the physics contexts have the same coefficients due to the mathematics of objects in motion.

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

AgendaOrientation to Materials (if needed)A Foundation for the Study of QuadraticsExamination and exploration of:• Topic A • Fluency Exercises – The Rapid White Board Exchange• Mid-Module Assessment• Topic B• Topic C• End of Module Assessment

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

End-of-Module Assessment

Work with a partner on this assessment

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Scoring the Assessment

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N YS CO MM O N CO R E M AT H E MAT I C S C U R R I C ULU M A Story of Functions

Key Points – End-of-Module Assessment• End of Module assessment are designed to assess all standards

of the module (at least at the cluster level) with an emphasis on assessing thoroughly those presented in the second half of the module.

• Recall, as much as possible, assessment items are designed to asses the standards while emulating PARCC Type 2 and Type 3 tasks.

• Recall, rubrics are designed to inform each district / school / teacher as they make decisions about the use of assessments in the assignment of grades.

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Biggest Takeaway

What are your biggest takeaways from the study of Module 4?

How can you support successful implementation of these materials at your schools given your role as a teacher, trainer, school or district leader, administrator or other representative?