1 Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development Department of Teaching and Learning The Teaching of Geometry, Grades 7-12 Instructor: Arnon Avitzur [email protected] Spring Semester, 2015 Course Description The course provides a link between teachers' mathematical knowledge & understanding of the major skills & concepts of geometry to the effective & appropriate teaching of these topics in grades 7 through 12. Course Overview This course will support students’ developing understandings of the pedagogical and mathematical issues underlying the teaching and learning of geometry in grades 7-12. The course will sample topics central to geometry, promoting deep mathematical understandings as well as related pedagogical content knowledge. Students will have opportunities to reflect on their own mathematical learning and problem solving strategies. At the same time, they will connect these experiences to theoretical and practical issues, drawing from current research on teaching and learning geometry. The course integrates the use of tools for teaching geometry, including digital technologies, such as The Geometer's SketchPad. This course is based upon the following assumptions: All students have the capacity to learn mathematics with understanding and deserve to have teachers who work toward this end. There is an on-going, major effort to reform mathematics teaching in US schools. Through this course we are trying to bring about a practice of mathematics teaching that rarely exists in US schools today. Therefore, this course might challenge images you may have of what it means to teach mathematics. Learning to teach mathematics well is a life-long endeavor, much longer than the duration of a course or two. This course is another step in that process. No one knows all they need to know in order to teach mathematics well. This should not be taken as discouraging; rather, this assumption is based on an appreciation that: o Learning and teaching are problematic (i.e., there is no right way); o Inquiring into mathematics, mathematics learning, mathematics teaching, and the mathematics of students is powerful; Good teachers know how to think about the problems of teaching and the kinds of things to do and pay attention to in order to teach more effectively. They make informed decisions and justify them based on a deep understanding of the related issues of mathematics, mathematics learning, and mathematics teaching. Often good teachers' lessons do not accomplish the teachers' goals; however, they know how to learn from the previous lessons so that the next attempt is better informed and more effective. This course is designed to prepare 7-12 mathematics teachers with the goal to help develop your mathematical and pedagogical understandings for that grade range. The Teaching of Geometry October 2010 Spring 2015 2 This course is part of your professional education. Approaching the course from the perspective of a college student trying to merely be successful in completing the course will limit what you take from the course. Approaching it instead as a math learner and a beginning professional in the field of education - evaluating what you understand and working toward deeper understanding of what you need to learn - will provide you with a strong foundation as you begin your career. Course Objectives Develop a stance on what counts as geometry, and why we teach it; Develop an understanding of big ideas in geometry and the connections between geometry and other mathematical domains; Solve geometry problems and construct geometry proofs from the secondary curriculum in multiple ways, while considering relevant pedagogical implications; Anticipate and analyze students' geometry reasoning and strategies, and begin to develop appropriate instructional strategies for supporting learning goals; Increase awareness of common difficulties students face in making sense of geometry concepts; Become more reflective with respect to your own and others’ teaching, and develop strategies for learning from your own and others’ experiences. Required Texts Driscoll, M. (2007). Fostering geometric thinking: A guide for teachers, grades 5-10. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann. Other Requirements The Geometer's SketchPad or GeoGebra available on your computer (If you don’t want to buy GSP, there is a cheap student version and perhaps a trial one) Laptops for use in the classroom The Teaching of Geometry October 2010 Spring 2015 3 Course Outline (always tentative) Week Topic Week 1 02/02/2015 What geometry is and why teach it Geometric Habits of Mind Week 2 02/09/2015 The Van-Hiele theory Common Core Geometry Standards and the NY Regents 02/16/2015 NO CLASS Week 3 02/23/2015 Concept image and concept definition Using examples in Geometry Weekly #1 - Van-Hiele and CCGS are due Week 4 03/02/2015 Discovering invariance Dynamic Geometry Environment Weekly #2 - Examples are due Week 5 03/09/2015 Lesson analysis Weekly #3 - DGE constructions are due 03/16//2015 NO CLASS Week 6 03/23/2015 Congruence and similarity Shape hierarchy Weekly #4 - Lesson analysis is due Week 7 03/30/2015 Thinking about student thinking Micro-teaching #1 proposal is due Week 8 04/06/2015 Micro-teaching #1 Week 9 04/13/2015 Theorems Proof Week 10 04/20/2015 Constructions Micro-teaching #2 proposal is due Week 11 04/27/2015 Micro-teaching #2 Week 12 05/04/2015 Micro-teaching #2 (continued) Problem-solving in geometry classes Week 13 05/11/2015 Micro-teaching reflections are due Final presentations The Teaching of Geometry October 2010 Spring 2015 4 Assessment and Grading 1. Active participation in class activities and contribution to discussions (30%) The quality of this class (and of your learning) depends on your attendance, close reading of the assignments, preparation for class, and engagement in and contributions to class activities and discussion. I will take attendance and keep notes on your participation in class. Good contributions to classroom discussion do more than simply push the conversation along. Positive, substantive contributions make your thinking available to the class, raise new questions, and challenge the group and yourself. I really encourage you to speak up, share your ideas, question what you do not understand, and make proposals in class. You cannot go wrong by engaging genuinely. In this course, it is important that you be willing to make your mathematical and pedagogical ideas public, for everyone, including yourself, to learn from. This means that others will be doing the same, and how you attend and respond to one another also counts as contributions. Your regular attendance is expected. Please be on time for class. You are responsible for turning in assignments when they are due and for knowing information announced in class, whether or not you were in class on any particular day. If you have an extenuating circumstance and you will have to miss class, come late, or leave early, please let me know as soon as you can. Absences will be excused at the discretion of the instructor. Please contact me as soon as you anticipate missing class. Each unexcused absence will result in a 2% reduction of your final grade. Unexcused tardiness or early departures count as unexcused absences. 3 or more absences may result in no credit for the course. 2. Weekly assignments (20%) Weekly assignments will be a combination of Geometry/Geometry instruction tasks (some will reinforce and apply ideas from previous lessons; others will prepare for the following class) and writing (reflection and commentary). These are listed in the course outline, but may also be assigned in response to what happens in class. Late assignment policy: All assignments are due at the beginning of class on the date they are due, unless I have stated otherwise. Under extenuating circumstances you may make other arrangements with me before the due date. Late assignments will be penalized 1 point for each day. 3. Micro-Teaching (50%) Each student will plan and teach parts of two geometry lessons for the class. Micro-teaching #1 (10%) will focus on discovery and examples, and Micro-teaching #2 (25%) will incorporate all the ideas studied in the class. Instead of a final exam, students will reflect on and present analysis and commentary on their Micro-Teaching experiences (15%). Rubrics for each component can be found at the end of this document. Your final grade will be determined by the sum of points accumulated for each component (participation, weekly assignments, and micro-teaching) The Teaching of Geometry October 2010 Spring 2015 5 Grading Rubrics Participation (30 points): Excellent (30 points) Good (25 points) Adequate (20 points) Has clearly read assignments carefully and thought deeply about them; Participated in class activities and contributed substantively to discussion Was late to class; Has read assignments; Participated in class activities and contributed substantively to class discussions. Was late to class; Has read most of the assignments; Participated in class activities and contributed to class discussions. Poor (15 points) Was late to class or absent (unexcused); Has not read assignments; Participated in class activities; Made very few (or no) substantive contributions to class discussions. Weekly Assignments (20 points): The weekly assignments (unrelated to Micro-Teaching) will be graded (0-5 points for each assignment). Unless otherwise stated, and only if applicable, the grading of an assignment will be done according to the following rubrics. At the end of the semester assignment grades will be averaged and scaled. 5 points All parts of the assignment were done thoroughly and thoughtfully, following the guidelines. 4 points All parts of the assignment were done well, following the guidelines. 3 points 2 points 1 point Most (but not all) parts of the assignment were completed adequately, following the guidelines. Only some parts of the assignment were completed, overlooking some of the guidelines. Only a very small part of the assignment was completed, overlooking most of the guidelines. Micro Teaching (50 points): The Micro-Teaching assignments have three main parts. (1) Micro-Teaching #1 (10 points), (2) Micro-Teaching #2 (25 points) (3) Final presentation (15 points). Micro-Teaching #1 and #2 each has three parts (draft/proposal, instruction, commentary). Rubrics for each of these parts will be distributed along with the assignments. The Teaching of Geometry October 2010 Spring 2015 6 The final grade will be determined by the sum of points accumulated for each component (participation, weekly assignments, and final project), according to Steinhardt School of Education Grading Scale: A AB+ B BC+ The Teaching of Geometry 93-100 90-92 87-89 83-86 80-82 77-79 C CD+ D F 73-76 70-72 65-69 60-64 Below 60 October 2010 Spring 2015 7 Accommodation for NYU Students with Disabilities Any student attending NYU who needs an accommodation due to a chronic, psychological, visual, mobility, and/or learning disability, or is Deaf or Hard of Hearing should register with the Moses Center for Students with Disabilities at 212 998-5980, 240 Greene Street. See www.nyu.edu/csd. Academic Integrity The relationship between students and faculty is the keystone of the educational experience in The Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development at New York University. This relationship takes an honor code for granted. Mutual trust, respect and responsibility are foundational requirements. Thus, how you learn is as important as what you learn. A university education aims not only to produce high quality scholars, but to also cultivate honorable citizens. Academic integrity is the guiding principle for all that you do; from taking exams, making oral presentations to writing term papers. It requires that you recognize and acknowledge information derived from others, and take credit only for ideas and work that are yours. You violate the principle of academic integrity when you: Cheat on an exam; Submit the same work for two or more different courses without prior permission from your professors; Receive help on a take-home examination that calls for independent work; Plagiarize. Plagiarism, one of the gravest forms of academic dishonesty in university life, whether intended or not, is academic fraud. In a community of scholars, whose members are teaching, learning and discovering knowledge, plagiarism cannot be tolerated. Plagiarism is failure to properly assign authorship to a paper, a document, an oral presentation, a musical score and/or other materials, which are not your original work. You plagiarize when, without proper attribution, you do any of the following: Copy verbatim from a book, an article or other media; Download documents from the Internet; Purchase documents; Report from other's oral work; Paraphrase or restate someone else's facts, analysis and/or conclusions; Copy directly from a classmate or allow a classmate to copy from you. For more on academic integrity see http://steinhardt.nyu.edu/policies/academic_integrity. The Teaching of Geometry October 2010 Spring 2015
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