Facilitating Communication about Measurement, Exponents, and Scientific Notation


As students move from the middle grades to high school, they move from primarily modeling linear phenomena, which have constant rates of change, to studying non-linear phenomena, which have variable rates of changes. Exponential functions are an important class of functions with non-constant rates of change and provide students an opportunity to revisit, reflect and refine their previous experiences involving numbers (e.g., properties of exponentials, scientific notation), issues of measurement (e.g., problems of scale), and geometry and spatial sense (e.g., visualization of exponential growth) (see the 9-12 Patterns, Functions, & Algebra Standard). Students need ample opportunities to organize and consolidate their thinking about exponentials.

All students need extensive experience listening to, reading about,writing about, speaking about, reflecting on, and demonstrating mathematical ideas in order to develop the ability to express mathematical ideas coherently. Students also need to reflect on the thinking of others to broaden their understanding about their own strategies and alternative strategies for solving a problem. Active student participation in learning through small- and large-group discussions provides multiple opportunities for questioning, listening, and summarizing.

The teacher plays an important role in facilitating and fostering communication so that powerful mathematical understanding is developed (see the 9-12 Communication Standard). Not only do teachers need to encourage their students to communicate mathematically, they also need to model good communication skills. The ability to pose questions that elicit, extend, and challenge students' thinking is an essential part of creating a classroom environment where intellectual risks, sense making, and deep understanding are expected.

The class shown in the following video clips is engaged in solving problems which require the use of very large numbers, prompting consideration of the value of scientific notation. The teacher relates the notions of scientific notation and exponents to the way Alice changes size in the story of Alice in Wonderland.

 

Considering Large Numbers

Prior to this video clip, students have been exploring exponentials in the context of the size changes of Alice in the story Alice in Wonderland. Students have been asked to translate the experiences of Alice into mathematical symbols. The investigation leads to discussions over the differences between a constant growth rate and a constant growth factor. Being engaged in solving problems that require the use of very large numbers prompts students to consider of the value of scientific notation to communicate the answer clearly.

In the first video clip below, students discuss their solutions to the problem, "How many inches are in a light year?" As you watch the video clip the first time, think about the following focus questions.

Focus Questions

  • How is the communication among students being structured?
  • What do students appear to understand about scientific notation and exponentials?

 

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Running Time: 47 seconds; File Size: 1.2 M

 

Reflection Questions

Listening to students share their ideas with their classmates can provide the teacher with information about student understanding.

  • What do the students seem to understand about scientific notation and exponents?
  • What might students still need to learn?
  • How can a teacher encourage students to listen to other students during small group discussion?

 

Students need time individually to formulate their thinking. Following this time with small group discussion maximizes the number of students who have an opportunity to verbalize their thinking (as seen in the video clip above). In addition to discussing solution methods in small groups, students need opportunities to communicate their thinking to larger audiences. Presenting problems and solutions to the class provides students with such an opportunity. When a small group of students prepares a presentation, group members have the opportunity to listen to each other's ideas and evaluate their own solution methods. In the following video clip, a group of students shares their solution method to the problem "About how many atoms are there in a kilogram of carbon?"

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Running Time: 53 seconds; File Size: 1.7 M

 

Reflection Questions

  • How can a teacher encourage students to listen to and engage with other students during small group discussion? During student presentations?
  • Compare the language that the students use to your own. What are some of the differences? What words or phrases may be problematic when working with exponents and scientific notation?
  • How might a teacher follow-up these investigations to have students formalize their thinking?

 

Reflection, Writing, and Communication

There are many different ways to encourage students to think and talk about mathematics; informal writing activities can help students reflect on their understanding of mathematical concepts and encourage them to make connections among topics. In the following video clip, the teacher uses Alice in Wonderland as an analogy, describing how Alice changed size as she ate cake and asking students to consider the relationship between scientific notation and Alice's growth.

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Running Time: 66 seconds; File Size: 1.5 M

 

Reflection Questions

  • In what ways does the teacher structure the activity to encourage students to reflect on and make connections between important mathematical ideas?
  • The teacher uses the phrase "double in size" to refer to Alice's change in height. To what other changes in Alice could this phrase refer?

 

Before beginning a writing assignment, students should know who their audience will be - teachers, other students, parents, community members, and personal writing for only oneself are a few possibilities. When students share their writing in small groups, they have the opportunity to verbalize their ideas and receive feedback from other students. The next video clip shows the students as they share their writing in small groups.

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Running Time: 46 seconds; File Size: 1.1 M

 

Reflection Questions

As students share their writing, they must decide on key ideas to share with the class.

  • How might this focus on key ideas facilitate discussion within groups?
  • How might it inhibit discussion?

 

In the next clip, students share their ideas with the whole class. This whole class dialogue provides an opportunity to come to a consensus as a class and to formalize the mathematics.

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Running Time: 50 seconds; File Size: 1.0 M

 

Reflection Questions

One student in this clip talks about the ease of telling when the something "doubles, triples or quadruples".

  • Is this student referring to the actual size or to the value of the exponent — 2, 3, and 4, respectively?
  • How would you help the student clarify his/her concept of exponentials?

 

Conclusion, Reflection, and Discussion

  • How do the key ideas generated by these students compare to goals that you might have for a lesson on scientific notation?
  • Compare the connections that are being made in small group discussion early on in the lesson to the connections that are made during the small group discussion near the end. Why are both opportunities necessary in the formation of connections?

 

References

Video clips generously provided by WGBH Boston. All clips were taken from "Alice to the Moon ," part of Teaching Math: A Video Library, 9-12. Funded and distributed by the Annenberg/CPB Math and Science Project, P.O. Box 2345, S. Burlington, VT 05407-2345, 1-800-LEARNER.

Fendel, D., Resek, D., Alper, L., & Fraser, S. (1998). Interactive Mathematics Program, Year 2. Pages 379-434. Berkeley, CA: Key Curriculum Press.


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