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Shanghai Teacher Exchange Programme September 2015 - The story so far….. • In September 2015 70 maths teachers from across the country travelled to Shanghai. • In November 2015 70 primary and secondary teachers from Shanghai travelled to the UK to teach maths to English students. Pre-conceptions • The teachers will be much better than me • The students will behave impeccably • All the children will be really clever. UK China Teachers in the UK have a broader depth of expertise. Teach approx. 170 students Differentiation for abilities in a class SEN provision Highly experienced in the curriculum structure Once a fortnight? Same day marking Intervention…. Everyone expected to keep up with the pace. Same day intervention not seen. Teach approx. 50 students Struggled to plan lessons for low ability set None Organisation in China Organisation…. • The Curriculum is planned small objective by small objective. It links together primary, middle and secondary curriculums so that there are no gaps. • The curriculum is stable. • Teachers are trained using the curriculum. Everyone teaches the same method…but other methods are explored It’s a team effort… • Lessons are planned by more than one teacher • The lesson belongs to the whole department • Lessons are observed by other teachers and refinements are made to the plan. • It is always the teaching and the lesson plan that is being judged and never the teacher • TRG’s occur in school and at district level • Text books support the lesson. Every pupil had his own book. There was no copying from the board Topic Progression On your tables….. Discuss how you would teach a sequence of lessons up to and including adding fractions. This is how the Chinese would do it… 1.Prime and composite numbers 2. HCF 3. LCM 4. Exact division 5. Proper, improper and mixed fractions 6. Comparing fractions 7. Equivalent fractions 8. Reduction to simplest form 9. Finding a common denominator 10. Adding and subtracting fractions. Part I Prime number & Composite number Challenge 1 : Both a and b are prime numbers. If a+b=9,a × b=_________。 What is a factor? Rigorous definitions True or false a) b) c) d) e) f) g) h) 36 is a factor of 72 34 is a factor of 17 5 is a factor of 20 5 is a factor of 0.5 3 is a factor of 18 38 is a factor of 19 4 is a factor of 0.2 3 is a factor of 17 The concept and the nonconcept Conceptual variation Listing Factors In pairs Factors of 18 1 & 18 2 & 9 3 & 6 Write down all the factors of 16 Write down all the factors of 13 Concept 1 Prime number: A prime number (or a prime) has exactly two factors, one and itself. Composite number:A composite number (or a composite) has more than two factors. Ex 1: List the numbers from 1-10 which are: (1) Odd numbers: 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 (2) Even numbers:2, 4, 6, 8 ,10 (3) Prime numbers: 2, (4) Composite numbers:4, 3, 5, 7 6, 8, 9,10 Ex2:Prime or Composite, why? (1) 27 27 1 27 3 9 Composite The factors of 27 are 1,3,9,27 29 Prime 29 1 29 The factors of 29 are 1,29 (3) 35 Composite 35 1 35 5 7 The factors of 35 are 1,5,7,35 (2) 37 1 37 37 Prime The factors of 37 are 1,37 (4) By examining the number of factors of a number you can determine whether the number is prime or composite? 1 Is 1 a prime or a composite number? 11, 21, 31, 41, 51, 61, 71, 81,91 Prime Composite Of the positive integers, 1 is A) the smallest odd number B) the smallest even number C) the smallest prime number D) the smallest integer Plan for misconceptions Of the positive integers, 4, is A) the smallest odd number B) the smallest even number C) the smallest prime number D) the smallest composite number What if a factor is also a prime number? Find all the prime factors of 48 2 48 2 24 2 12 2 6 3 48= 2x2x2x2x3 5 35 7 35=5x7 2 60 2 30 3 15 5 60=2x2x3x5 Which of the following shows 24 written as a product of prime factors? A) 24=2x3x4 B) 24=2x2x2x3 C) 24=1x2x2x2x3 D) 24=2x2x6 Shanghai Lesson Structure • Review/recap of previous lesson • Introduction of key concept • Definitions of key concepts with rigorous mathematical language • Conceptual variation • Procedural variation –use of different method • Student solutions analysed • Step by step instructions • A more challenging problem that requires application of the concept What number should be added to the 2 denominator of , when 4 is added to 5 the numerator so that the fraction remains the same value ? TRG - Angles on straight lines