Colin Foster's Mathematics Education Blog
24 November 2022
Fractions as factors
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Can a factor be a fraction? People sometimes agonise over whether a fraction such as $\frac{2}{3}$ can be called ‘a factor’ of another numbe...
10 November 2022
Is area more difficult than volume?
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I have a tendency to assume that concepts get more difficult as the number of dimensions increases. Length is pretty straightforward, surely...
1 comment:
27 October 2022
Butterfly effects when adapting tasks
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Sometimes a superficially small tweak to a task - changing just one little thing - can dramatically alter it, and mean that a lot more think...
1 comment:
13 October 2022
How open should a question be?
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People often say or imply that when teaching mathematics 'open questions' are simply better than 'closed questions'. Instead...
29 September 2022
Tasks that can't fail
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Do you have tasks that you use in lessons that "can't fail"? Favourite tasks that you've used many times and that always s...
15 September 2022
Always simplify your answer
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Einstein is supposed to have said that “Everything should be made as simple as possible, but no simpler”. Mathematics questions often say ...
2 comments:
01 September 2022
Interactive introductions
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How do you introduce a new mathematical topic or concept? Do you give students a task to do, or do you start by explaining everything? I thi...
1 comment:
18 August 2022
The Differentiator
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I have been very inspired by Leslie Dietiker's way of thinking about mathematics lessons as 'stories' (see Dietiker, 2015). In t...
04 August 2022
Misremembering Goldbach’s Conjecture
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It's the holiday, so a shorter, lighter blogpost today, and only one reflection question. I hope you are having a good break! When I wen...
21 July 2022
Making rounding interesting
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Are there any 'boring' topics in mathematics? Understandably, mathematics teachers tend to be kind of professionally committed to th...
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