Day 6: Spheres (Major Lesson Component) : Apply Geometric Concepts in Modeling Situations
Day 6: Spheres (Major Lesson Component) : Apply Geometric Concepts in Modeling Situations
Class Description
This is a 10th grade Geometry class. It is simulated by 8
students, 4 of which are male and the other four, female. Though
the classroom is quite large and the number of students is quite
small in comparison, I will have them sitting in groups of four
in the front of the classroom. Each table will have 2 males and
2 females. Since Jessie and Lydia are my higher level students
(in mathematics), I will put them at separate tables.
Unit Title
Lesson
Topic
3-D shapes
Spheres
and
applications
Type of
Lesson
Developmental
Lesson
MD State Curriculum
Standard/ MD Common Core
State Standard
Apply geometric concepts in modeling
situations
1. Use geometric shapes, their measures, and their
properties to describe objects (e.g., modeling a tree
trunk or a human torso as a cylinder).
2. Apply concepts of density based on area and volume
in modeling situations (e.g., persons per square mile,
BTUs per cubic foot).
Lesson Objective(s):
Objective 1 Students will be able to analyze the major
characteristics of a sphere in order calculate its volume in
real world applications.
Objective 2 Students will manipulate an orange in order to
Oranges
PowerPoint slides
Additional pieces of paper
Napkins
Teacher
Key Questions
So a football is a
sphere right? Can
anyone give me some
examples of spheres?
Drill/Motivational
Activity
Key Questions
What makes a cube
different from a
rectangular prism? Why
is its surface area and
volume so easy to find?
Lesson Development
Students
Anticipated
Responses?
No!! Balls:
basketball,
soccerball,
tennisball,
baseball etc.
Time
5 minutes
10 minutes
three dimensions.
Activity 1
Key Questions
So now that
everyone seems to
feel comfortable
working with the
easier 3-D shapes,
lets move into a
more complex figure
in spheres.
Anticipated
Responses?
The radius
None!!
Does anyone know or
remember the volume of
a sphere?
Thats good to
Surface area is measure note. The volume
in squares. Why again?
has a lot to do
with the
accumulation of
circles. When we
get to surface
area, we will talk
Transition
a little more about
that.
36. There should
be no difficulty
seeing as though it
is simply a direct
implementation of
the equation.
Activity 2
Key Questions
What is the area of
each great circle you
created?
Because we are
multiplying two
things at a time.
Even though it is
in 3-dimmensions,
it is based on the
number of items
being multiplies.
10 minutes
sphere?
experience.
Transition
Discovering the
surface area of a
sphere
Anticipated
Responses?
Key Questions
r2
Summary/Closure/Revisit So to wrap up
Objective
todays lesson lets
think about then
importance of
visualization and
why it helps to
understand topics
Anticipated
Responses?
Safety Valve
No, in fact, I
dont even remember
learning about it.
The volume has
always been
embedded in my
brain. However,
with todays
activity, I not
only feel confident
using the equation,
I feel equally as
comfortable
explaining it to
someone else.
See Exit Ticket w/
answers
In todays lesson,
we completed both
objectives relating
to the surface area
and volume of a
sphere. The
important
information to take
away is the usage
of the formulas and
some basic
information about
spheres. These will
come back to haunt
you later, so do
not forget the
formulas!
With a 25 minute
lesson, yet alone a
math lesson, it is
really hard to plan
for a safety valve.
However, with a bit
of extra time, I
could provide more
real world examples
to drive the
concept home for
the students.
Reflection on assessment Assume that after you have taught
this lesson and assessed student learning you find that students
did not meet the objective(s). How would you plan future
instruction on this lessons content and skills to ensure
student mastery and application?
If I were to be informed, through assessment, that my lesson did
not coincide with the objectives, regardless of my time frame, I
need to find more time to discuss it. Seeing as though my unit
is 8 days with the initial assumption of 7, I may have that
extra day to go a little deeper in class. I would however need
to address this idea ASAP because once this unit is over, it
will be very hard to come back to it. We absolutely cannot skip
it because of its importance. Also, if I wanted to keep the
orange activity, because it worked so well, I can possibly cut
down on some lecture and give the students more hands on
opportunity. That is essentially what Common Core wants in the
long run anyway. To ensure students have mastered this concept,
I will make sure that surface area and volume are hit the
hardest.