This document outlines an inductive learning lesson plan for teaching students about multiplication and division as inverse operations. The lesson involves four stages: (1) students observe examples of division and multiplication sentences and look for patterns, (2) they hypothesize relationships between the operations, (3) more examples are used to test their hypotheses, and (4) finally students generalize the rule that multiplication and division are inverse operations of each other. The goal is for students to discover this relationship through examples rather than being directly taught the rule.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0 ratings0% found this document useful (0 votes)
34 views
Lesson 8
This document outlines an inductive learning lesson plan for teaching students about multiplication and division as inverse operations. The lesson involves four stages: (1) students observe examples of division and multiplication sentences and look for patterns, (2) they hypothesize relationships between the operations, (3) more examples are used to test their hypotheses, and (4) finally students generalize the rule that multiplication and division are inverse operations of each other. The goal is for students to discover this relationship through examples rather than being directly taught the rule.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 16
LESSON 8:
INDUCTIVE LEARNING GENOVA, CRISTINE JOY C. MACARAIG CHARLENE MAE F. OBJECTIVE :
•PLAN A LESSON THAT ALLOWS
STUDENTS TO INDUCTIVELY LEARN A CONCEPT INTRODUCTION
• IN OUR CONTEMPORARY SOCIETY, TEACHERS ARE
DISCOURAGED TO SPOON-FEED INFORMATION TO LEARNERS. INSTEAD, TEACHERS ARE TO PROVIDE OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS TO DISCOVER CONCEPTS ON THEIR OWN. ONE WAY OF DOING THIS IS THROUGH THE INDUCTIVE LEARNING STRATEGY. THINK
• THE INDUCTIVE LEARNING STRATEGY, SOMETIMES CALLED
DISCOVERY LEARNING, IS BASED ON THE PRINCIPLE OF INDUCTION. INDUCTION MEANS TO DERIVE A CONCEPT BY SHOWING THAT IF IT IS TRUE TO SOME CASES, THEN IT IS TRUE FOR ALL. THIS IS IN CONTRAST TO DEDUCTION WHERE A CONCEPT IS ESTABLISHED BY LOGICALLY PROVING THAT IT IS TRUE BASED ON GENERALLY KNOWN FACTS. THE INDUCTIVE METHOD IN TEACHING IS COMMONLY DESCRIBED AS "SPECIFIC TO GENERAL," "CONCRETE TO ABSTRACT," OR "EXAMPLES TO FORMULA." WHEREAS THE VICE VERSA ARE USED TO DESCRIBE THE DEDUCTIVE METHOD. • IN AN INDUCTIVE LEARNING LESSON, TEACHERS DESIGN AND FACILITATE ACTIVITIES THAT GUIDE THE LEARNERS IN DISCOVERING A RULE. ACTIVITIES MAY INVOLVE COMPARING AND CONTRASTING, GROUPING AND LABELING, OR FINDING PATTERNS. IN MATHEMATICS CLASSES, LEARNERS ENGAGE IN INDUCTIVE LEARNING WHEN THEY OBSERVE EXAMPLES AND THEN, LATER ON, GENERALIZE A RULE OR FORMULA BASED ON THE EXAMPLES. THERE ARE FOUR PROCESSES THAT THE STUDENTS GO THROUGH WHEN GIVEN AN INDUCTIVE LEARNING ACTIVITY-(1) OBSERVE, (2) HYPOTHESIZE, (3) COLLECT EVIDENCE, AND (4) GENERALIZE. OBSERVE
• CHILDREN LOVE LOOKING FOR PATTERNS! WHEN GIVEN A
LOT OF EXAMPLES, IT IS NATURAL FOR THEM TO LOOK FOR SIMILARITIES AND ASSUME RULES. SO, THE KEY IS TO GIVE THEM EXAMPLES TO OBSERVE. THESE EXAMPLES MUST BE WELL-THOUGHT-OF SO THAT THE STUDENTS WOULD EVENTUALLY ARRIVE AT A COMPLETE RULE. FOR INSTANCE, IF YOU WANT YOUR STUDENTS TO DISCOVER THE RULE IN MULTIPLYING BY POWERS OF 10, IT IS BETTER TO USE THE EXAMPLES IN SET B THAN THOSE IN SET A SET B
6 * 10 = 60 6 * 10 = 60
18 * 10 = 180 18 * 10 = 180
321 * 10 = 3, 210 10 * 321 = 3, 210
457 * 10 = 4, 570 40 * 10 = 400
BOTH SETS WILL LEAD STUDENTS TO DISCOVER THAT THE TECHNIQUE IN MULTIPLYING BY 10 IS PLACING A 0 AFTER THE NUMBER BEING MULTIPLIED. HOWEVER, THE VARIETY OF EXAMPLES IN SET B ALLOWS STUDENTS TO ESTABLISH THAT THE RULE WORKS EVEN WHEN EXCHANGING 10 AND THE OTHER FACTOR (18 * 10 = 180) AND IF THE OTHER FACTOR ENDS WITH A ZERO, THAT ZERO IS NOT NEGLECTED (40 * 10) SET B ALLOWS STUDENTS TO HAVE A MORE COMPREHENSIVE UNDERSTANDING OF THE RULE. HYPOTHESIZE
• THE STUDENTS FORM RULES IN THEIR MINDS AS THEY
OBSERVE. IN THIS STAGE, ENCOURAGE THE STUDENTS TO SHARE THEIR THOUGHTS. ASSURE THEM THAT THERE ARE NO WRONG HYPOTHESES. ACKNOWLEDGE THE VARIETY OF THE STUDENTS' IDEAS BUT ALSO STREAMLINE THEM TO, LATER ON, TEST ONLY THE UNIQUE HYPOTHESES. COLLECT EVIDENCE
• HERE THE STUDENTS WOULD TEST THEIR HYPOTHESIS.
HOW? BY APPLYING THEIR HYPOTHESIS TO OTHER EXAMPLES. IF THERE ARE MORE THAN ONE HYPOTHESIS GENERATED BY THE CLASS, INTENTIONALLY GIVE A COUNTEREXAMPLE FOR THEM TO TEST. GENERALIZE
• FINALLY, THE STUDENTS WOULD NOW FORMALIZE THEIR
HYPOTHESIS TO A RULE. SUPPORT THE STUDENTS SO THAT THEY WOULD USE MATHEMATICAL TERMS IN STATING THEIR RULE. DOING THIS WOULD DEVELOP THE STUDENTS' MATHEMATICAL VOCABULARY AND THEREFORE THEIR OVERALL MATHEMATICAL COMMUNICATION SKILLS. EXPERIENCE
• STUDY THE LESSON PLAN ON THE NEXT PAGE. TAKE NOTE
THAT THE PLAN ONLY SHOWS THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE LESSON, WHICH INVOLVES THE INDUCTIVE LEARNING STRATEGY; OTHER PARTS ARE NOT INCLUDED. IN THIS LESSON, INDUCTIVE LEARNING WAS NOT USED TO DISCOVER A RULE BUT RATHER TO DISCOVER A RELATIONSHIP TOPIC: MULTIPLICATION AND DIVISION AS INVERSE OPERATIONS GRADE LEVEL: 2 TARGET LEARNING COMPETENCY: BY THE END OF THE LESSON, THE STUDENTS WILL BE ABLE TO DESCRIBE MULTIPLICATION AND DIVISION AS INVERSE OPERATIONS OBSERVE
ASK THE STUDENTS TO FILL IN THE BLANKS BY DIVIDING
OR MULTIPLYING. THEN LEAD THEM TO OBSERVE EACH PAIR OF DIVISION AND MULTIPLICATION NUMBER SENTENCES. GIVE SOME TIME FOR THE STUDENTS TO OBSERVE THE EXAMPLES. FAST LEARNERS MAY BECOME TOO EXCITED TO SHARE THEIR HYPOTHESIS BUT DO NOT ALLOW THEM TO SPILL IT. THE GOAL IS FOR ALL STUDENTS TO HAVE THE "AHA!" MOMENT. HYPOTHESIZE
STRUGGLING STUDENTS MAY NOT SEE THE PATTERN RIGHT
AWAY. HELP THEM BY FOCUSING THEIR ATTENTION TO THE QUOTIENT AND THE FIRST FACTOR. CALL SOME STUDENTS TO EXPLAIN THEIR HYPOTHESES. AFTER EACH EXPLANATION, ASK WHO HAS THE SAME HYPOTHESIS COLLECT EVIDENCE
•APPLY THE HYPOTHESES TO
EACH EXAMPLE TO SEE IF THEY ALWAYS WORK GENERALIZE
• BASED ON THE RESULT OF THE "COLLECT EVIDENCE"
STAGE, ASK THE STUDENTS WHICH HYPOTHESIS IS TRUE FOR ALL. THEN INSTRUCT THE STUDENTS TO WRITE, USING THEIR OWN WORDS, THE RULE IN THEIR NOTEBOOK. HAVE TWO TO THREE STUDENTS READ ALOUD WHAT THEY HAVE WRITTEN.