I have always loved books and loved to read. As a kid, I loved spending time in our town library and as an adult, used book stores are some of my favorite places. In my home office, I have multiple bookcases of math / math-ed books and even have a healthy dose of "to-be-read" books on my Kindle regarding math (but that's another post for another day....)
Over the summer, one of the books I picked up was Open Middle Math by Robert Kaplinsky. I was already familiar with the idea of Open Middle and had used some of the problems from the website in my classroom in the past, but I was interested in learning more about how they could be used. Here's a quote from early on in the book:To be sure, using Open Middle problems does not eliminate student misconceptions entirely. However, since using them, I now see student misconceptions more clearly and can use them as talking points to strengthen mathematical understandings during the lesson instead of simply lamenting missed opportunities afterward.
I should say that prior to reading the book, I had watched the webinar and had looked at the DOK Matrix for Open Middle Problems, so I was very familiar with the idea, but I thought of Open Middle problems more as a warmup or a formative assessment piece rather than to explore misconceptions. I was intrigued by this concept and decided I wanted to try more of these in my classroom....
Again, early in the book, Mr. Kaplinsky has this suggestion to introduce the process of Open Middle:
Okay - I can do that! I made a quick template for Sum of 1000, printed off one per table, put them into dry erase sleeves with a small envelope of numbers and set it aside to use as one of my first days of school non-curricular tasks.Using the digits 1 to 9 at most one time each, place a digit in each box to create a sum that is as close to 1,000 as possible. What’s great about this problem is that very few children or adults get it right the first time, yet very few give up either because it doesn’t feel unreasonable.
- Area of a Triangle (Coordinate Plane)
- Creating a Right Triangle (Equations)
- Creating a Right Triangle (One Coordinate Given)
- Triangle Sum Theorem
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