1 / 37

One Pathway for Teaching Percentages

One Pathway for Teaching Percentages. Level three Number and Algebra Knowledge NA3-5 Know fractions and % in everyday use Strategies NA3-1 Use a range of additive and simple multiplicative strategies with whole numbers,fractions,decimals and %. Level four Number and Algebra Knowledge

Download Presentation

One Pathway for Teaching Percentages

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. One Pathway for Teaching Percentages

  2. Level three Number and Algebra Knowledge NA3-5 Know fractions and % in everyday use Strategies NA3-1 Use a range of additive and simple multiplicative strategies with whole numbers,fractions,decimals and % Level four Number and Algebra Knowledge NA4-5 Know the equivalent decimal and % for everyday fractions Strategies NA4-3Find fractions,decimals and % of amounts expressed as whole numbers, simple fractions and decimals Where do Percentages sit in NZC?

  3. Knowledge Stage 7 The student recalls fraction,decimal,% conversions for halves,thirds,quarters,fifths and tenths. Stage 8 The student recalls fraction, decimal,% conversions for given fractions and decimals, eg 9/8 = 1.125 = 112.5% Strategies Stage 7 The student can find simple equivalent fractions and rename common fractions as decimals and % Stage 8 The student chooses from a wide range of mental strategies to solve problems, Eg 65% of 24 (50% = 12, + 10% = 2.4 ,+ 5%= 1.2) so the answer is 12 + 2.4+ 1.2 = 15.6) partitioning % Where do Percentages sit on the Number Framework?

  4. What do we mean by % • Percentages are fractions with denominators hundredths

  5. Some starters Put an amount on the board eg $40 Students make that amount by as many different % as possible Eg • 100% of 40 = 40 • 50% of 80 = 40 • 25% of 160 = 40 • 200% of $20 = 40

  6. 100% $250 100% $250 100% 90kg 30% 24kg 20% $250 100% $60 10% 50% 10% 10% 25% 1% 5% 15% 80% 11% 2% 15% 75%  10  2 3 100% $2 25% 5% 30% 100% 10% 5.5kg 5% 1% 100% 10% 5% 9 2.5% Box trails

  7. This is a simple versionStudents draw up a 3 x 3 grid and pick 9 of these0.5 0.15 0.7 0.01 0.10.9 0.2 2.1 1.5 0.1251.3 0.175 0.03 0.25 0.40.6 0.75 0.3 0.37 0.8Call out % or the decimal and students pick the %0.5(50%) 0.15(15%) 0.7(70%) 0.01(1%) 0.1(10%)0.9(90%) 0.2(20%) 2.1(210%) 1.5(150%) 0.125(12.50%)1.3(130%) 0.175(17.50%) 0.03(3%) 0.25(25%) 0.4(40%)0.6(60%) 0.75(75%) 0.3(30%) 0.37(37%) 0.8(80%)

  8. Teaching % Where do we start?

  9. Knowledge is essential • Equipment very important at the start • Teach the strategy reasonably quickly and then……… • Application is crucial - students need lots of opportunities to make the strategies work for them. • Context • Revisit ideas frequently

  10. Activities to build knowledge

  11. Use a bead string to fill in the gaps

  12. What we going to look at to day? • How to use double number lines to answer % problems • Using the teaching model • What our students need to know to do this work? • Resources for practising and sustainability

  13. Materials Images Knowledge • Start by: • Using materials, diagrams to illustrate and solve the problem • Progress to: • Developing mental images to help solve the problem • Extend to: • Working abstractly with the number property Teaching progression

  14. What type of problem do we expect to meet in years 9/10 ? Percentages • Finding one number as a % of another • Finding a % of a quantity • Finding the total given a % of the total • Increase/decrease by a % • Finding the original after an increase/decrease • GST and other problems

  15. Using double number lines to solve % problems

  16. 20% of 150 is 30 • 20% of 150 is • 20% of is 30 • % of 150 is 30

  17. Question (in context) The local dairy farmer is selling 20% of his herd of 150 cows. How many is he selling? Rewrite in maths language 20% of 150 is   150 0% 20% 100%

  18. 150  150 0% 20% 100% 0% 20% 100% How do we use the lines to get the answer? 150 divided by 5 = 30 20 x 5 = 100 Find 10% : 150 divided by 10 So 10% = 15 So 20% =30

  19. 150 0% 20% 100% 15 x 10 15 x 2 10 x 2 10 x 10

  20. There are 30 students in 9CT and 40% are girls. How many girls are there in the class? • 40% of 30 is  • In a berry mix there are 30% strawberries and 20% raspberries and the rest are blackberries. In a 500gm punnet of berries what weight are the strawberries? • 30% of 500gm is 

  21. Abigail is working on a set of 50 number problems and she has just finished question 28. What % of the questions has she finished. 28 is  % of 50 • Mr Sharp spent the day at the races and his horses were placed in 8 out of 20 races. In what % of the races was he successful? 8 is  % of 20

  22. 30% of the swimming team are girls. If there are 18 girls . How many are in the team altogether? 18 is 30% of 

  23. Activities to practice these skills • Activity 1 • Activity 3 Note: these are not teaching activities FIO’s • Fully grown Page 9 • The Percentage Game page 14/1 • Laser Blazer page 12/13

  24. What do students need to be able to do before we use this? Have a sound knowledge of percentage • Recall of all multiplication and division facts Discounts, markups, inflation etc • To know answers must be in context with correctunits • Common factors and lowest common multiples • AM/AP

  25. Revision of % knowledge Starter pack

  26. Increasing/decreasing by a %

  27. Decreasing by a % Sarah went shopping for a new bike which cost $350 When she got to town there was a sale and she got 20% off the price, What did she pay? Did she pay more or less? How much less? So instead of paying 100% she only paid? Show all this on the number lines $350 0% 80% 100%

  28. X 4 X 4 Increasing by a percentage The value of a $400 antique vase has been increased by 20%. What is its value now? What questions do we ask? 120% of 400 is   $400 0% 100% 120% Or divide 400 by 10 (to get 10%) and multiply by 12.

  29. Moving to number properties 20% of 150 is ? Now is time to link what they know about % with decimal fractions. How else can we write this? What does 20% actually mean? How could we do this without the number line? For some students this stage will be a long time coming! For others they will tell you. Now might be the time to bring in a calculator and some more “awkward” q’s

  30. Activity 5 Dominoes - using number properties

  31. Finding the original amount after a % increase/decrease Example: After an increase in his weekly wage of 20% Joe has $480.What was his wage before the increase? Talk through and write the maths question $480 is 120% of  Complete a number line with this information  $480 0% 100% 120%

  32. Revision (maintenance) Some activities to use to give students constant revision. Activities 2, 4, 6, 7 and 8

More Related