Pages

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

Conic Sections Projects using Desmos 2019 for Algebra 2 Honors or Pre-Calculus

This is only the second year that I have done Conics Projects on Desmos. (Click here for previous Conics Desmos Project post). This year, I taught conic sections in the first semester, and so I assigned this before Thanksgiving break in case students wanted to work on it. They did a fantastic job!

I think this project is great for several reasons, but mainly:

  • It's open-ended
  • They really learn about domain restrictions and intersections
  • They can use conic sections as well as parent functions, so it ties concepts together
  • They can relate math to something they enjoy
  • It's creative
  • They researched things I haven't taught them yet: inequalities, trig graphs, and lemniscates, for example
This year I added a peer review. I got the idea from my graduate class in Applied Learning. Each student was assigned a peer, and they had to say something that they liked about the project and something that they thought could be improved. They had to send this to me, and then I sent it to the peer, which ensured good quality and no negative comments. Then, the students had to make a change based on their peer's recommendation. Honestly, they gave better critical feedback than I ever could have! (See below for more info on the peer review).

Here are some of their projects.





















Examples of how the Final Project was turned in:
















Peer Review:

How I set up the peer review. Each student sent their project to the person after the arrow. The person after the arrow then sent their response to me, which I read and then forwarded to the student. 


 Cristi ->Will -> James->Manci-> He ->Lucas ->Bobby  ->Grace  ->Irina-> Leo->dylan  ->zach ->andres ->anthony -> niamh ->ella ->ashley ->zhongxuan ->
blake ->jack ->cristi


A Great Peer Review

Here is my Rubric.


RUBRIC 30 POINTS TOTAL


_____ 4 points Creativity
_____ 3 points Colorful
_____ 5 points Sophistication of conics
_____ 4 points Use of domain restrictions
_____ 5 points Final project with all conics shown prominently is printed in color do not wait till the last minute to do this, nor have poor printer quality and pasted on construction paper
_____ 4 points Equations printed out and pasted next to picture on construction paper (can go off the
            page if necessary.)
______5 peer review turned in on time (-2 if late per day) (graded separately – not part of 30 points)
______5 peer review emailed to me (graded separately - not part of 30 points)
______5 corrections based on peer review



How this project related to my Doctoral study in the Applied Learning Sciences

(Excerpt from my paper)


I believe that the way I teach is an amalgamation of several learning theories: Piaget’s constructivism, Papert’s constructionism, Vygotsky’s social constructivism, and even Behaviorialist theory, when I need to get facts across quickly. However, with my learning project, I am going to focus on Papert’s Constructionism, where “learners make knowledge their own,” (Kafai, 2006 p. 39) and physical objects are important. Using ideas gleaned from Piaget when he worked with him in Geneva, Seymour Papert found it was possible to learn abstract concepts concretely through objects-to-think-with. The objects my students will think with are graphs of conic sections. As of this writing, my students are learning how to graph and find equations of conics, yet I believe that they do not quite have ownership of the concept. It is something they know they need to study to pass the course, but I think that the topic is abstract and separate from them. Through the creative drawing activity, students will be transforming the ideas taught in the classroom and will express them through the website Desmos.com. Similar to LOGO, students will create designs of their choosing by “telling” the computer what to do; in this case, entering equations and playing with them until they are in the “correct spot,” that is, getting it out of their heads and onto paper. Every student can (and is encouraged to) relate conics to something that they enjoy, for example: create a beach scene, a zoo, a hockey arena, or a videogame scene, for example. The hope is that they will appropriate their knowledge to make it their own (Kafia, 2006).


Kafai, Y. B. (2006). Constructionism. In R. K. Sawyer (Ed.), The Cambridge handbook of the learning sciences (1st ed.) (pp. 35–46). Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.

7 comments:

  1. Love it, thanks for sharing! Here is an activity that could make a good follow-up and gives students an opportunity to create animated graphs: https://teacher.desmos.com/activitybuilder/custom/5a2a9f5866e707061270a101

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks a lot for sharing this amazing knowledge with us. This site is fantastic. I always find great knowledge from it. Learn Awesome Math Tricks

    ReplyDelete
  3. Do you have a document of the directions and rubric? Sorry if I missed the link to it.

    ReplyDelete
  4. This project, which allows students the option to construct animated graphs. This website is incredible. It always provides me with a wealth of information. In the web design jack , I work as a web designer. I found exactly what I was looking for, and it has been quite beneficial to me.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Precalculus and Algebra 2 with Trigonometry are usually the same thing with minor differences. When you examine the "Table of Contents" of the Alg 2 with Trig and the Precalc books by the same author/publisher, you'll notice that they're nearly identical.
    Source:nicholasmathiou

    ReplyDelete
  6. It is very helpful for students that they can make their projects with the help of animations and always love animations and I wanted to learn this thing that how can I make anything with animation so now I learned a little bit from here so I'm going to try this out.

    ReplyDelete