Tagged: Sketchpad

Hello Spring!

Today’s blog post features a sketch from Anna Nguyen, who’s a 9th grade student. Anna observes, “Math is one of my favorite subjects. I’m not a genius or the smartest in my class, but I do enjoy dealing with letters and numbers, which is also why I like chemistry. I think GSP is the most...

Constructing Morley Triangles

By Adrienne Barrett This post is by guest blogger Adrienne Barrett, who’s a senior mathematics and education dual major at Rowan University. She is currently student teaching and upon graduation in May, she hopes to find a full-time position teaching high-school mathematics. She’s always loved math, and studying it in college has given her a...

Pi Day 2015: Pieces of Pi

For this year’s Pi Day post, I thought I’d continue our Web Sketchpad (WSP) construction theme. But rather than adapting the visualizations from last year’s Pi Day post to the new construction capabilities, I decided to take a different approach. Some time ago, I built a set of custom tools for the non-Web version of...

Drawing an Ellipse with Pins and String

In my prior blog posts, I’ve described how to construct ellipses using linkages, concentric circles, congruent triangles, and tangent circles. These are all great methods, but I think I got ahead of myself: There’s a simple ellipse construction technique described in nearly every precalculus book that I’ve bypassed in my excitement to show you the more exotic approaches. Say hello to...

Moving Beyond Formulas When Investigating Triangle Area

For the past year, my blogging partner Scott and I have worked with the team of Everyday Mathematics to build interactive Web Sketchpad models for their forthcoming new edition. It’s been fun for both of us to find ways to insert dynamic mathematics into their K–6 curriculum. Last year, I shared an Everyday Mathematics isosceles triangle investigation that...

Innovative Approaches to Computer-Based Assessment, Part Four

For the past month, I’ve focused this blog on the role that computers can play in assessing students’ mathematical knowledge. I’ve presented three Web Sketchpad-based examples of assessment with mathematical topics ranging from isosceles triangles, to the Pythagorean Theorem, to the slopes of perpendicular lines. Throughout, I’ve tried to show that the introduction of the computer...

Innovative Approaches to Computer-Based Assessment, Part Two

In my previous post, I shared Dan Meyer’s analysis of what’s wrong with computer-based mathematics assessments. Dan focuses his critique on the Khan Academy’s eighth-grade online mathematics course, identifying 74% of its assessment questions as focusing on numerical answers or multiple-choice items. This is a far cry from the constructing, analyzing, and arguing tasks advocated by the Smarter...

Can Computer-Based Assessment Model Worthwhile Mathematics?

Several weeks ago, Dan Meyer described his experience of completing 88 practice sets in Khan Academy’s eighth-grade online mathematics course. His goal was to document the types of evidence the Khan Academy asked students to produce of their mathematical understanding. Dan’s findings were disappointing: He concludes that 74% of the Khan Academy’s eighth-grade questions were either multiple choice or required nothing more than a numerical response. By contrast, Dan...