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This is the real fun, for me.
Start by telling the students “Pick a number. Add three. Subtract the number you started with. You are left with…three!” OK, no great shock and surprise. But let’s use algebra to express what we have just discovered. . The key is recognizing what that sentence mean. can be any number. So when we write we are indeed asserting that if you take any number , add three and then subtract the number, you get three in the end.
Here’s a harder one. Pick a number, add three, multiply by four, subtract twelve, divide by the number you started with. Everyone started with different numbers, but everyone has 4 in the end. Ask the students to find a generalization to represent that , and see if they can work their way to . See also if they can guess what number this trick will not work with.
Now, have them work on the in-class assignment “Algebraic Generalizations,” in groups of three.. Most of the class period should be spent on this. This is hard!!! After the first couple of problems (which very directly echo what you already did in class), most groups will need a lot of help.
Here are some of the answers I’m looking for—I include this to make sure that the purpose of the assignment is clear to teachers.
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