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OK, at this point, you have them start working on the in-class exercise “Inverse Functions.” Note that you have not yet given them a way of finding inverse functions, except by noodling around! Let them noodle. Even for something like , they should be able to get there, with a bit of hand-holding, by reversing the steps: first multiply by 7, then subtract 3, then divide by 2. If they ask about #11, make sure they try a few things (such as ) and test them —they will discover they don’t work. Explain that, in fact, we have no inverse function of right now, so we’re going to make one up later in the year and call it a “logarithm.” They can then leave this one blank.
After they have finished noodling their way through the most of the exercises, interrupt the class and say “Now, I’m going to give you a formal method of finding inverse functions—you will need this for the homework.” The formal way is: first, reverse the and the , then solve for . For instance, from we first write . Then solve for to get .
But wait! We’re not done with this topic!
What happens the next day is, they come in with questions. Whatever else they did or didn’t get, they got stuck on #10. (If they got stuck on #9, point out that it is the same as #2; make sure they understand why.) #10 is hard because they cannot figure out how to solve for y. This brings us, not to a new conceptual point, but to a very important algebraic trick, which we are going to learn by doing a TAPPS exercise.
TAPPS (Thinking Aloud Pair Problem Solving) is a powerful learning tool, and here’s how it goes. The students are broken into pairs.
One person in each pair is the teacher . His job is to walk through the following solution, step by step, explaining it. For each step, explain two things. Why am I allowed to do that, and why did I want to do that? Your explanation should make perfect sense to a normal Algebra I student. You should never skip steps—go line, by line, by line, explaining each one.
The other person is the student. He also has two jobs. First, whenever the teacher says something that is not perfectly clear, stop him! Even if you understand it, say “Wait, that didn’t make perfect sense.” Keep pushing until the explanation is completely bullet-proof. Second, keep the teacher talking. If he pauses to think, say “Keep talking. What are you thinking?” The teacher should “think out loud” until he comes up with something.
If the students are stuck on a line, they should raise their hands and ask you.
Take the time to carefully explain the process—we will do other TAPPS exercises. And one more thing—warn them that after everyone has completed the exercise, you will be calling on individuals to explain tricky steps. You will not call for volunteers. After they are done, everyone in the class should be able to answer any question about anything in this derivation. So you will just pick people and ask them questions like “Why did I do that?”
After they are done, call on individuals and ask questions like “Why did we subtract from both sides?” and “How did we get ?” Point out the general strategy is only two steps: get all the things on one side, then pull out the . Check their answer to the question at the end.
Once again, there is the sample test—you will probably want to assign it as a homework, and tell them to do that and also study everything since the last test. The next day, go over the homework and any questions. Then give the test.
Congratulations, you’re through with your first unit! If things went well, you have laid the groundwork for the entire year. Onward and upward from here!
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