Pythagorean Theorem and Irrational Number Lesson 1
Pythagorean Theorem and Irrational Number Lesson 1
2. Have a few volunteers come to the board and write down which numbers
they classified as each. Tell students you will go over it after. (3 minutes)
3. Start by introducing the most basic number systems and then the more
complicated (natural numbers, whole numbers, integers, rational,
irrational). (10 minutes)
4. Give students the classifying numbers worksheet and have them fill the 16
numbers from the opener in on the worksheet. Have them check answers
with their tablemates. (10 minutes)
5. Have the students who came up to the board fix any mistakes they made at
the beginning of class. (3 minutes)
6. Go over any questions or problems that the students encountered while
classifying the numbers. (5 minutes)
7. Hand out an index card to everyone in the class. On each index card there
is a number. Tell the class not to look at their number. Have the class stand
up and hold the index cards on their forehead and to try and silently
separate into rational and irrational numbers. Then tell the rational
numbers to split into natural, whole, integer, and rational. (10 minutes)
8. CLOSURE: In the remaining time, have the students stick their numbers
onto the board in order from least to greatest. Tell the class that tomorrow
we will be learning how to approximate irrational numbers and we will fix
the order of numbers we just put up. (4 minutes)
Grouping:
The students are at table of four, so their groups are by their tables. When
they are in pairs, they are working with the student next to them. I am grouping
the students because this is new information for them and I think they need to put
minds together to come up with some ideas.
Sponge activity: (to soak up extra time)
The last activity of class will be continued next class, so if there is extra time, we
will start deciding whether people put the numbers in the correct order or not.
Homework when appropriate:
Classifying numbers worksheet.
Wrap-up: How will you help students make meaning from the lessons
activities?
The group activity near the end of class is checking to see if the students
understood the classification of numbers.
Potential Pitfalls and Reflection: What difficulties can you predict that your students
may find challenging or have misconceptions about? How will you address those
confusions?
Students may be thrown off by decimals and must remember that
irrational numbers have decimals that DO NOT repeat.