ORBIT/GeoGebra Competition: Difference between revisions

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The winner of the competition was Anthony Or with his pair of complementary applets on perimeter and area.  Both applets have in-app spreadsheets for students to record their investigation results.  These are excellent applets for visualising area and perimeter, addressing common misconceptions held by primary school students in a fun interactive way.
The winner of the competition was Anthony Or with his pair of complementary applets on perimeter and area.  Both applets have in-app spreadsheets for students to record their investigation results.  These are excellent applets for visualising area and perimeter, addressing common misconceptions held by primary school students in a fun interactive way.


*[[file:material-22723.ggb]]
*[[variety of perimeters with fixed area]]
*[[file:material-28888.ggb]]
*[[variety of areas with fixed perimeter]]





Revision as of 14:10, 27 March 2013

Details to follow...

This resource may not be final.

Students shot.jpg
The 2013 competition has generated five high quality open-ended activities that support interactive teaching and allow children (age 6-10) to explore an element of mathematics for themselves.

Lesson idea. GeoGebra is a free, fun, interactive software environment that can be used with great effect to promote interactive teaching and enquiry based learning. The competition winning GeoGebra applets presented here also come with guidance notes for use in the primary classroom.

Teaching approach. The following guidance note are provided for each resource:

  • a short overview
  • brief instructions or teacher’s note (simple instructions including useful tips and recommendations)
  • list of learning objectives
  • description of the underlying pedagogical rationale/teaching approach
    (edit)
Resource details
Title ORBIT/GeoGebra Competion 2013
Topic
Teaching approach
Learning Objectives
Format / structure

wiki page with downloadable .doc version

Subject
Age of students / grade
Table of contents
Additional Resources/material needed
Useful information
Related ORBIT Wiki Resources
Other (e.g. time frame)
Files and resources to view and download

The winner of the competition was Anthony Or with his pair of complementary applets on perimeter and area. Both applets have in-app spreadsheets for students to record their investigation results. These are excellent applets for visualising area and perimeter, addressing common misconceptions held by primary school students in a fun interactive way.


The ORBIT/GeoGebra competition yielded a further three high quality GeoGebra activities:

Guidance notes:

One student also produced an excellent document with links to GeoGebra files

Acknowledgement

This was a joint competition between The University of Cambridge Faculty of Education ORBIT project and GeoGebra (a world-wide community developing and using the GeoGebra software).{{}}

License

[[Category:]]