Thursday 27 August 2015

Patterns That Grow


As Marilyn Burns says, pattern is the password of mathematics.

I like playing with patterns. I use them to get the kids interested in finding relationships.

So I gave them this provocation:

Here's a pattern - 1, 5, 9, 13….

Based on this, can you tell me if 21 is going to be in this pattern? And then will 45 be in it as well?

So we got the blocks out and started making some patterns. Here is what the kids came up with:




"The pattern makes a cross shape. And 21 makes the same shape so it must be in the pattern."



"And 45 can make a really big cross too."

From talking as a group we were able to work out that yes, indeed, 45 is going to be in our pattern.

In fact one student pointed out that it was like the 4x pattern (4, 8, 12, 16…) but just one more.

It was a good starting point. The conversation was never going to end there.

What other patterns can you make? Can you explain your pattern using numbers? Can you tell me what the next number will be without making the model of it?



Here's a nice pattern - just like the cross but missing a leg.
CAn you see a link to the 3x pattern?





This one adds on a leg and goes 3D.
And now we were thinking about the 5x pattern.
Is Grade 2 too young to start talking about y = 5x + 1?




We had a good talk about this one. Is there a step missing somewhere? Should there be something between 1 and 8? Is 1 part of the pattern?



Another pattern based on squares - ah ha! Square numbers!




And then taking the square into the third dimension!


This is not the end of work with patterns for the year. We will revisit the concept many times but I feel that the kids have a good grounding now in identifying, making and explaining patterns.

And we had a lot of fun.








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