The book is designed to
give students not only the “hows” but also an understanding of the
“whys” of the basic math processes they may be reviewing and those
they are learning for the first time. The first information the
student encounters in each activity is a real-life application
of the skills and techniques covered by that activity.
This portion of the activity clearly states the target
proficiencies that the student should gain over the course of
the activity.
Each module provides a terminology checkpoint, listing
previously used terms relevant to the new topic as well as the new
terms to be introduced, giving students a "heads up" on the
vocabulary they should have already learned before going on.
A Building Mathematical Language section focuses on the
specific and well-defined vocabulary of mathematics as well as
commonly used notation and translation. This section does more than
teach students to "speak math"; it teaches them how to think through
and talk about math.
Math processes that require more than three steps are presented in
table form as Methodologies, which break the processes down
to their fundamental steps. Techniques are presented for one or
two-step processes, translations, and conversions.
In a step, when a
particular mathematical property is applied for the first time, a Why can you do this?
or “Why do you do this?” is inserted and footnoted for the
student who desires to understand the process, not just memorize a
set of steps.
The commonly used
shortcuts to computation and notation are footnoted as such and presented in models, which follow the methodologies.
Special cases, for which the student might ask, “This doesn’t fit the original example, so what do I do now?” are also footnoted and presented as separate models.
Students are occasionally prompted with a
Think graphic to draw their attention to an otherwise easily
missed step or procedure.
Models for the special cases and shortcuts are presented in
step-by-step format. As students
work
through the models, they are cued with the special case and
shortcut instructions. In chapters 4 through 6, specifically
chosen models also serve as opportunities for review by
incorporating computations with decimals and fractions.
When appropriate for the
section, estimation techniques are presented with examples as
additional (optional) tools the student can use to verify the answer
to a problem.
Gleaned from the observations of Basic Mathematics instructors as to
what mathematical errors students are most likely to make, a
table-format section called Addressing Common Errors lists
and gives the student an example of each of those problematic areas.
Most importantly, however, it provides resolution for each common
pitfall—how to avoid this—and the correct process for each example.
The Pre-Activity section ends with a
Preparation Inventory which provides students with an actual
checklist of critical skills and understandings they need to have
before proceeding to the Activity section.
In
this section, students are given concrete guidelines as to the
criteria against which their performance is measured, as
well as guidelines for presentation of their responses to questions
and exercises.
This section presents a set of Critical Thinking Questions,
encouraging the student to articulate in writing what he or she has
learned thus far. The first few questions are direct, followed by
those convergent questions that require the students to tie in
previously learned knowledge with the topic at hand. Finally, a
question is posed to challenge the student to explore the topic
further. The convergent Critical Thinking Questions are especially
suitable for small group discussion, and may be worth revisiting
once the students have demonstrated that they have mastered the
processes.
This section provides important suggestions for successfully
performing the skills and solving the problems posed in the
Activity. Suggestions include the use of a horizontal bar in
fractions, as opposed to a diagonal bar, which can easily interfere
with correct alignment in the problem, careful use of the original
problem rather than an intermediate step when validating a final
answer, and so forth.
A
carefully chosen set of exercises, including a few basic problems,
special cases, and those that might lead to the common errors
previously addressed are in a Demonstrate Your Understanding
section. Ample workspace is provided in the book for both
problem-solving and validation.
When an answer does not validate,
many students first instinct is to erase the entire problem and begin again. An Identify and
Correct section presents actual student-written work for the
students to first validate for accuracy, and then analyze to detect
the error(s) made.
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Some
Activities also include Mental Math and Team Exercises
sections. In Mental Math, students are challenged to apply what
they have learned of the problem-solving process to solve
problems mentally, rather than working them out in writing. The
Team Exercises offer students an opportunity to work in teams or
groups to think through meta-mathematical issues raised over the
course of the activity.
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At the
end of each section there are Additional Exercises to
allow students the opportunity to demonstrate their comprehension of
the activity content.
At the
end of each chapter there are Application Problems to
allow students a further opportunity to apply what they have learned
over the course of the chapter.
Foundations of Math
also provides additional student
support tools
at the back of the book:
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Reading Logs
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Practice Tests
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Self Assessment Tools
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Midterm Assessment Tool
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Student Survey
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Answer Keys
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