“What is the role of the teacher during a Desmos activity?” (2024)

One way that teachers support student learning during a Desmos activity is by facilitating classroom conversations. This week the Desmos Fellows considered ways to plan for those conversations by looking at a teacher dashboard with sample student work. We looked at Linear Systems: Gym Membership, which asks students to analyze several gym membership plans in order to make a recommendation to afriend.

“What is the role of the teacher during a Desmos activity?” (1)

We focused on the questions below to help us discuss the role of the teacher during theactivity:

  • Where would you pause for classroom conversation? How might this conversation support the goals of the activity?
  • How would you prioritize which conversations to have with the class?
  • Which single screen has the potential for the most powerful conversation to support activity goals and student learning?

Here’s ouranalysis:

Screens1-3

These screens provide access to the context, and involve the students in developing the problem. There was also a general consensus that Screen 3 offers the greatest potential for classconversation.

  • Jade White shares with us that “Screen 2 would be a great first place to pause; most students should have familiarity with gym memberships but checking in on this screen to ensure that they understand the context of the problem will help them understand the context of the math when they get there.” Jade appreciates that Screen 3 offers students a chance to ask their own questions, which can help students feel more comfortable asking questions in general.
  • Serge Ballif points out that students need to understand the considerations from Screens 1-3 if they are to appreciate the rest of the activity. Pausing for clarification sets students up for success in the latter half of the activity.
  • Stephanie Blair and a colleague planned to extend the work on Screen 3 by having students look at all of the questions from the class, perhaps using Anonymous Mode. From there students would choose the question they thought was best, justify their choice, and explain how they would use the information they got from the question to help Mateo choose a gym membershipplan.
  • Anna Scholl likes this screen coming early in the activity because students can discuss and “know” their answer, and then dive into how to show their answer visually, possibly with multiplerepresentations.

Screen4

The prompt for Screen 4 is to “Use Desmos to create a visual tool to help Mateo decide which gym membership to choose.” Here students will represent their mathematical thinking using either a graph, table, or equations. Student work for this screen leaves room for interpretation of what students understand and are still developing ideas around, and for that reason Screen 4 is our second place winner for classroom conversationpotential.

  • Jenn Vadnais would use this screen to highlight multiple representations by connecting a table and equation with the graph. Using points in addition to lines will help our concrete thinkers clearly see the monthly markers.
  • Linda Saeta wants to make sure students understand what their models tell them about the world. Questions such as “After 3 months, what does your model say will be the cost of the three plans?” help us gauge whether or not students understand the connection between the model and the scenario.
  • Scott Miller suggests pausing on Screen 4 to have students discuss and explain the change in scale that they made. This allows students that found an answer without using the graph to see another way of thinking that wasn’t accessible to them before changing the axes. Jade White points out that students may also make different decisions about what x and y represent, so discussing the graph on this screen can be especiallyilluminating.
  • Paul Jorgens offers ideas around how to proceed when students need additional support. His strategy is to get two groups with different responses together and have them reason it out. “It might be a time to huddle with some groups as they work. In closure, I think I would mock up a misconception (or 2) on a preview of screen 4 and reason together with the class and then end sharing thoughts about best plan on Screen 5.”

Screen5

  • Nick Corley would give his students a chance to debate their answers, and to discuss if there is a right or wrong answer. Using the dashboard to select and sequence student responses can be powerful in facilitating this discussion.

Screen7

  • Jade White shares that her priority conversations would be on slides 5 and 7 around a deeper understanding of systems of equations and the significance of the intersection point. Screen 7 ties everything together by having students identify the slope and y-intercept and their significance as well as graphing two lines that have a specific intersection point.

These are just some of the ways that a teacher can play an active role in shaping student learning during a digital activity. What are some other teacher moves we might consider in this activity and in others? Let us know on Twitter@desmos.

“What is the role of the teacher during a Desmos activity?” (2024)

FAQs

“What is the role of the teacher during a Desmos activity?”? ›

One way that teachers support student learning during a Desmos

Desmos
Desmos is an advanced graphing calculator implemented as a web application and a mobile application written in TypeScript and JavaScript. Desmos. Type of site. Online graphing calculator.
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Desmos
activity is by facilitating classroom conversations. This week the Desmos Fellows considered ways to plan for those conversations by looking at a teacher dashboard with sample student work.

How to use Desmos in the classroom? ›

  1. Create an Account. Create a free account at teacher.desmos.com or sign in with Google. ...
  2. Explore existing activities. Desmos has many well-made math activities (pre-calculus and calculus). ...
  3. Create your own activity. Image: Select Custom Activities and New activity. ...
  4. Run activity in class (pause, anonymize, pacing).

What is the use of Desmos in teaching math? ›

Desmos is a helpful tool not only to teach math in the classroom, but also to let students discover new information from equations and graphs on their own. This program is advantageous to use in the classroom in order to help show students the trends between what an equation looks like and what its graph looks like.

What are the benefits of Desmos in the classroom? ›

Desmos encourages students to practice math skills as well as play with math to express their creativity. Students can enter an unlimited number of mathematical expressions and instantly see results graphed on the page.

What is a Desmos activity? ›

Desmos Activities are a math teacher favorite because you can build graphing tasks with the Desmos Graphing Calculator and there are lots of pre-made activities to choose from, but options like card sorts (view examples) and Polygraph (a digital Guess Who game) make this a tool that has been used by multiple subject ...

How do I assign a Desmos activity to a class? ›

Assign to Your Classes

Click Add a Class, click Add New Class and then give the new Class a name. Use the url (https://teacher.des…) to navigate back to the activity if needed, select Assign to Your Classes and assign as you wish. To get students into the activity, open up your classes from the menu on the left.

What is the goal of Desmos? ›

Desmos Studio is a Public Benefit Corporation with a goal of helping everyone learn math, love math, and grow with math. We believe that everyone has an inner mathematician and that some people haven't been given the opportunity, encouragement, or tools to discover theirs.

What are the pros and cons of using Desmos? ›

Desmos is one of the most complete software for functions and graphics. Adding functions to create graphics and do calculations is one of the most important and useful features. Desmos is good but it's also kind of complex, contains all necessary features but sometimes finding a comon expression can be complicated.

How do you use Desmos for beginners? ›

Create and Explore a Graph
  1. Visit the Desmos website then locate the graphing calculator.
  2. Write one equation per line in the edit boxes provided— “expression 1”, “expression 2”, etc. ...
  3. Press ALT+T, then H to trace a graph. ...
  4. Use the arrow keys to explore the graph.
  5. Press ALT+S for a summary of the points of interest.

What functions does Desmos support? ›

Trig Functions
FunctionTry typing...This function plots or finds the...
sinesin(x)sine of an angle
cosinecos(x)cosine of an angle
tangenttan(x)tangent of an angle
cosecantcsc(x)cosecant of an angle
2 more rows
5 days ago

What is the feature of Desmos? ›

Desmos Graphing Calculator is an open online tool with extensive numerical and visual versatility. It allows the user to plot and label points on the Cartesian plane, demonstrate solutions to equations and inequalities, graph functions and create regression models from data sets, among other capabilities.

Is Desmos a curriculum? ›

Brought to you by the team behind Desmos activities, Desmos Math 6–A1 is a full-year curriculum, aligned to scope and sequence. Read the review for grades 6–8 on EdReports.

Why is Desmos used? ›

Our free suite of math tools, including our Graphing Calculator, is used annually by over 75 million people around the world. Those tools help people represent their ideas mathematically, connect different representations dynamically, make conjectures, and then develop entirely new ideas.

Is Desmos free for teachers? ›

Desmos Classroom is a free teaching and learning platform, now part of Amplify.

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