Curriculum proposal number___2004.36_____________ Curriculum Action Request (CAR) (Form 4-93) - Maui Community College 1. Author(s)___Kate Acks_____________________________________________________ 2. Authors’ unit(s) _____STEM__________________________ 3. Date submitted to Curriculum Committee_____Nov 1, 2004_________________ 4. a. General type of action? b. Specific type of action Addition _X_regular __experimental __other (specify) ___________ _X_course __program Modification __number/alpha __title __credits __description __prerequisites __corequisites __program __other (specify) ___________ 5. Reason for this curriculum action: to articulate with UH Manoa and system-wide agreement 6. Existing course _ _____________________________________________________________________________ alpha number title credits 7. Proposed new/modified course MATH 112 Math for Elementary Teachers II 3_____ alpha number title credits 8. New course description or page number in catalog of present course description, if unchanged. Demonstrates operations and develops the properties of the natural numbers, integers, rational numbers, and real numbers. Explores the use of mathematical operations to solve problems including geometry, probability, and physical rates. 9. Prerequisite(s) MATH 111 with at least a C. 10. Corequisite(s) 11. Recommended preparation: _________________________ 12. Is this course cross-listed? ___yes _x__no If yes, list course 13. Student contact hours per week lecture 3__hours lab___hours lecture/lab___hours other___hours, explain 14. Revise current MCC General Catalog page(s)__115_________________________ 15. Course grading ___letter grade only ___credit/no credit 16. Proposed semester and year of first offering? 17. Maximum enrollment__35___ _x__either spring__semester _2006_year Rationale, if applicable 18. Special scheduling considerations? __yes _x_no __x_audit If yes, explain. 19. Special fees required? __yes _x_no If yes, explain. 20. Will this request require special resources (personnel, supplies, etc.?) __yes x_no If yes, explain. 21. Is this course restricted to particular room type? 22. __yes x__no If yes, explain. _x_Course fulfills requirement for AA_________________________ program/degree __Course is an elective for __________________________________ program/degree _x Course is elective for AA degree 23. This course __increases __decreases _x_makes no change in number of credit required for the program(s) affected by this action 24. Is this course taught at another UH campus? _x_yes __no a. If yes, specify campus, course, alpha and number : UHManoa, MATH 112 b. If no, explain why this course is offered at MCC 25. a. Course is articulated at __UHCC __UH Manoa __UH Hilo __UH WO __Other/PCC b. Course is appropriate for articulation at _x_UHCC _x_UH Manoa __UH Hilo _x_UH WO __Other/PCC c. Course is not appropriate for articulation at __UHCC __UH Manoa __UH Hilo __UH WO __Other/PCC d. Course articulation information is attached? _x_yes __no ....................................................................... Proposed by Kate Acks 11-01-04 ________________________________ Author or Program Coordinator/Date Requested by Kate Acks 11-01-04 _________________________________ Division or Unit Chair/Date Approved by _________________________________ Academic Senate Chair/Date _________________________________ Chief Academic Officer/Date Recommended by _________________________________ Curriculum Chair/Date Revised July 2004/AC _________________________________ Chancellor/Date Maui Community College Course Outline 1. Alpha and Number 2. MATH 112 Course Title Math for Elementary Teachers II Credits 3 Date of Outline October 2004 (Revised April 2005) Course Description Demonstrates operations and develops the properties of the natural numbers, integers, rational numbers, and real numbers. Explores the use of mathematical operations to solve problems including geometry, probability, and physical rates. 3. Contact Hours/Type 3 hours lecture per week 4. Prerequisites MATH 111 with at least a C. Corequisites Recommended Preparation Approved by _____________________________________ Date________________ 5. General Course Objectives For detailed information on how MATH 112 focuses on the Maui Community College general education standards, see the attached curricular grid. MATH 112 fulfills three of the 3 credits for the Quantitative Reasoning Requirement for A.A. and A.S. degrees at Maui Community College. This course fulfills the requirements for the University of Hawai’i at Manoa General Education, Symbolic Reasoning Foundation requirement. This course meets the following University of Hawaii Manoa Symbolic Reasoning Hallmarks (By System agreement, this course is designed to satisfy the following Foundations Symbolic Reasoning criteria for the University of Manoa) Expose students to the beauty, power, clarity and precision of formal systems Help students understand the concept of proof as a chain of inferences Teach students how to apply formal rules or algorithms Require students to use appropriate symbolic techniques in the context of problem solving, and in the presentation and critical evaluation of evidence Not focus solely on computational skills Build a bridge from theory to practice and show students how to traverse this bridge This course in conjunction with MATH 111 is designed to satisfy the prerequisite for the College of Education. 6. Specific Course Objectives, Competencies, and Student Learning Outcomes For assessment purposes, these are linked to #7. Recommended Course Content. On successful completion of this course, students will be able to a. communicate about arithmetic operations using set theory and counting; b. explain the relationship between adding and subtracting; and between multiplication and division; c. represent operations of addition and multiplication using translations along a line and composition of translations; d. interpret new functions created by magnification and reflection; e. discuss primes and their relation to composite numbers; f. interpret a rational as a ratio when connected to probabilities or various rates including speed and averages; g. use dimensional analysis to help solve a problem; h. explain an irrational number and the significance of specific irrational numbers such as pi; i. interpret the geometry of the real number line from studying translations, reflections and dilations of the real number line; j. connect the arithmetic operations with the composition of translations and dilations in distance between points 7. Recommended Course Content and Approximate Time Spent on Each Topic Linked to #6 Student Learning Outcomes. 5-6 Weeks Operations and development of numbers (a,b,c) 9-10 Weeks Solve geometry, probability and physical rate problems (d,e,f,g,h,i,j) 8. Text and Materials, Reference Materials, Auxiliary Materials and Content Appropriate text(s) and materials will be chosen at the time the course is offered. By University of Hawaii System-wide agreement on September 18, 2004, campuses agreed to use materials created by Joel Weiner with support of Neil Pateman, Instructor for ITE 324, 325 (Elementary Mathematics I, II) College of Education. MCC supports this agreement to facilitate system-wide articulation of MATH 112. Additional materials such as Thomas Sonnabend Mathematics for Teachers will be used for reference materials. Internet searches 9. Recommended Course Requirements and Evaluation Specific course requirements are at the discretion of the instructor at the time the course is being offered. 55%-90% Written – in-class exams 5%- 25% 0%-30% 10%-25% Out of class work (including take home exams and homework) In-class exercises and group work Written reflective papers 10. Methods of Instruction Instructional methods will vary considerably with instructors. Specific methods will be at the discretion of the instructor teaching the course and the method by which the course is taught. These might include but are not limited to a. b. c. d. e. f. exams and papers with feedback and discussion lectures (kept to a minimum) and class discussion problem solving Power Point presentations (kept to a minimum) videos, DVDs, CD-ROMs with detailed viewing guide and discussion questions group activities g. h. i. j. k. l. m. oral reports and other student presentations games and simulations web-based assignments and activities reflective journals or papers group and/or individual research projects with reports or poster presentations study logs and study groups other contemporary learning techniques (such as problem-based learning, investigative case-based learning) n. homework assignments