Sign in to view assessments and invite other educators
Sign in using your existing Kendall Hunt account. If you don’t have one, create an educator account.
Display for all to see the graphic that illustrates a framework for the Information Gap routine.
Explain that in an Information Gap routine students work with a partner. One partner gets a problem card with a question that doesn’t have enough given information, and the other partner gets a data card with information relevant to the problem card.
The person with the problem card asks questions like “Can you tell me ?” and is expected to explain what they will do with the information. If that person asks for information that is not on the data card (including the answer!) and gives their reason, then the person with the data card must respond with, “I don’t have that information.” The person with the data card should just be providing information, not making assumptions. Note that it is okay to help a stuck partner by saying something like “I don’t have the recursive definition of the sequences. I only have information about the images of points.”
Once the partner with the problem card has enough information, both partners look at the problem card and solve the problem independently.
Arrange students in groups of 2 or 4. If students are new to the Information Gap routine, allowing them to work in groups of 2 for each role supports communication and understanding. In each group, distribute a problem card to one student (or group) and a data card to the other student (or group). After reviewing their work on the first problem, give them the cards for a second problem and instruct them to switch roles. Provide access to graph paper.
Your teacher will give you either a problem card or a data card. Do not show or read your card to your partner.
If your teacher gives you the problem card:
If your teacher gives you the data card:
After students have completed their work, share the correct answers and ask students to discuss the process of representing sequences in different ways. Here are some questions for discussion:
Highlight for students’ connections between representations. For example, a recursive definition might include , which corresponds to an entry in a table and the point on a graph.