TPT
Total:
$0.00
MathxMath Banner

MathxMath

Rated 4.85 out of 5, based on 59 reviews
88 Followers
Hudgins, Virginia, United States
About the store
My wife and I have taught in the public schools for a combined 35 years, teaching nearly every mathematics class possible at the high school level, from Pre-Algebra to AP Calculus. Our focus includes Algebra II, Pre-Calculus, Statistics, and Calculus.
Read more

All resources

Preview of Related Rates--A Video Project for Calculus

Related Rates--A Video Project for Calculus

Created by
MathxMath
This project asks Calculus students to create their own related rates problem, solve it, and then verify the problem experimentally. Students are asked to work in cooperative groups to complete the keystone of the project: a video that allows them to quantify the variables being explored in their related rates problem. The document has a single page of instructor notes, two pages of student notes and directions, and a final single page with a grading rubric to support the instructor.
Showing 1-1 of 1 results

About the store

Experience

My wife and I have taught in the public schools for a combined 35 years, teaching nearly every mathematics class possible at the high school level, from Pre-Algebra to AP Calculus. Our focus includes Algebra II, Pre-Calculus, Statistics, and Calculus.

Awards & shining teacher moments

My wife and I have combined to be awarded teacher of the year for our local school district three times, as voted by our administrators and peers. I have won technology teacher of the year for Region 3 in Virginia.

My own education history

My wife and I both graduated from the Indiana University of Pennsylvania with degrees in Secondary Mathematics Education. In addition, I have earned a Masters Degree from the College of William and Mary in Curriculum and Instruction in Secondary Mathematics Education.

Additional biographical information

My wife and I have four children, each of whom claim that the worst possible day occurs when both breakfast and dinner conversations center around the joys and frustrations of teaching high school mathematics.