I have created four extra sheets about
decimals to supplement Pamela’s
math book so far. She seems to have a weak grasp of various complexities, but I hope to solidify her understanding through extra practice. Because she is a
concrete-sequential learner, she does not mind rows of problems that look similar (unlike my
concrete-random son). Yesterday’s spreadsheet in
Excel reminded me of a high-tech tip that can make life easier when trying to think of random problems with the same structure on a sheet. When forced to do so, I fall into a rut. Pamela has an eagle eye for patterns, and I have to vary them enough for her not to guess a pattern and miss the actual concept presented. This is why I adore the concept of a
random number generator, which I learned about while getting my
master’s degree in
operations research!
In this case, I needed to select between 1 and 99 coins. Excel has a random number generator that picks numbers between 0 and 1. If you multiply the random number by 99 and round up, you will get a random selection of numbers between 1 and 99. Once I get the formula right, I simply copy it down the column and it will generate different numbers in every cell! Here is the statement in Excel that worked:
=ROUNDUP(RAND()*99,0)
Because I wanted to make sure she had multiple chances to work with 1 to 9 coins, I copied the following formula into several of the cells to force randomly generated, single- digit numbers:
=ROUNDUP(RAND()*9,0)
In the next column, I needed to alternate between pennies and dimes from one problem to another. I set up a logical statement that puts in the word dimes when the random number is less than .5 and pennies for all other numbers. Here is what worked:
=IF(RAND()<0.5,"dimes","pennies")
Here is what these three formulas produced in ten rows of problems:
12 pennies
6 dimes
97 pennies
66 pennies
5 dimes
51 dimes
1 dimes
4 pennies
9 dimes
26 dimes
I just LOVE technology!
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