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WK | LSN | TOPIC | SUB-TOPIC | OBJECTIVES | T/L ACTIVITIES | T/L AIDS | REFERENCE | REMARKS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 3 |
Vectors (II)
|
Coordinates in two dimensions
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify the coordinates of a point in two dimensions Plot points on coordinate planes accurately Understand position representation using coordinates Apply coordinate concepts to practical situations |
Q/A on coordinate identification using grid references
Discussions on map reading and location finding Solving coordinate plotting problems using systematic methods Demonstrations using classroom grid systems and floor patterns Explaining coordinate applications using local maps and directions |
Chalk and blackboard, squared paper or grid drawn on ground, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 221-222
|
|
1 | 4 |
Vectors (II)
|
Coordinates in three dimensions
Column and position vectors in three dimensions |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify the coordinates of a point in three dimensions Understand the three-dimensional coordinate system Plot points in 3D space systematically Apply 3D coordinates to spatial problems |
Q/A on 3D coordinate understanding using room corner references
Discussions on height, length, and width measurements Solving 3D coordinate problems using systematic approaches Demonstrations using classroom corners and building structures Explaining 3D visualization using physical room examples |
Chalk and blackboard, 3D models made from sticks and clay, exercise books
Chalk and blackboard, movement demonstration space, exercise books |
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 222
|
|
1 | 5 |
Vectors (II)
|
Column vectors in terms of unit vectors i, j, k
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Express vectors in terms of unit vectors Convert between column and unit vector notation Understand the standard basis vector system Apply unit vector representation systematically |
Q/A on unit vector concepts using direction examples
Discussions on component representation using organized methods Solving unit vector problems using systematic conversion Demonstrations using perpendicular direction examples Explaining basis vector concepts using coordinate axes |
Chalk and blackboard, direction indicators, unit vector reference charts, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 226-228
|
|
1 | 6 |
Vectors (II)
|
Vector operations using unit vectors
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Express vectors in terms of unit vectors Perform vector addition using unit vector notation Calculate vector subtraction with i, j, k components Apply scalar multiplication to unit vectors |
Q/A on vector operations using component-wise calculation
Discussions on systematic operation methods Solving vector operation problems using organized approaches Demonstrations using component separation and combination Explaining operation logic using algebraic reasoning |
Chalk and blackboard, component calculation aids, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 226-228
|
|
1 | 7 |
Vectors (II)
|
Magnitude of a vector in three dimensions
Parallel vectors |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Calculate the magnitude of a vector in three dimensions Apply the 3D magnitude formula systematically Find vector lengths in spatial contexts Solve magnitude problems accurately |
Q/A on 3D magnitude using extended Pythagorean methods
Discussions on spatial distance calculation using 3D techniques Solving 3D magnitude problems using systematic calculation Demonstrations using 3D distance examples Explaining 3D magnitude using practical spatial examples |
Chalk and blackboard, 3D measurement aids, exercise books
Chalk and blackboard, parallel line demonstrations, exercise books |
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 229-230
|
|
2 | 1 |
Vectors (II)
|
Collinearity
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Show that points are collinear Apply vector methods to prove collinearity Test for collinear points using vector techniques Solve collinearity problems systematically |
Q/A on collinearity testing using vector proportion methods
Discussions on point alignment using vector analysis Solving collinearity problems using systematic verification Demonstrations using straight-line point examples Explaining collinearity using geometric alignment concepts |
Chalk and blackboard, straight-line demonstrations, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 232-234
|
|
2 | 2 |
Vectors (II)
|
Proportional division of a line
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Divide a line internally in the given ratio Apply the internal division formula Calculate division points using vector methods Understand proportional division concepts |
Q/A on internal division using systematic formula application
Discussions on ratio division using proportional methods Solving internal division problems using organized approaches Demonstrations using internal point construction examples Explaining internal division using geometric visualization |
Chalk and blackboard, internal division models, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 237-238
|
|
2 | 3 |
Vectors (II)
|
External division of a line
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Divide a line externally in the given ratio Apply the external division formula Distinguish between internal and external division Solve external division problems accurately |
Q/A on external division using systematic formula application
Discussions on external point calculation using vector methods Solving external division problems using careful approaches Demonstrations using external point construction examples Explaining external division using extended line concepts |
Chalk and blackboard, external division models, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 238-239
|
|
2 | 4 |
Vectors (II)
|
Ratio theorem
Advanced ratio theorem applications |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Express position vectors Apply the ratio theorem to geometric problems Use ratio theorem in complex calculations Find position vectors using ratio relationships |
Q/A on ratio theorem application using systematic methods
Discussions on position vector calculation using ratio methods Solving ratio theorem problems using organized approaches Demonstrations using ratio-based position finding Explaining theorem applications using logical reasoning |
Chalk and blackboard, ratio theorem aids, exercise books
Chalk and blackboard, advanced geometric aids, exercise books |
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 240-242
|
|
2 | 5 |
Binomial Expansion
|
Binomial expansions up to power four
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Expand binomial function up to power four Apply systematic multiplication methods Recognize coefficient patterns in expansions Use multiplication to expand binomial expressions |
Q/A on algebraic multiplication using familiar expressions
Discussions on systematic expansion using step-by-step methods Solving basic binomial multiplication problems Demonstrations using area models and rectangular arrangements Explaining pattern recognition using organized layouts |
Chalk and blackboard, rectangular cutouts from paper, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 256
|
|
2 | 6 |
Binomial Expansion
|
Binomial expansions up to power four (continued)
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Expand binomial function up to power four Handle increasingly complex coefficient patterns Apply systematic expansion techniques efficiently Verify expansions using substitution methods |
Q/A on power expansion using multiplication techniques
Discussions on coefficient identification using pattern analysis Solving expansion problems using systematic approaches Demonstrations using geometric representations Explaining verification methods using numerical substitution |
Chalk and blackboard, squared paper for geometric models, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 256
|
|
2 | 7 |
Binomial Expansion
|
Pascal's triangle
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Use Pascal's triangle Construct Pascal's triangle systematically Apply triangle coefficients for binomial expansions Recognize number patterns in the triangle |
Q/A on triangle construction using addition patterns
Discussions on coefficient relationships using triangle analysis Solving triangle construction and application problems Demonstrations using visual triangle building Explaining pattern connections using systematic observation |
Chalk and blackboard, triangular patterns drawn/cut from paper, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 256-257
|
|
3 | 1 |
Binomial Expansion
|
Pascal's triangle applications
Applications to numerical cases |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Use Pascal's triangle Apply Pascal's triangle to binomial expansions efficiently Use triangle coefficients for various powers Solve expansion problems using triangle methods |
Q/A on triangle application using coefficient identification
Discussions on efficient expansion using triangle methods Solving expansion problems using Pascal's triangle Demonstrations using triangle-guided calculations Explaining efficiency benefits using comparative methods |
Chalk and blackboard, Pascal's triangle reference charts, exercise books
Chalk and blackboard, simple calculation aids, exercise books |
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 257-258
|
|
3 | 2 |
Probability
|
Introduction
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Calculate the experimental probability Understand probability concepts in daily life Distinguish between certain and uncertain events Recognize probability situations |
Q/A on uncertain events from daily life experiences
Discussions on weather prediction and game outcomes Analyzing chance events using coin tossing and dice rolling Demonstrations using simple probability experiments Explaining probability language using familiar examples |
Chalk and blackboard, coins, dice made from cardboard, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 262-264
|
|
3 | 3 |
Probability
|
Experimental Probability
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Calculate the experimental probability Conduct probability experiments systematically Record and analyze experimental data Compare experimental results with expectations |
Q/A on frequency counting using repeated experiments
Discussions on trial repetition and result recording Solving experimental probability problems using data collection Demonstrations using coin toss and dice roll experiments Explaining frequency ratio calculations using practical examples |
Chalk and blackboard, coins, cardboard dice, tally charts, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 262-264
|
|
3 | 4 |
Probability
|
Experimental Probability applications
Range of Probability Measure |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Calculate the experimental probability Apply experimental methods to various scenarios Handle large sample experiments Analyze experimental probability patterns |
Q/A on advanced experimental techniques using extended trials
Discussions on sample size effects using comparative data Solving complex experimental problems using systematic methods Demonstrations using extended experimental procedures Explaining pattern analysis using accumulated data |
Chalk and blackboard, extended experimental materials, data recording sheets, exercise books
Chalk and blackboard, number line drawings, probability scale charts, exercise books |
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 262-264
|
|
3 | 5 |
Probability
|
Probability Space
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Calculate the probability space for the theoretical probability Define sample space systematically List all possible outcomes Apply sample space concepts |
Q/A on outcome listing using systematic enumeration
Discussions on complete outcome identification Solving sample space problems using organized listing Demonstrations using dice, cards, and spinner examples Explaining probability calculation using outcome counting |
Chalk and blackboard, playing cards (locally made), spinners from cardboard, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 266-267
|
|
3 | 6 |
Probability
|
Theoretical Probability
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Calculate the probability space for the theoretical probability Apply mathematical reasoning to find probabilities Use equally likely outcome assumptions Calculate theoretical probabilities systematically |
Q/A on theoretical calculation using mathematical principles
Discussions on equally likely assumptions and calculations Solving theoretical problems using systematic approaches Demonstrations using fair dice and unbiased coin examples Explaining mathematical probability using logical reasoning |
Chalk and blackboard, fair dice and coins, probability calculation aids, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 266-268
|
|
3 | 7 |
Probability
|
Theoretical Probability advanced
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Calculate the probability space for the theoretical probability Apply theoretical probability to complex problems Handle multiple outcome scenarios Solve advanced theoretical problems |
Q/A on advanced theoretical applications using complex scenarios
Discussions on multiple outcome analysis using systematic methods Solving challenging theoretical problems using organized approaches Demonstrations using complex probability setups Explaining advanced theoretical concepts using detailed reasoning |
Chalk and blackboard, complex probability materials, advanced calculation aids, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 268-270
|
|
4 | 1 |
Probability
|
Theoretical Probability applications
Combined Events |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Calculate the probability space for the theoretical probability Apply theoretical concepts to real situations Solve practical probability problems Interpret results in meaningful contexts |
Q/A on practical probability using local examples
Discussions on real-world applications using community scenarios Solving application problems using theoretical methods Demonstrations using local games and practical situations Explaining practical interpretation using meaningful contexts |
Chalk and blackboard, local game examples, practical scenario materials, exercise books
Chalk and blackboard, playing cards, multiple dice, Venn diagram drawings, exercise books |
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 268-270
|
|
4 | 2 |
Probability
|
Combined Events OR probability
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Find the probability of a combined events Apply addition rule for OR events Calculate "A or B" probabilities Handle mutually exclusive events |
Q/A on addition rule application using systematic methods
Discussions on mutually exclusive identification and calculation Solving OR probability problems using organized approaches Demonstrations using card selection and event combination Explaining addition rule logic using Venn diagrams |
Chalk and blackboard, Venn diagram materials, card examples, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 272-274
|
|
4 | 3 |
Probability
|
Independent Events
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Find the probability of independent events Apply multiplication rule for independent events Calculate "A and B" probabilities Understand independence concepts |
Q/A on multiplication rule using independent event examples
Discussions on independence identification and verification Solving AND probability problems using systematic calculation Demonstrations using multiple coin tosses and dice combinations Explaining multiplication rule using logical reasoning |
Chalk and blackboard, multiple coins and dice, independence demonstration materials, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 274-275
|
|
4 | 4 |
Probability
|
Independent Events advanced
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Find the probability of independent events Distinguish between independent and dependent events Apply conditional probability concepts Handle complex independence scenarios |
Q/A on independence verification using mathematical methods
Discussions on dependence concepts using card drawing examples Solving dependent and independent event problems using systematic approaches Demonstrations using replacement and non-replacement scenarios Explaining conditional probability using practical examples |
Chalk and blackboard, playing cards for replacement scenarios, multiple experimental setups, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 276-278
|
|
4 | 5 |
Probability
|
Independent Events applications
Tree Diagrams |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Find the probability of independent events Apply independence to practical problems Solve complex multi-event scenarios Integrate independence with other concepts |
Q/A on complex event analysis using systematic problem-solving
Discussions on rule selection and application strategies Solving advanced combined problems using integrated approaches Demonstrations using complex experimental scenarios Explaining strategic problem-solving using logical analysis |
Chalk and blackboard, complex experimental materials, advanced calculation aids, exercise books
Chalk and blackboard, tree diagram templates, branching materials, exercise books |
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 278-280
|
|
4 | 6 |
Compound Proportion and Rates of Work
|
Compound Proportions
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Find the compound proportions Understand compound proportion relationships Apply compound proportion methods systematically Solve problems involving multiple variables |
Q/A on compound relationships using practical examples
Discussions on multiple variable situations using local scenarios Solving compound proportion problems using systematic methods Demonstrations using business and trade examples Explaining compound proportion logic using step-by-step reasoning |
Chalk and blackboard, local business examples, calculators if available, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 288-290
|
|
4 | 7 |
Compound Proportion and Rates of Work
|
Compound Proportions applications
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Find the compound proportions Apply compound proportions to complex problems Handle multi-step compound proportion scenarios Solve real-world compound proportion problems |
Q/A on advanced compound proportion using complex scenarios
Discussions on multi-variable relationships using practical contexts Solving challenging compound problems using systematic approaches Demonstrations using construction and farming examples Explaining practical applications using community-based scenarios |
Chalk and blackboard, construction/farming examples, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 290-291
|
|
5 | 1 |
Compound Proportion and Rates of Work
|
Proportional Parts
Proportional Parts applications |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Calculate the proportional parts Understand proportional division concepts Apply proportional parts to sharing problems Solve distribution problems using proportional methods |
Q/A on proportional sharing using practical examples
Discussions on fair distribution using ratio concepts Solving proportional parts problems using systematic division Demonstrations using sharing scenarios and inheritance examples Explaining proportional distribution using logical reasoning |
Chalk and blackboard, sharing demonstration materials, exercise books
Chalk and blackboard, business partnership examples, exercise books |
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 291-293
|
|
5 | 2 |
Compound Proportion and Rates of Work
|
Rates of Work
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Calculate the rate of work Understand work rate relationships Apply time-work-efficiency concepts Solve basic rate of work problems |
Q/A on work rate calculation using practical examples
Discussions on efficiency and time relationships using work scenarios Solving basic rate of work problems using systematic methods Demonstrations using construction and labor examples Explaining work rate concepts using practical work situations |
Chalk and blackboard, work scenario examples, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 294-295
|
|
5 | 3 |
Compound Proportion and Rates of Work
|
Rates of Work and Mixtures
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Calculate the rate of work Apply work rates to complex scenarios Handle mixture problems and combinations Solve advanced rate and mixture problems |
Q/A on advanced work rates using complex scenarios
Discussions on mixture problems using practical examples Solving challenging rate and mixture problems using systematic approaches Demonstrations using cooking, construction, and manufacturing examples Explaining mixture concepts using practical applications |
Chalk and blackboard, mixture demonstration materials, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 295-296
|
|
5 | 4 |
Graphical Methods
|
Tables of given relations
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Draw tables of given relations Construct organized data tables systematically Prepare data for graphical representation Understand relationship between variables |
Q/A on table construction using systematic data organization
Discussions on variable relationships using practical examples Solving table preparation problems using organized methods Demonstrations using data collection and tabulation Explaining systematic data arrangement using logical procedures |
Chalk and blackboard, ruled paper for tables, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 299
|
|
5 | 5 |
Graphical Methods
|
Graphs of given relations
Tables and graphs integration |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Draw graphs of given relations Plot points accurately on coordinate systems Connect points to show relationships Interpret graphs from given data |
Q/A on graph plotting using coordinate methods
Discussions on point plotting and curve drawing Solving graph construction problems using systematic plotting Demonstrations using coordinate systems and curve sketching Explaining graph interpretation using visual analysis |
Chalk and blackboard, graph paper or grids, rulers, exercise books
Chalk and blackboard, graph paper, data examples, exercise books |
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 300
|
|
5 | 6 |
Graphical Methods
|
Introduction to cubic equations
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Draw tables of cubic functions Understand cubic equation characteristics Prepare cubic function data systematically Recognize cubic curve patterns |
Q/A on cubic function evaluation using systematic calculation
Discussions on cubic equation properties using mathematical analysis Solving cubic table preparation using organized methods Demonstrations using cubic function examples Explaining cubic characteristics using pattern recognition |
Chalk and blackboard, cubic function examples, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 301
|
|
5 | 7 |
Graphical Methods
|
Graphical solution of cubic equations
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Draw graphs of cubic equations Plot cubic curves accurately Use graphs to solve cubic equations Find roots using graphical methods |
Q/A on cubic curve plotting using systematic point plotting
Discussions on curve characteristics and root finding Solving cubic graphing problems using careful plotting Demonstrations using cubic curve construction Explaining root identification using graph analysis |
Chalk and blackboard, graph paper, cubic equation examples, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 302-304
|
|
6 | 1 |
Graphical Methods
|
Advanced cubic solutions
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Draw graphs of cubic equations Apply graphical methods to complex cubic problems Handle multiple root scenarios Verify solutions using graphical analysis |
Q/A on advanced cubic graphing using complex examples
Discussions on multiple root identification using graph analysis Solving challenging cubic problems using systematic methods Demonstrations using detailed cubic constructions Explaining verification methods using graphical checking |
Chalk and blackboard, advanced graph examples, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 302-304
|
|
6 | 2 |
Graphical Methods
|
Introduction to rates of change
Average rates of change |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Calculate the average rates of change Understand rate of change concepts Apply rate calculations to practical problems Interpret rate meanings in context |
Q/A on rate calculation using slope methods
Discussions on rate interpretation using practical examples Solving basic rate problems using systematic calculation Demonstrations using speed-time and distance examples Explaining rate concepts using practical analogies |
Chalk and blackboard, rate calculation examples, exercise books
Chalk and blackboard, graph paper, rate examples, exercise books |
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 304-306
|
|
6 | 3 |
Graphical Methods
|
Advanced average rates
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Calculate the average rates of change Handle complex rate scenarios Apply rates to business and scientific problems Integrate rate concepts with other topics |
Q/A on complex rate applications using advanced scenarios
Discussions on business and scientific rate applications Solving challenging rate problems using integrated methods Demonstrations using comprehensive rate examples Explaining advanced applications using detailed analysis |
Chalk and blackboard, advanced rate scenarios, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 304-310
|
|
6 | 4 |
Graphical Methods
|
Introduction to instantaneous rates
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Calculate the rate of change at an instant Understand instantaneous rate concepts Distinguish between average and instantaneous rates Apply instant rate methods |
Q/A on instantaneous rate concepts using limiting methods
Discussions on instant vs average rate differences Solving basic instantaneous rate problems Demonstrations using tangent line concepts Explaining instantaneous rate using practical examples |
Chalk and blackboard, tangent line examples, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 310-311
|
|
6 | 5 |
Graphical Methods
|
Rate of change at an instant
Advanced instantaneous rates |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Calculate the rate of change at an instant Apply instantaneous rate methods systematically Use graphical techniques for instant rates Solve practical instantaneous rate problems |
Q/A on instantaneous rate calculation using graphical methods
Discussions on tangent line slope interpretation Solving instantaneous rate problems using systematic approaches Demonstrations using detailed tangent constructions Explaining practical applications using real scenarios |
Chalk and blackboard, detailed graph examples, exercise books
Chalk and blackboard, advanced rate examples, exercise books |
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 310-311
|
|
6 | 6 |
Graphical Methods
|
Empirical graphs
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Draw the empirical graphs Understand empirical data representation Plot experimental data systematically Analyze empirical relationships |
Q/A on empirical data plotting using experimental examples
Discussions on real data representation using practical scenarios Solving empirical graphing problems using systematic methods Demonstrations using experimental data examples Explaining empirical analysis using practical interpretations |
Chalk and blackboard, experimental data examples, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 315-316
|
|
6 | 7 |
Graphical Methods
|
Advanced empirical methods
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Draw the empirical graphs Apply empirical methods to complex data Handle large datasets and trends Interpret empirical results meaningfully |
Q/A on advanced empirical techniques using complex datasets
Discussions on trend analysis using systematic methods Solving challenging empirical problems using organized approaches Demonstrations using comprehensive data analysis Explaining advanced interpretations using detailed reasoning |
Chalk and blackboard, complex data examples, exercise books
|
KLB Mathematics Book Three Pg 315-321
|
|
7 |
END OF TERM THREE EXAMS |
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8 |
END OF TERM THREE EXAMS |
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9 |
MARKING AND CLOSING |
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