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| WK | LSN | STRAND | SUB-STRAND | LESSON LEARNING OUTCOMES | LEARNING EXPERIENCES | KEY INQUIRY QUESTIONS | LEARNING RESOURCES | ASSESSMENT METHODS | REFLECTION |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | 1 |
Algebra
|
Matrices — Identifying and representing matrices in different situations
Matrices — Determining the order of a matrix |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- identify a matrix from a table of information in different situations; - represent data from real-life tables as a matrix; - reflect on the use of matrices in everyday life. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Discuss real-life tables such as football league tables, travel schedules, and shopping lists and count their rows and columns - Study the Kape Furniture Company production tables for 2022 and 2023 and represent each as a matrix - Arrange items in rows and columns and discuss how to write a matrix using correct notation |
How do we use matrices in real-life situations?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 38–40
- Football league tables / travel schedules - Squared paper - Digital devices - Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 40–42 |
- Oral questions
- Observation
- Written exercises
|
|
| 2 | 2 |
Algebra
|
Matrices — Determining the position of items in a matrix
Matrices — Determining compatibility of matrices for addition and subtraction |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- determine the position of any element in a matrix using row and column notation (aᵢⱼ); - locate specific elements when given their row-column position; - show interest in the systematic organisation of data in matrices. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Discuss and identify the position of each element in terms of its row and column - Use notation aᵢⱼ to describe element positions (e.g. a₁₂ = element in row 1, column 2) - Solve exercises identifying and locating elements in matrices of various orders |
How do we locate a specific element in a matrix?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 42–43
- Matrix position charts - Digital devices - Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 43–44 - Compatibility charts |
- Oral questions
- Written exercises
- Observation
|
|
| 2 | 3 |
Algebra
|
Matrices — Addition of matrices
Matrices — Subtraction of matrices |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- add compatible matrices by adding corresponding elements; - solve real-life problems involving addition of matrices; - show interest in using matrices to organise and combine data. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Represent first-leg and second-leg football results as matrices and add them to get season totals - Add matrices by adding elements in the same position - Solve exercises on addition of matrices and find unknowns in matrix addition equations |
How do we add matrices to combine real-life data?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 44–45
- Football league tables - Digital devices / internet (YouTube link) - Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 45–47 - Matrix exercise cards - Digital devices |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 2 | 4 |
Algebra
|
Matrices — End-of-sub-strand written assessment
Equations of a Straight Line — Identifying gradient; gradient as a measure of steepness |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- consolidate all matrix concepts (identification, order, position, compatibility, addition, subtraction); - solve a variety of matrix problems accurately; - appreciate the importance of matrices in organising and processing data. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Complete a variety of revision exercises on all matrix concepts - Solve mixed problems: represent tables as matrices, state order, locate elements, add and subtract matrices - Complete a short end-of-sub-strand written assessment |
How do we use matrices to solve real-life problems?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 38–47
- Assessment papers - Digital devices - Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 48–50 - Adjustable ladder (practical) - Gradient/slope diagrams |
- Written assessment
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 2 | 5 |
Algebra
|
Equations of a Straight Line — Calculating the gradient of a line from two known points (m = (y₂−y₁)/(x₂−x₁))
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- derive and apply the formula m = (y₂ − y₁)/(x₂ − x₁) to calculate gradient; - calculate the gradient of a line from two given points; - identify whether the gradient is positive, negative, zero, or undefined. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Study graphs and count vertical and horizontal steps between two points on a line - Derive the gradient formula using change in y ÷ change in x - Calculate gradients from given pairs of coordinates and from graphs - Classify lines as having positive, negative, zero, or undefined gradients |
How do we calculate the gradient of a line passing through two points?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 50–52
- Graph paper / Cartesian plane charts - Digital devices / internet (YouTube link) |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 3 | 1 |
Algebra
|
Equations of a Straight Line — Determining the equation of a straight line given two points
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- find the gradient of a line from two given points; - derive the equation of a straight line given two points using the gradient formula; - apply the method to find equations for sides of triangles and parallelograms. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Follow step-by-step procedure: find gradient, pick one point plus P(x,y), set up gradient equation, cross-multiply and simplify - Find equations of lines passing through various pairs of coordinates - Find equations of lines AB, BC, AC for a triangle with given vertices |
How do we determine the equation of a line when we know two points on it?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 52–55
- Graph paper - Worked example charts - Digital devices |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 3 | 2 |
Algebra
|
Equations of a Straight Line — Determining the equation of a straight line from a known point and gradient
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- find the equation of a straight line given one point and the gradient; - set up the gradient equation and simplify to get the line equation; - show interest in applying the method to different point-gradient combinations. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Follow step-by-step procedure: use given point B(x₁,y₁) and point C(x,y), form gradient ratio equal to given m, cross-multiply and simplify - Solve exercises given various points and gradients (including fractional and negative gradients) - Verify answers by substituting the given point back into the derived equation |
How do we find the equation of a line when we know one point and its gradient?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 55–57
- Worked example charts - Graph paper - Digital devices |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 3 | 3 |
Algebra
|
Equations of a Straight Line — Determining the equation of a straight line from a known point and gradient
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- find the equation of a straight line given one point and the gradient; - set up the gradient equation and simplify to get the line equation; - show interest in applying the method to different point-gradient combinations. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Follow step-by-step procedure: use given point B(x₁,y₁) and point C(x,y), form gradient ratio equal to given m, cross-multiply and simplify - Solve exercises given various points and gradients (including fractional and negative gradients) - Verify answers by substituting the given point back into the derived equation |
How do we find the equation of a line when we know one point and its gradient?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 55–57
- Worked example charts - Graph paper - Digital devices |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 3 | 4 |
Algebra
|
Equations of a Straight Line — Expressing the equation of a straight line in the form y = mx + c
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- rearrange any linear equation into the form y = mx + c; - identify the gradient m and y-intercept c directly from the equation; - appreciate the usefulness of the y = mx + c form in describing a line. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Rearrange equations step by step: isolate y by moving x-terms to the right and dividing by the coefficient of y - Identify gradient and y-intercept from equations already in y = mx + c form - Complete tables matching equations, gradients, and y-intercepts - Convert equations such as 4y + 3x − 2 = 0 into y = mx + c |
How do we rewrite the equation of a straight line in the form y = mx + c?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 57–59
- Equation rearrangement charts - Digital devices |
- Written tests
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 3 | 5 |
Algebra
|
Equations of a Straight Line — Interpreting the gradient m and y-intercept c in y = mx + c
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- interpret m as the gradient and c as the y-intercept in the equation y = mx + c; - complete tables of values and draw straight-line graphs from equations; - recognise the use of equations of straight lines in real-life situations. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Study the equation y = 2x + 4: discuss the coefficient of x as the gradient and the constant as the y-intercept - Complete tables of values for given equations and use them to draw lines on a Cartesian plane - Interpret real-life linear relationships using gradient and intercept - Use digital devices or other resources to show different hills and relate to gradient |
How does the equation y = mx + c describe a straight line?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 59–61
- Graph paper / Cartesian plane - Digital devices |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 4 | 1 |
Algebra
|
Equations of a Straight Line — Determining the x-intercept and y-intercept
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- determine the x-intercept by substituting y = 0 in a line equation; - determine the y-intercept by substituting x = 0 in a line equation; - use intercepts to draw straight-line graphs on a Cartesian plane. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Discuss the meaning of x-intercept (where the line crosses the x-axis, y = 0) and y-intercept (where the line crosses the y-axis, x = 0) - Draw lines y = x+2, y = x+5, y = x−3 and record their intercepts in a table - Calculate x and y-intercepts for various equations including 3x + 2y = 12 |
How do we find where a straight line crosses the axes?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 61–63
- Graph paper / Cartesian plane - Digital devices |
- Written exercises
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 4 | 2 |
Algebra
|
Equations of a Straight Line — End-of-sub-strand written assessment
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- demonstrate mastery of all straight-line concepts; - solve a variety of problems accurately; - appreciate the application of straight-line equations in everyday contexts. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Complete assessment exercises covering gradient, equation of a line (two points and point-gradient), y = mx + c form, interpretation, and intercepts - Correct and discuss solutions as a class |
How do we apply equations of straight lines to solve problems?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 48–64
- Assessment papers - Graph paper - Digital devices |
- Written assessment
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 4 | 3 |
Algebra
|
Linear Inequalities — Solving linear inequalities in one unknown
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- form linear inequalities from real-life statements; - solve linear inequalities in one unknown using inverse operations; - note that dividing or multiplying by a negative number reverses the inequality sign. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Discuss real-life inequality statements (e.g. "a number multiplied by 4 minus 5 is greater than the number multiplied by 3 plus 2") and form inequalities - Solve inequalities by adding, subtracting, multiplying, or dividing both sides — noting the sign reversal rule for negatives - Solve exercises involving fractional and compound inequalities |
How do we solve linear inequalities in one unknown?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 65–67
- Inequality statement cards - Digital devices / internet (YouTube link) |
- Oral questions
- Written exercises
- Observation
|
|
| 4 | 4 |
Algebra
|
Linear Inequalities — Representing linear inequalities in one unknown on a number line and on a Cartesian plane
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- represent linear inequalities in one unknown on a graph; - use a continuous line for ≤ or ≥ and a broken line for < or >; - shade the unwanted region to indicate the solution set. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Draw a number line and represent simple inequalities such as x < 4 and x ≥ −3 - Follow steps: treat inequality as an equation, draw the boundary line (broken or continuous), test a point, shade unwanted region - Solve inequalities and represent the solution on a graph (e.g. 2y − 4 ≤ 2) |
How do we represent inequalities in one unknown on a graph?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 67–70
- Graph paper / Cartesian plane - Digital devices |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 4 | 5 |
Algebra
|
Linear Inequalities — Representing linear inequalities in two unknowns graphically
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- generate a table of values and draw the boundary line for a linear inequality in two unknowns; - test a point to determine which region satisfies the inequality; - shade the unwanted region and identify the required region. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Generate a table of values for the line y = 3x and draw the boundary (continuous line for ≤); test point (1,1) — is 1 ≤ 3(1)? — to identify the required region - Represent inequalities such as y > 2x − 2 using a broken boundary line, test a point, and shade the unwanted region - Identify inequalities represented by given shaded graphs |
How do we represent a linear inequality in two unknowns on a graph?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 70–72
- Graph paper / Cartesian plane - Digital devices |
- Written tests
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 5 | 1 |
Algebra
|
Linear Inequalities — End-of-sub-strand written assessment
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- consolidate all linear inequality concepts: solving, one-variable graphs, two-variable graphs, and real-life applications; - solve a variety of inequality problems accurately; - appreciate the use of linear inequalities in real-life decision-making. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Complete mixed exercises: solve inequalities in one unknown, represent on graphs, represent two-unknown inequalities graphically, solve word problems - Complete a short end-of-sub-strand written assessment - Correct and discuss solutions as a class |
How do we apply linear inequalities to solve and represent real-life situations?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 65–73
- Assessment papers - Graph paper - Digital devices |
- Written assessment
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 5 | 2 |
Algebra
|
2.1–2.3 Algebra — Strand 2 consolidation: matrices, equations of a straight line, and linear inequalities
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- review and consolidate all Strand 2 concepts across the three sub-strands; - solve mixed problems involving matrices, straight-line equations, and linear inequalities; - show confidence in applying algebra to solve real-life problems. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Work through mixed strand revision exercises covering matrices, equations of straight lines, and linear inequalities - Identify connections between topics: e.g. graphing lines relates to graphing inequalities - Peer-review solutions and discuss common mistakes - Use digital devices or graphing tools to verify graphs and equations |
How do matrices, equations of straight lines, and linear inequalities connect to real-life problems?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 38–73 (revision exercises)
- Graph paper - Revision exercise sheets - Digital devices |
- Written tests
- Oral questions
- Peer assessment
|
|
| 5 | 3 |
Measurements
|
Area — Area of a regular pentagon
Area — Area of a regular hexagon |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- identify the properties of a regular pentagon; - calculate the area of a regular pentagon by dividing it into triangles from the centre; - appreciate the use of area of polygons in real-life situations. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Draw and cut out a regular pentagon, discuss its properties, and count the triangles formed when vertices are joined to the centre - Derive: Area of pentagon = area of one triangle × 5 - Solve real-life problems: pizza box lids, road signs, and hexagonal tiles shaped as pentagons |
How do we work out the area of different surfaces?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 73–75
- Cut-outs of pentagons and hexagons - Ruler and pair of compasses - Digital devices - Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 73–76 - Cut-outs of hexagons |
- Oral questions
- Observation
- Written exercises
|
|
| 5 | 4 |
Measurements
|
Area — Surface area of rectangular-based prisms (cuboids)
Area — Surface area of triangular-based prisms |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- identify the faces of a rectangular-based prism and sketch its net; - work out the surface area of a closed cuboid using SA = 2lw + 2lh + 2wh; - apply surface area of rectangular prisms to real-life contexts such as packaging and painting. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Collect rectangular prism models; cut along edges to separate the six faces - Measure length and width of each face, calculate individual areas, and sum all six - Apply the formula SA = 2lw + 2lh + 2wh to solve problems: painting walls, making packaging boxes, and coating metallic tanks |
How do we work out the surface area of a rectangular prism?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 76–79
- Rectangular prism models - Rulers and scissors - Digital devices - Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 79–81 - Triangular prism models - Digital devices / internet (YouTube link) |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 5 | 5 |
Measurements
|
Area — Surface area of square, rectangular, and triangular-based pyramids
Area — Area of a sector; area of a segment of a circle |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- sketch the net of a pyramid and identify its base and triangular faces; - calculate the total surface area of square, rectangular, and triangular-based pyramids; - apply surface area of pyramids to real-life problems. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Use models of square, rectangular, and triangular pyramids; cut open along edges to get the net - Measure the faces and calculate area of base + area of all triangular faces - Solve problems: Great Pyramid of Giza, playing arenas, and cost of painting pyramid-shaped structures |
How do we find the total surface area of a pyramid?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 81–85
- Pyramid models - Rulers and scissors - Digital devices - Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 85–91 - Circle cut-outs with sectors and segments - Pair of compasses and ruler |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 6 | 1 |
Measurements
|
Area — Surface area of a cone (curved surface and total surface area)
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- derive the curved surface area of a cone from the net of a sector: CSA = πrl; - calculate the total surface area of a closed cone: TSA = πrl + πr²; - solve real-life problems involving cones such as ice cream containers, paper hats, and funnels. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Use card paper to draw and cut out a sector of radius 7 cm; fold it into a cone and identify the curved surface as the sector - Derive: Curved surface area = πrl; Total surface area = πrl + πr² (closed cone); open cone = πrl only - Solve problems: surface area of ice cream cones, birthday paper hats, and ground-nut containers |
How do we find the total surface area of a cone?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 91–93
- Card paper and scissors - Pair of compasses - Scientific calculators - Digital devices |
- Written tests
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 6 | 2 |
Measurements
|
Volume of Solids — Volume of triangular-based prisms
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- identify the cross-sectional area of a triangular prism; - calculate the volume of a triangular prism using V = cross-sectional area × length; - apply volume of triangular prisms to real-life problems such as greenhouses and concrete blocks. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Collect prism-shaped objects; identify and discuss features of triangular prisms - Calculate height of the triangular face using Pythagoras, find cross-sectional area, then multiply by length - Solve problems: greenhouse volumes, concrete blocks, and loading company loaders |
How do we determine the volume of different solids?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 98–101
- Triangular prism models - Rulers - Digital devices |
- Oral questions
- Written exercises
- Observation
|
|
| 6 | 3 |
Measurements
|
Volume of Solids — Volume of rectangular-based prisms (cuboids)
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- calculate the volume of a rectangular prism using V = l × w × h; - determine height or base area when volume is given; - apply volume of rectangular prisms to real-life situations such as storage tanks, sandboxes, and water tanks. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Collect rectangular containers from the locality; measure length, width, and height; calculate base area then multiply by height - Solve problems: movie theatre popcorn containers, rectangular water tanks, and soap containers - Determine height from given volume and base area |
How do we use the volume of solids in real-life situations?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 101–105
- Rectangular prism containers - Rulers - Digital devices |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 6 | 4 |
Measurements
|
Volume of Solids — Volume of square, rectangular, and triangular-based pyramids
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- calculate the volume of pyramids using V = ⅓ × base area × perpendicular height; - determine a missing dimension when volume and other dimensions are given; - apply volume of pyramids to real-life problems. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Identify and name pyramids from their bases; use digital resources to explore the formula - Apply V = ⅓ × base area × h to square, rectangular, and triangular-based pyramids - Solve problems: parachutes, glass pyramids, crystals formed by two pyramids joined at the base |
How do we calculate the volume of a pyramid?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 105–109
- Pyramid models - Digital devices / internet |
- Written exercises
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 6 | 5 |
Measurements
|
Volume of Solids — Volume of a cone
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- calculate the volume of a cone using V = ⅓πr²h; - find a missing dimension (radius or height) when the volume is given; - apply volume of a cone to real-life situations such as ice cream cups and party hats. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Use digital resources to explore the formula for volume of a cone - Apply V = ⅓πr²h to calculate volumes; rearrange to find radius or height - Solve problems: ice cream vendor cones, hourglasses made of two identical cones, yoghurt cups, and birthday party hats |
How do we work out the volume of a cone?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 109–111
- Cone models - Scientific calculators - Digital devices |
- Written tests
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 7 | 1 |
Measurements
|
Volume of Solids — Volume of a frustum (cone-based and pyramid-based)
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- identify a frustum as the solid formed when the top of a cone or pyramid is cut off horizontally; - calculate the volume of a frustum using: V = volume of big solid − volume of small solid; - apply volume of frustum to real-life situations such as lampshades and water troughs. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Use a model pyramid or cone; cut horizontally to form a frustum and a smaller solid - Apply: Volume of frustum = volume of big cone/pyramid − volume of small cone/pyramid - Solve problems: cone-shaped water containers, lampshades, and water troughs cut from a pyramid |
How do we determine the volume of a frustum?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 111–114
- Cone and pyramid models - Scissors - Digital devices |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 7 | 2 |
Measurements
|
Mass, Volume, Weight and Density — Converting units of mass
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- identify and state the units of mass and their abbreviations; - convert units of mass from one form to another (g, kg, mg, Hg, Dg, dg, cg, μg, Mg, tonnes); - appreciate the importance of accurate mass measurement in everyday life. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Discuss different instruments used in weighing: beam balance, electronic weighing machine, spring balance - Take a walk outside class, collect objects of different sizes, weigh them, and express masses in kilograms - Convert masses between units and record findings in a table |
How do you weigh materials and objects?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 115–117
- Beam balance / electronic weighing machine - Objects of different sizes - Digital devices |
- Oral questions
- Written exercises
- Observation
|
|
| 7 | 3 |
Measurements
|
Mass, Volume, Weight and Density — Relationship between mass and weight; W = mg
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- distinguish between mass (quantity of matter, kg) and weight (gravitational pull, N); - calculate weight from mass using W = mg (g ≈ 10 N/kg); - convert weight back to mass and apply to real-life situations. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Use a beam balance and a spring balance to measure mass and weight of the same stones; record in a table and compare mass (kg) vs. weight (N) - Derive the relationship: Weight = mass × gravitational force (10 N/kg) - Solve problems: weight of a 97 kg object; mass from a given weight of 250 N; weight on a different planet |
How does mass relate to weight?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 117–119
- Beam balance and spring balance - Stones of different sizes - Digital devices |
- Written tests
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 7 | 4 |
Measurements
|
Mass, Volume, Weight and Density — Density: concept, formula, and calculations (D = M/V)
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- define density as mass per unit volume; - calculate density, mass, or volume using the formula D = M/V; - convert density between g/cm³ and kg/m³ and apply to real-life situations. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Use a 100 cm³ container and a beam balance; fill with different substances (sand, water, gravel, soil), measure mass, and calculate mass ÷ volume - Derive: Density = Mass ÷ Volume; rearrange to find mass or volume - Convert: 1 g/cm³ = 1 000 kg/m³; solve problems using oil, paraffin, copper, mercury, and petrol densities |
How do we determine the density of a substance?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 119–122
- 100 cm³ containers - Beam balance / electronic scale - Sand, water, gravel, and soil - Digital devices |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 7 | 5 |
Geometry
|
Coordinates and Graphs — Plotting points on a Cartesian plane
Coordinates and Graphs — Drawing straight line graphs by generating tables of values |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- identify the x-axis, y-axis, origin, and four quadrants of a Cartesian plane; - correctly plot given points using their x- and y-coordinates; - appreciate the use of the Cartesian plane as a tool for locating positions. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Draw two perpendicular axes on graph paper, mark equal intervals, and label x and y directions; discuss the terms x-axis, y-axis, and origin - Plot a range of points including points in all four quadrants, on the axes, and at the origin: e.g. A(2,5), B(–4,–1), C(6,–3), D(0,–5), E(3,0) - Write the coordinates of given plotted points by reading the x- and y-values from the axes |
How do we draw graphs of straight lines?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 166–168
- Graph paper - Ruler and pencil - Digital devices - Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 168–170 |
- Oral questions
- Observation
- Written exercises
|
|
| 8 | 1 |
Geometry
|
Coordinates and Graphs — Drawing parallel lines; establishing that parallel lines have equal gradients
Coordinates and Graphs — Drawing perpendicular lines; establishing that m₁ × m₂ = –1 |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- draw two or more parallel lines on the same Cartesian plane; - calculate their gradients and establish that parallel lines have equal gradients (m₁ = m₂); - find the equation of a line parallel to a given line and passing through a given point. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Generate tables of values for y = 2x + 1 and y – 2x = 3; draw them on the same Cartesian plane and observe they are parallel - Calculate the gradient of each line and verify m₁ = m₂; draw three parallel lines and confirm all three have the same gradient - Find equations of parallel lines: e.g. parallel to y = ½x – 4 passing through P(6,–1); determine value of k in parallel-line problems |
How do we use gradients to identify parallel lines?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 170–174
- Graph paper - Ruler - Digital devices / internet (YouTube link) - Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 174–179 - Ruler and protractor - Digital devices |
- Written tests
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 8 | 2 |
Geometry
|
Coordinates and Graphs — Applying straight-line graphs, parallel and perpendicular lines to real-life and mixed problems
Scale Drawing — Compass bearings (Nθ°E/W, Sθ°E/W) and true bearings (3-digit clockwise notation) |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- solve mixed problems on equations of lines, parallel lines, and perpendicular lines; - determine unknown constants in line equations using parallelism or perpendicularity conditions; - apply graphs of straight lines in real-life situations such as Integrated Science experiments. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Plot points and draw three lines on the same plane; determine their equations from the graph - Solve combined problems: find equation of L₁ parallel to y = 2x + 3 through P(2,6); find the gradient and equation of L₂ perpendicular to L₁ at P - Find value of a in y = 3x + 2 and ay + x = 7 which are perpendicular; find value of m in line through A(2,1) and B(4,m) perpendicular to 3y = 5 – 2x - Discuss: how Integrated Science uses straight-line graphs for experimental data |
How do we apply graphs of straight lines in real-life situations?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 166–179 (revision)
- Graph paper - Revision exercise sheets - Digital devices - Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 180–183 - Protractors and rulers - Compass direction diagrams - Graph paper |
- Written assessment
- Oral questions
- Peer assessment
|
|
| 8 | 3 |
Geometry
|
Scale Drawing — Determining compass and true bearings of one point from another using a protractor; back bearings
Scale Drawing — Making scale drawings from bearing-and-distance data involving 2–3 points |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- determine the compass and true bearing of one point from another using a protractor; - determine back bearings from given forward bearings; - solve problems involving bearings of multiple points from a single reference location. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Study a map of Hekima village; use a protractor to determine the compass and true bearing of the dispensary, quarry, mosque, market, and school from the tower - Determine: if bearing of Q from P = 120°, bearing of P from Q = 300°; practise finding back bearings for various cases - Solve: find bearing of R from P, bearing of Q from R, and bearing of Q from P using the given three-point diagram |
How do we determine the bearing of one point from another?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 183–188
- Protractors and rulers - Graph paper - Maps and compass diagrams - Digital devices - Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 186–191 |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 8 | 4 |
Geometry
|
Scale Drawing — Complex scale drawing problems involving 3–4 bearing-and-distance points
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- make accurate scale drawings for problems involving three or four points with given bearings and distances; - determine distances and bearings not given in the problem directly from the scale drawing; - solve real-life navigation and positioning problems using scale drawing. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Solve: three islands A, B, C — B is 50 km on bearing 035° from A; C is 60 km on bearing 135° from B; port D is 80 km due south of B — find bearing of C from A, bearing of D from C, and distance AC - Solve: two houses 750 m apart, one due north of the other, observation point due west — find distances using scale drawing - Solve: town A on bearing 050° from C, town B on bearing 020° from C; find distance A to C and bearing of B from A |
How do we use scale drawing to solve multi-point navigation problems?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 188–192
- Protractors and rulers - Graph paper - Digital devices |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 8 | 5 |
Geometry
|
Scale Drawing — Identifying and determining angles of elevation by accurate scale drawing
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- define angle of elevation as the angle by which the line of sight is raised from the horizontal to see an object above; - make accurate scale drawings to determine angles of elevation; - calculate heights and horizontal distances from scale drawings involving angles of elevation. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Walk to the assembly ground; observe the top of the flagpost; discuss line of sight and the angle of elevation - Make scale drawings: observer 80 m from an object 40 m high — choose scale 1 cm : 10 m, draw, and measure angle of elevation = 27° - Solve: tower shadow 35 m long, height 15 m — find angle of elevation; Kirigo's eye at 172 cm views top of a post 8 m away at 60° — find the height of the post |
How do we determine the angle of elevation using scale drawing?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 191–196
- Graph paper - Protractors and rulers - Digital devices |
- Written tests
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 9 | 1 |
Geometry
|
Scale Drawing — Identifying and determining angles of depression by accurate scale drawing
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- define angle of depression as the angle by which the line of sight is lowered from the horizontal to see an object below; - make accurate scale drawings to determine angles of depression; - determine horizontal distances and heights from scale drawings involving angles of depression. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Discuss the difference between elevation and depression using sketches; establish that the angle of depression equals the alternate angle of elevation - Make scale drawing: eagle at height 600 m, horizontal distance 960 m to chick — find angle of depression = 32° - Solve: boat 310 m from a 60 m lighthouse; plane at altitude 8 km between two airports with angles of depression 25° and 31° — find distance between airports and shortest distance to airport B |
How do we determine the angle of depression using scale drawing?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 196–201
- Graph paper - Protractors and rulers - Digital devices |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 9 | 2 |
Geometry
|
Scale Drawing — Describing land boundaries using bearing and distance from a reference point
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- describe the boundary points of a piece of land using bearing and distance from an external reference point; - construct a scale drawing of the land from a bearing-and-distance table; - appreciate the use of scale drawing in real-life land surveying. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Take triangular piece of land PQR; join each vertex to reference point O; measure the bearing and distance for each vertex and record in a table - Reconstruct the scale drawing of the farm from the bearing-and-distance data - Solve: quadrilateral farm boundaries described from an external point with A(334°, 225 m), F(352°, 305 m), G(27°, 335 m), H(64°, 335 m) - Discuss careers in scale drawing and surveying with parents or guardians |
How do we use bearing and distance to describe and draw a piece of land?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 200–203
- Protractors and rulers - Graph paper - Maps - Digital devices |
- Written exercises
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 9 | 3 |
Geometry
|
Similarity and Enlargement — Identifying similar figures; properties: proportional corresponding sides and equal corresponding angles
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- identify similar figures by verifying that corresponding sides are proportional and corresponding angles are equal; - state similar triangles in the correct vertex order; - appreciate the occurrence of similar shapes in the environment. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Collect objects from the school environment; sort by similarity and state reasons for grouping - Verify triangle similarity: compare side ratios DE/AB = EF/BC = DF/AC; or measure corresponding angles with a protractor - Prove similarity of rectangles (R: 8 cm × 6 cm and T: 12 cm × 9 cm), equilateral triangles, and squares; explain why all equilateral triangles are similar |
What are similar objects?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 205–209
- Ruler and protractor - Cut-out shapes - Digital devices |
- Oral questions
- Written exercises
- Observation
|
|
| 9 | 4 |
Geometry
|
Similarity and Enlargement — Drawing similar figures by scaling all sides by the same ratio; equal corresponding angles
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- draw a figure similar to a given figure by multiplying all sides by the same scale ratio; - ensure all corresponding angles remain equal in the drawn figure; - apply similar figures to real-life contexts such as plots and photographs. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Use the side ratio as a scale: draw rhombus PQRS similar to ABCD (sides 3 cm) but twice as big — sides 6 cm, same angles 70° and 110° - Draw similar triangles (e.g. right-angled triangle 3-4-5 scaled to QR = 6 cm), rectangles (AB = 8 cm, BC = 6 cm scaled to QR = 9 cm), and parallelograms - Solve real-life problems: drawing similar rectangular plots of land; two rectangular photographs with given corresponding dimensions |
How do we draw a figure similar to a given one?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 209–213
- Ruler, protractor, and pair of compasses - Graph paper - Digital devices |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 9 | 5 |
Geometry
|
Similarity and Enlargement — Identifying an enlargement; locating the centre; determining positive and negative scale factors
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- identify a transformation as an enlargement by verifying that image-distance/object-distance from a fixed point is constant; - locate the centre of enlargement by extending lines through corresponding vertices; - distinguish between positive and negative scale factors based on the relative positions of object and image. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Study object ABC and image A'B'C'; join AA', BB', CC' and extend to find centre O; verify OA'/OA = OB'/OB = OC'/OC - Record scale factor; note that when object and image are on opposite sides of O the scale factor is negative (e.g. –2.5) - Identify real-life examples of enlargement: magnifying lens, projectors, photocopiers, and maps - State two features common to object and image under enlargement |
How do we use enlargement in real-life situations?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 213–217
- Ruler - Squared/graph paper - Digital devices |
- Written exercises
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 10 | 1 |
Geometry
|
Similarity and Enlargement — Constructing enlarged images given centre O and scale factor k; determining and applying the linear scale factor
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- construct the image of a figure under enlargement given centre O and scale factor k (positive and negative); - calculate the linear scale factor (LSF) as image side ÷ corresponding object side; - use LSF to find unknown sides and solve real-life problems involving similar figures. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Enlarge triangle ABC with scale factor 2.5, centre O: join O to each vertex, extend the line, and mark OA' = 2.5 × OA; repeat for B and C; join A'B'C' - Enlarge with negative scale factor –2: extend lines from each vertex through O to the other side and mark OA' = 2 × OA beyond O - Calculate LSF for similar rectangles (14 cm → 7 cm: LSF = 0.5); use LSF to find unknown dimensions — e.g. QR of a similar rectangle; widths of similar farm plots |
How do we determine and apply the linear scale factor of similar figures?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 217–222
- Ruler and pair of compasses - Graph paper - Digital devices |
- Written tests
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 10 | 2 |
Geometry
|
Similarity and Enlargement — Constructing enlarged images given centre O and scale factor k; determining and applying the linear scale factor
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- construct the image of a figure under enlargement given centre O and scale factor k (positive and negative); - calculate the linear scale factor (LSF) as image side ÷ corresponding object side; - use LSF to find unknown sides and solve real-life problems involving similar figures. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Enlarge triangle ABC with scale factor 2.5, centre O: join O to each vertex, extend the line, and mark OA' = 2.5 × OA; repeat for B and C; join A'B'C' - Enlarge with negative scale factor –2: extend lines from each vertex through O to the other side and mark OA' = 2 × OA beyond O - Calculate LSF for similar rectangles (14 cm → 7 cm: LSF = 0.5); use LSF to find unknown dimensions — e.g. QR of a similar rectangle; widths of similar farm plots |
How do we determine and apply the linear scale factor of similar figures?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 217–222
- Ruler and pair of compasses - Graph paper - Digital devices |
- Written tests
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 10 | 3 |
Geometry
|
Trigonometry — Identifying hypotenuse, opposite, and adjacent sides relative to a given acute angle in a right-angled triangle
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- identify the hypotenuse as the side opposite the right angle and the longest side; - identify the opposite and adjacent sides with reference to any given acute angle; - appreciate the relationship between the angles and sides of a right-angled triangle. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Draw right-angled triangles in different orientations on graph paper; label hypotenuse, opposite, and adjacent for each marked angle - Discuss how the labelling of opposite and adjacent sides changes when the reference angle changes (standing at A vs. standing at C) - Identify opposite, adjacent, and hypotenuse for each marked angle in a variety of triangles drawn in different positions |
What is the relationship between angles and sides in a right-angled triangle?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 223–225
- Ruler and protractor - Graph paper - Digital devices |
- Oral questions
- Observation
- Written exercises
|
|
| 10 | 4 |
Geometry
|
Trigonometry — Identifying and calculating tan θ = opp/adj; sin θ = opp/hyp; cos θ = adj/hyp
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- define the three trigonometric ratios (tangent, sine, cosine) for an acute angle in a right-angled triangle; - calculate the decimal value of each ratio from given side lengths; - appreciate that the ratio remains constant for a fixed angle regardless of triangle size. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Measure opposite, adjacent, and hypotenuse sides in three similar right-angled triangles drawn to coincide at vertex A; compute opp/adj, opp/hyp, and adj/hyp for each — note the constant values - Define: tan θ = opp/adj; sin θ = opp/hyp; cos θ = adj/hyp and express as decimals - Express each trig ratio as a fraction and as a decimal for various triangles with given side lengths |
How do we express trigonometric ratios from a right-angled triangle?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 225–232
- Ruler and protractor - Graph paper - Digital devices |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 10 | 5 |
Geometry
|
Trigonometry — Reading tables of sine, cosine, and tangent for acute angles; using mean difference columns
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- read the sine, cosine, and tangent of acute angles from mathematical tables including the mean difference (ADD/SUBTRACT) column; - find an angle given its sine, cosine, or tangent from tables; - note that the cosine table uses the SUBTRACT column (cosine decreases as angle increases). |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Study the structure of trig tables: x° column, 0.0–0.9 main columns, ADD/SUBTRACT difference columns - Read values step by step: tan 5.8° = 0.1016; tan 6.37° = 0.1116 using ADD column; sin 62.6° = 0.8878; sin 33.47° = 0.5515 - Find an angle from its ratio: tan θ = 0.8571 → θ = 40.6°; sin x = 0.9639 → x = 74.56°; cos x = 0.1234 → x = 82.91° using SUBTRACT column for cosine |
How do we use trigonometric tables to find ratios and angles?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 232–240
- Mathematical trig tables (sin, cos, tan) - Scientific calculators - Digital devices |
- Written tests
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 11 | 1 |
Geometry
|
Trigonometry — Using a scientific calculator to find trig ratios and inverse trig functions for acute angles
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- use the sin, cos, and tan keys on a scientific calculator to find trig ratios of given angles; - use the shift + sin/cos/tan keys to find an angle from its ratio (inverse trig); - compare calculator results with table values and appreciate the efficiency of technology. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Ensure the calculator is set to degree mode (D displayed at top); discuss calculator key sequences - Calculate: sin 45° = 0.7071; cos 71° = 0.3256; tan 55° = 1.428 using the calculator — give answers to 4 significant figures - Find angles: tan⁻¹(0.3764) = 20.63°; sin⁻¹(0.500) = 30°; cos⁻¹(0.9998) = 1.28° using shift + ratio key - Use IT/digital devices or other resources to explore trig ratios |
How do we use a calculator to find trigonometric ratios and angles?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 240–242
- Scientific calculators - Mathematical trig tables - Digital devices |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 11 | 2 |
Geometry
Data Handling and Probability |
Trigonometry — Using sin, cos, and tan to calculate unknown sides and angles in right-angled triangles
Data Interpretation (Grouped Data) — Determining appropriate class width; drawing frequency distribution tables |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- select the appropriate trigonometric ratio to find an unknown side given one side and one acute angle; - use inverse trig to find an unknown angle given two sides; - apply trig ratios to solve real-life problems involving right-angled triangles. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Identify the correct ratio: use tan 42° = x/7 → x = 7 × tan 42° = 6.303; use cos 36° = x/7 → x = 7 × cos 36° = 5.663 - Find angle a: sin a = 10/18 = 0.5556 → a = sin⁻¹(0.5556) = 33.75° - Solve: length of perpendicular height of an equilateral triangle of side 10 cm; length of diagonal of a square with perimeter 36 cm; sides of an equilateral triangle with perpendicular height 18 cm |
How do we apply trigonometric ratios to calculate lengths and angles of right-angled triangles?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 238–243
- Mathematical trig tables - Scientific calculators - Digital devices - Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 224–229 - Graph paper and exercise books |
- Written assessment
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 11 | 3 |
Data Handling and Probability
|
Data Interpretation (Grouped Data) — Identifying the modal frequency and modal class from a frequency distribution table
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- define modal frequency as the highest frequency in a grouped data set; - identify the modal class as the class with the highest frequency; - apply the concept of modal class to real-life data sets such as school scores and goal tallies. |
- Recall the meaning of mode from Grade 8 (most frequently occurring value); discuss how mode applies to grouped data
- From the frequency distribution table of 52 learners' masses, identify: modal frequency = 14; modal class = 45–49 kg - Solve exercises: words read per minute, number of learners in schools, goals in netball matches, and mobile money agent data - Recognise the modal class by identifying the class with the highest frequency from prepared tables |
How do we identify the most common class in grouped data?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 229–231
- Frequency distribution tables - Digital devices |
- Oral questions
- Written exercises
- Observation
|
|
| 11 | 4 |
Data Handling and Probability
|
Data Interpretation (Grouped Data) — Calculating the mean of grouped data using midpoints (x̄ = Σfx ÷ Σf)
Data Interpretation (Grouped Data) — Building cumulative frequency columns; identifying the median class |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- find the midpoint of each class by averaging the class limits; - calculate Σfx by multiplying each midpoint by its frequency; - determine the mean using the formula x̄ = Σfx ÷ Σf and apply it to real-life data. |
- Introduce the midpoint: e.g. midpoint of 0–4 = (0+4)/2 = 2; build an extended table with columns: Class / Midpoint (x) / Frequency (f) / fx
- Work through Example 4: trucks crossing a weighing bridge — Σf = 40, Σfx = 520, mean = 13 tonnes - Solve: mean of marks of 40 learners using class width 10 (classes 20–29 to 80–89); number of daily calls at a customer care office; number of trees planted in 20 villages - Use IT devices or other materials to verify mean calculations |
How do we calculate the mean of grouped data?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 231–234
- Exercise books - Scientific calculators - Digital devices - Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 234–236 |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 11 | 5 |
Data Handling and Probability
|
Data Interpretation (Grouped Data) — Calculating the median using the formula: Median = L + [(N/2 − cfa) ÷ fm] × im
Data Interpretation (Grouped Data) — Mixed problems on class width, frequency tables, modal class, mean, and median |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- apply the median formula using the values identified from the cumulative frequency table; - correctly compute L as the average of the lower boundary of the median class and the upper boundary of the class above it; - determine the median of grouped data from real-life situations and appreciate its use. |
- Work through Example 5: 40 learners' Mathematics marks — median class 50–59; L = (49+50)/2 = 49.5; cfa = 17; fm = 6; im = 10 → Median = 49.5 + [(20−17)/6] × 10 = 54.5
- Work through Example 6: vaccination ages of 82 people — median class 11–15; L = 10.5; cfa = 29; fm = 16; im = 5 → Median = 14.25 - Solve: electricity units used by 70 customers; masses of 30 hospital patients; 400 m race times for 50 learners - Use IT devices to verify median calculations |
How do we calculate the median of grouped data?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 236–238
- Exercise books - Scientific calculators - Digital devices - Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 224–238 (revision) - Revision exercise sheets |
- Written tests
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 12 | 1 |
Data Handling and Probability
|
Probability — Experiments involving equally likely outcomes; P(event) = favourable outcomes ÷ total outcomes
Probability — Determining the range of probability; P(certain event) = 1; P(impossible event) = 0; 0 ≤ P(A) ≤ 1; P(A') = 1 − P(A) |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- identify equally likely outcomes in experiments such as tossing a coin or rolling a die; - calculate the probability of a simple event using P = favourable outcomes ÷ total possible outcomes; - appreciate that equally likely events have equal chances of occurring. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Toss a coin repeatedly and record outcomes; discuss: is there a side that will always face up? Establish that head and tail are equally likely - Roll a regular die; list all 6 equally likely outcomes; find P(5) = 1/6, P(3) = 1/6 - Solve: triangular pyramid (4 faces), basket with one red and one blue pen, five girls with tags 1–5, Sande's three pens (blue, black, red) - Recall Grade 8 probability; discuss how prior learning connects to the current work |
Why is probability important in real-life situations?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 239–241
- Coins and dice - Coloured pens / objects in a bag - Digital devices - Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 241–243 |
- Oral questions
- Observation
- Written exercises
|
|
| 12 | 2 |
Data Handling and Probability
|
Probability — Identifying mutually exclusive events; P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B) (addition law)
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- define mutually exclusive events as events where the occurrence of one prevents the occurrence of the other; - apply the addition law: P(A or B) = P(A) + P(B) for mutually exclusive events; - identify mutually exclusive events in real-life situations and solve related problems. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Toss a coin once; discuss: can head and tail both face up at the same time? Establish mutual exclusivity - Identify real-life mutually exclusive events: at school or at home; lunch at home or at school; football or volleyball choice - Roll a die: P(1 or 2) = 1/6 + 1/6 = 2/6; P(even number) = P(2) + P(4) + P(6) = 3/6; P(3 or 5 or 4) = 3/6 - Solve: cards numbered 1–9 (P(odd), P(prime), P(prime or even)); spinner numbered 1–8; word MUTUALLY written on separate cards |
How do we calculate the probability of mutually exclusive events?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 243–247
- Coins and dice - Number cards - Spinners - Digital devices |
- Written tests
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 12 | 3 |
Data Handling and Probability
|
Probability — Performing experiments involving independent events; P(A and B) = P(A) × P(B) (multiplication law)
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- define independent events as events where the outcome of one does not affect the outcome of the other; - apply the multiplication law: P(A and B) = P(A) × P(B) for independent events; - solve real-life problems involving two or more independent events including with and without replacement. |
- One learner holds a coin, another holds a die; toss simultaneously — discuss: does the coin outcome affect the die outcome? Establish independence
- Establish: the word "and" in probability means multiply: P(A and B) = P(A) × P(B) - Work through: basket with 4 red and 3 green balls (with replacement) — P(red then green) = 4/7 × 3/7 = 12/49; P(all red) = 16/49 - Solve: pink and orange marbles without replacement; three learners hitting a target with different individual probabilities; coin-and-die combined experiments - Apply to real life: rain and lateness; pen and ruler usage in class |
How do we calculate the probability of independent events occurring together?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 247–251
- Coins, dice, and coloured balls/marbles - Digital devices |
- Written assignments
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 12 | 4 |
Data Handling and Probability
|
Probability — Drawing tree diagrams to represent possible outcomes of a single-stage event
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- draw a tree diagram to represent all possible outcomes of a single probability experiment; - place correct probabilities on each branch ensuring branches from each node sum to 1; - use tree diagrams to solve real-life probability problems involving single outcomes. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Draw branches for a coin toss: label X (head) and Y (tail); place P(H) = 1/2 and P(T) = 1/2 on the branches; confirm the two branches sum to 1 - Draw tree diagram for Musau's arrival: P(late) = 40%, P(early) = 60% — two branches from a single starting point - Draw tree diagram for a school presidential election: P(Salma) = 0.32, P(Kerubo) = 0.41, P(Nanjala) = 0.27 — three branches summing to 1 - Solve: basket with 3 yellow and 2 blue balls; school modes of transport (bus 0.25, motorcycle 0.38, walking); Judy's fruit basket (25 oranges, 28 mangoes, 17 avocados) |
How do we use a tree diagram to show the outcomes of a probability experiment?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 251–255
- Graph paper or blank paper - Ruler and pencil - Digital devices |
- Written exercises
- Oral questions
- Observation
|
|
| 12 | 5 |
Data Handling and Probability
|
Probability — Mixed problems on equally likely outcomes, range, mutually exclusive events, independent events, and tree diagrams
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
- solve mixed problems covering all probability concepts: equally likely outcomes, range of probability, mutually exclusive events, independent events, and tree diagrams; - apply probability to real-life decision-making situations; - appreciate probability as a tool for predicting outcomes in real life while avoiding harmful gambling practices. |
In groups, learners are guided to:
- Work through comprehensive revision exercises covering: simple probability, complementary events, addition law, multiplication law, and tree diagrams - Solve real-life problems: weather forecasting (probability of rain and lateness); team selection (probability of a class captain); fruit distribution - Discuss: how probability applies to real life — weather, sports outcomes, disease vaccines, business decisions - Explore using digital devices or other resources to simulate and explore probability experiments |
Why is probability important in real-life situations?
|
- Mentor Mathematics Grade 9 pg. 239–255 (revision)
- Coins, dice, and coloured marbles/balls - Revision exercise sheets - Digital devices |
- Written assessment
- Oral questions
- Peer assessment
|
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