Travelling Australia

Task 26 ... Years 2 - 8

Summary

Anyone who has had to develop an itinerary involving flights between cities in sequence will be aware of the problems of matching departure and arrival times and problems of changing time zones. This task has a huge depth of investigation related to flying across the most fascinating country in the world. There are many challenges involving time, time difference, timetables and sequencing, as well as broader problem solving situations such as:
  • How many ways can we fly from A to B?
  • How do we know we have found them all?
  • Which of them takes the least time?
 

Materials

  • Map of Australia
  • Two colours of counters to show the start and finish of a trip
  • 1 model aeroplane
  • 1 model clock to show 24 hours
  • 1 chart like an airport departure and arrival screen and cards for displaying details

Content

  • time measurement in both 12 hours and 24 hours
  • time zones and changes of day
  • time difference
  • sequencing
  • problem solving
Travelling Australia

Iceberg

A task is the tip of a learning iceberg. There is always more to a task than is recorded on the card.
   

The card suggests directions for exploring the iceberg and they really don't end. Problems can be set by the teacher or created by the students. At a simple level just choosing a base city and asking the students to create the departure board for all flights from that city for the day, is a challenge which involves plenty of mathematics. More complex problems would be related to:

  • The number of ways from A to B?
  • The quickest way from A to B?
  • The quickest way from A to A flying through every city in the network?
and so on.

Problems related to other mathematics content and cross-curriculum work including plenty of geography and literacy can easily be an extension. Questions such as:

  • How far can a jet travel in three hours?
  • How far is it between...?
  • If you travelled for the same time in a jet across USA, Asia, Europe (or any other continent or country) starting from ... where would you finish?
  • Do the times given allow for time zone changes?
  • How do time zones change around the world?
could well open up broader exploration.

Whole Class Investigation

Tasks are an invitation for two students to work like a mathematician. Tasks can also be modified to become whole class investigations which model how a mathematician works.
   

To convert this task to a whole class lesson (or, perhaps, a whole class unit would be a richer way to think), one key element is the map. A3 size copies to share between pairs would work, but what about a large scale map in the centre of the carpet which the whole class can gather around. You could prepare this by projecting a tracing onto the floor and then marking out the shadow with masking tape. Alternatively, prepare it on a tough plastic (such as shade cloth), then the map can be easily rolled up and brought back as necessary. Students can bring their own small planes to use and the other items are easily reproducible.

Begin the unit with the story shell that the class is a company about to set up and airline network across the country. A a team, develop a series of focus questions for the company (and of course a very marketable name) and roll on from there.

Note: Between the mid 1990s and mid 2000s, two companies (Virgin Blue and Jet Star) did undertake exactly this challenge in Australia.

At this stage, Travelling Australia does not have a matching lesson on Maths300.

Is it in Maths With Attitude?

Maths With Attitude is a set of hands-on learning kits available from Years 3-10 which structure the use of tasks and whole class investigations into a week by week planner.
   

The Travelling Australia task is an integral part of:

  • MWA Chance & Measurement Years 3 & 4

Green Line
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