HI
@ the OP:
I remember when my sister's oldest was in 9th grade (I think). It is several
years back, but I still remember the, imho, perfect math assignment.
The problem given was this:
A man wants to buy car. He checks out varius dealers and such. He thinks he wants a car driven by gasoline, but he also likes another car which runs on diesel. Given that the gasoline prices are higher than the diesel prices, the students should do a range of mathemathical solving problems, including, but not limited to: calculate which car would be cheapest in the long run.
IIRC, the diesel car did get a little worse mileage than the gasoline car, but the gasloine car did infact, IIRC, cost a little more in insurance than the diesel car.
Now, IIRC, the students should in fact solve this problem as well as they were asked to make a graphical representation of the costs of driving these two cars. (or a pie chart of another sort of graphical mathematichal representation).
Of course, you could also substitute one of these cars with a hybrid.
Or maybe your students like to ski ? Slopes, maths and stuffs,
calucalting the body weight with the height of the slope and stuff.
In the movie 'the mirror has two faces' the math professor is about to give up. Then Barbara Streisand's character takes him to a (base) ball game, and gives him pointers as to how he could get the students interested again:
He asks them how hard a certain player should have hit the ball if it were to a certain distance, he also asks them why a certain player didn't hit the ball and at what angle he should have hit it and such.
In fact, in Num3ber, the FBI math guy recently (in the episode 5, i think) explained that all is math, all is numbers. Try connecting the math to the student's lives. If they have car, try to get them to focus on some of the math issues, mileages and such. Or if they want a certain Ipod nad have a job, try making them work out how much they money they have to make to earn enough money for buying an Ipod.
Also, you could try making cases and get the student to solve them.
One of my favorite cases come from the movie 'race the sun' in which
Halle Berry stars as a teacher who encourages the students in the high school to work together in making a sun driven car. Lots of calculations and maths right there.
I'm not saying that you should go as far as they did in the movie, but maybe you get your students to find out which energy form is the cheapest one - or how much energy the are using at home etc. etc.
I have seen a math exam in high school on Danish TV not long ago. The students should explain the maths behind a Danish flag or they were asked
to explain the concept of 'areal' (area, space ? = you know you multply say
2mX2m and get 4m2 ??) . IIRC, the questions were all open ended in that
they provided multiple solutions as to how the students did in fact come to the correct result.
Airplane tickets and math could be another great openend assignment.
(I would write trains, but I think the OP is in the USA).
In my mind, math should learn students to think logical and reason clearly.