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III-Day 29

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DAILY LESSON LOG OF M10SP-IIIg-h-1 (Week Seven-Day Three)

School Grade Level Grade 10


Teacher Learning Area Mathematics
Teaching Date and Time Quarter Third
Objectives must be met over the week and connected to the curriculum standards. To meet the
objectives, necessary procedures must be followed and if needed, additional lessons, exercises and
remedial activities may be done for developing content knowledge and competencies. These are
I. OBJECTIVES assessed using Formative Assessment Strategies. Valuing objectives support the learning of content and
competencies and enable children to find significance and joy in learning the lessons. Weekly objectives
shall be derived from the curriculum guides.
A. Content Standards The learner demonstrates understanding of key concepts of probability.
B. Performance Standards The learner is able to formulate and solve the probability of a given union.
Learning Competency: Finds the probability of (A U B) (M10SP-IIIg-h-1)
Learning Objectives:
C. Learning Competencies/ 1. Determine if the given is mutually exclusive or not;
Objectives 2. Find the probability of a given union; and
3. Demonstrate appreciation of generating and recognizing unions and its
probability.
II. CONTENT Probability
III. LEARNING RESOURCES teacher’s guide, learner’s module,
A. References
1. Teacher’s Guide Pages
2. Learner’s Materials Pages 332-
3. Textbook pages
4. Additional
Materials from
Learning Resource
(LR) portal
B. Other Learning https://www.deped-tambayan.com/2023/03/mathematics-7-10-dll-compilation-3rd.html?
Resources fbclid=IwAR0Gg3Bqkn9pcaa1FVcqOY1lfKsnN3ToiSq83mLMHiNSX36sb-zO04x8OiI
These steps should be done across the week. Spread out the activities appropriately so that
pupils/students will learn well. Always be guided by demonstration of learning by the pupils/ students
which you can infer from formative assessment activities. Sustain learning systematically by providing
IV. PROCEDURES pupils/students with multiple ways to learn new things, practice the learning, question their learning
processes, and draw conclusions about what they learned in relation to their life experiences and
previous knowledge. Indicate the time allotment for each step.
Review previous lesson by letting the students answer, by pair the exercise in
Activity 6 numbers 1 and 2 on page 337 of the Learner’s Manual.

Answer Key
A. Review previous lesson
or presenting the new
lesson

B. Establishing a purpose The teacher lets the students realize that recognizing and identifying mutually and
for the lesson non-mutually exclusive events are important skills needed to understand the
concepts of finding the probability of a union.
The teacher lets the students, in pairs, do Activity 7 numbers 1 on page 338 of the
Learner’s Module.

C. Presenting examples/ Answer Key


instances of the new 20 5
1. a. ∨
lesson 48 12
28 7
b. ∨
48 12

The teacher discusses the answer key and gives the students additional exercises.
Students answers Activity 7 number 2 and 3 on page 338 of the Learner’s Module.
D. Discussing new concepts
and practicing new skills Answer Key
#1

E. Discussing new concepts


and practicing new skills
#2
The teacher lets the students answer Activity 8 numbers 1 and 2 on page 339 of
the Learner’s Manual.

Answer Key

1. How does a simple event differ from a compound event?


Any event which consists of a single outcome in the sample space is called an
F. Developing mastery
elementary or simple event. On the other hand, events which consist of more than
(leads to formative
one outcome are called compound events. A compound event consists of two or
assessment 3)
more simple events.

2. Differentiate mutually exclusive events from non-mutually exclusive events.


Mutually exclusive events are two or more events having no common elements,
while the events which are not mutually exclusive are two or more events which
have common elements.

G. Finding practical
applications of concepts
and skills in daily living
The teacher realizes that the use of counting techniques, permutations and
H. Making generalizations
combinations are key concepts of finding the probability of events, includes
and abstractions about
mutually exclusive and non-mutually exclusive.
the lesson
The teacher lets students analyse the illustration answer the questions that
follows.
Consider the following example in which D represents students on the debate
team and B represents students on the basketball team:

1. Are the sets intersecting or disjoint?


I. Evaluating Learning 2. How many students are on the debate team?
3. How many students are on the basketball team?
4. How many students are on the universal set?
5. Write a formula that we could use to determine the number of students
in the union of sets D and B.

Answer Key
1. Intersecting
2. 52
3. 39
4. 98
5. n ( D ∪ B )=n ( D ) +n ( B )−n ( D ∩ B )

J. Additional activities or
remediation
V. REMARKS
Reflect on your teaching and assess yourself as a teacher. Think about your students’ progress. What
works? What else needs to be done to help the pupils/students learn? Identify what help your
VI. REFLECTION instructional supervisors can provide for you so when you meet them, you can ask them relevant
questions.
A. No. of learners who earned
80% of the evaluation
B. No. of learners who require
additional activities for
remediation who scored below
80%
C. Did the remedial lesson work?
No. of learners who have
caught up with the lesson.
D. No. of learners who continue
to require remediation
E. Which of my teaching
strategies worked well? Why
did these work?
F. What difficulties did I
encounter which my principal
or supervisor can help me
solve?
G. What innovation or localized
materials did I use/ discover
which I wish to share with
other teachers

Prepared by:
VINCENT R. PASTORES
Maguikay NHS

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