As per the vision statement of NCF 2005, School Mathematics does

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21.

The twin premises to fix the place of Mathematics teaching in our school curriculum are

  • "how to engage the mind of every student" and "how to strengthen the student's resources"

  • "how to improve the reasoning ability of every student" and "how to enhance his spatial ability"

  • "how to raise the performance of every student in Mathematics" and "how to prepare meritorious students for international olympiads"

  • "how to make the Mathematics class more activity-oriented" and "how to enhance the procedural skills and understanding of algorithms in every student"


22.

A teacher asked the students to find the number of possible pentominoes using 5 squares and then further explore the number of possible hexaminoes and so on. These types of activities help the child to

  • improve the observation skills

  • identify relation between number pattern and shapes

  • improve spatial ability

  • improve analytical ability


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23.

As per the vision statement of NCF 2005, School Mathematics does not take place in a situation, where children

  • learn to enjoy Mathematics

  • see Mathematics as a part of their daily life experience

  • pose and solve meaningful problems

  • memorise formulae and algorithms


D.

memorise formulae and algorithms

The NCF envisions school Mathematics as taking place in a situation where:
1. Children learn to enjoy Mathematics rather than fear it
2. Children learn “important” Mathematics which is more than formulas and mechanical procedures
3. Children see Mathematics as something to talk about, to communicate through, to discuss among themselves, to work together on
4. Children pose and solve meaningful problems
5. Children use abstractions to perceive relationships, to see structures, to reason out things, to argue the truth or falsity of statements
6. Children understand the basic structure of mathematics: arithmetic, algebra, geometry and trigonometry, the basic content areas of school Mathematics, all of which offer a methodology for abstraction, structuration, and generalization
7. Teachers are expected to engage every child in the class with the conviction that everyone can learn Mathematics


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24.

With the help of'Geogebra' software, students can learn all concepts of geometry through

  • exploratory approach

  • inquiry-based approach

  • project-based approach

  • lecture-based approach


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25.

One of the major reasons for student's failure in Mathematics at school level is that our assessment process

  • emphasizes on testing of procedural knowledge than mathematisation of abilities

  • is gender-biased and asks problems relevant to boys' interests

  • is more subjective in nature and less or no objective type of questions are included

  • gives more weightage to formative assessment than summative assessment


26.

LCM and HCF of two numbers p and q are P and Q, respectively.

If P - p = q - Q, then

  • p2 + q2 = P2 + Q2

  • p2 - P2 = q2 - Q2

  • P - Q = p - q

  • pP = qQ


27.

If 3  x  10 and 5  y  15, then minimum value of xy is 

  • 13

  • 12

  • 15

  • 10


28.

LCM of 22, 54, 135 and 198 is

  • 22 x 33 x 5 x 11

  • 23 x 32 x 5 x 11

  • 2 x 33 x 5 x 11

  • 22 x 33 x 5 x 11


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29.

Which one of the following statements is correct?

  • Sum of two prime numbers is always a prime number

  • '1' is the smallest prime number

  • A composite number can be odd

  • There is no even prime number


30.

As per NCF 2005, the goal of Mathematics teaching in school curriculum is that children learn 'Important Mathematics' Important Mathematics implies

  • understanding appropriate use of learnt mathematical techniques

  • solving mathematical games and puzzles

  • verifying geometrical theorems in Maths lab

  • knowing mathematical procedures and algorithms


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