My Problem of the Week is how to handle when students all finish at different times. It's inevitable, but only now am I finally getting a system together to handle it. Read my last post for details.
This post is all about my new Problem of the Week. I think I tried something like this my first year, but it was more like a problem of the month, hardly anyone ever attempted it, and I might have abandoned it after 4 months. Not a win at all! I'm coming back with a better plan this time around.
First of all, I'm making a set of 40 problems (and my answers) this summer. No need to search for them mid-year. I've collected some interesting problems from Mathcounts and Exeter, along with a few other sites. As I'm thinking through this more, I think I'm going to need some open-ended questions to really make this take off, so if you have good sources, please let me know.
Second, I've totally rethought the process. See, I could have kids do the problems on their own, turn them in to me, wait for me to check them, tell them if they're right or wrong, and move on. Who does most of the work in that scenario? Me. And goodness knows I don't need another stack of papers to check! Who should be doing all (or most of) the work? The kids. Enter the new system: each week, I'll post a new question to the POTW bulletin board area. Students will be encouraged to write up their solutions and post them to the bulletin board themselves. Then (and this is the part that I'm most excited about) other students will be encouraged to respond to the solutions posted and tack their responses to the board. They can ask questions or make comments. If I can get it to take off the way I envision, there will be a mess of notebook paper surrounding the question. (Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others, anyone?) On Friday, we'll tear down the week's work and start fresh on Monday.
Third, I want this "discussion" to happen among my classes. Currently, my school groups students into homogeneous classes for reading and math. The students know this. They also know which teachers or classes are "high" and which are "low." I once had a student tell me, "You know I'm not good at reading because I am in Mrs. ___'s class." I teach a middle-low group (8th grade math) and the two highest math groups (CC Algebra I). I'd like to have these students conversing about math via the POTW board so that the students in a lower group see that they can contribute just as much as the students in the higher classes.
Do you use anything like a problem of the week? How does it work in your classroom?
Mathematically yours,
Miss B
Showing posts with label standards for mathematical practices. Show all posts
Showing posts with label standards for mathematical practices. Show all posts
Sunday, August 4, 2013
Friday, July 19, 2013
Foldable for 8 Standards of Mathematical Practice
Happy Friday, everyone!
My parents were just here for a short visit, so I took a few days off from thinking about the next year too much. We spent yesterday at the beach and had crabs for lunch today before they went home. It's always good to see them!
Last week, I spotted a blog post about journaling on the math standards. Unfortunately, I can no longer recall where I read it, so please let me know if it was yours or if you also read it and remember because I want to link back to that post! I knew immediately that I wanted this to be an assignment for my left pages in my Interactive Notebook. That list of assignments now numbers 22 and you can get it here.
In order for my kids to journal about the standards, they would need to understand them. Enter Sarah's awesome posters she shared yesterday. I've put these into a foldable that my students will have in the beginning "reference" section of their notebooks. Here are some photos. Please excuse the quality; I need to build a larger light box if I'm going to be taking pictures of open notebooks.
The outside of the 8-door foldable lists the 8 Standards of Mathematical Practice as they are written. I cannot begin to count how many inservices and team meetings have been dedicated to these 8 sentences!
If the foldable would be helpful in your classroom, you can download it here.
How do you make your students aware of and accountable for the 8 Standards of Mathematical Practice?
Mathematically yours,
Miss B
Last week, I spotted a blog post about journaling on the math standards. Unfortunately, I can no longer recall where I read it, so please let me know if it was yours or if you also read it and remember because I want to link back to that post! I knew immediately that I wanted this to be an assignment for my left pages in my Interactive Notebook. That list of assignments now numbers 22 and you can get it here.
In order for my kids to journal about the standards, they would need to understand them. Enter Sarah's awesome posters she shared yesterday. I've put these into a foldable that my students will have in the beginning "reference" section of their notebooks. Here are some photos. Please excuse the quality; I need to build a larger light box if I'm going to be taking pictures of open notebooks.
The outside of the 8-door foldable lists the 8 Standards of Mathematical Practice as they are written. I cannot begin to count how many inservices and team meetings have been dedicated to these 8 sentences!
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"8 Standards of Mathematical Practice AKA What Good Mathematicians do." Foldable on the right side of the page, writing prompt on the left. |
I know the kids will appreciate having the standards translated into "kid
speak." I put Sarah's simplified sentences inside the flaps and will have the kids illustrate what the standards mean to them. Then, on the left side of the page, they will answer two brief writing prompts that will serve as a baseline for the year:
1. "The standard that I demonstrate most
consistently
is #___ because..."
2. "Standard #___ is difficult for me
because..."
If the foldable would be helpful in your classroom, you can download it here.
How do you make your students aware of and accountable for the 8 Standards of Mathematical Practice?
Mathematically yours,
Miss B
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Implementing Rich Mathematical Tasks
My school system is partially through the transition to Common Core Mathematics. Our lower elementary grades have fully transitioned, HS Geometry has transitioned, and 8th grade has transitioned to the point where we're teaching both the old and new together this year! As part of the transition, 8th grade students who previously passed Algebra I in 7th grade are enrolled in a course we've titled "Intermediate Algebra." The course resembles traditional Algebra II in a lot of ways and is designed to fill the gap that would be made by students moving directly from our state's Algebra I/Data Analysis curriculum into CC Algebra II.
One of the expectations for the course this year is that I provide my students with rich mathematical tasks with an open-ended quality. I was a bit hesitant to get started with these as the students I teach haven't had many experiences with open-ended problem solving. I feared they would be frustrated by the lack of rigid structure and be very needy.
Here's how I organized the task process in my room.
- I presented the concept of a mathematical task as different from a BCR (the style of constructed response used on MD state testing which is quite formulaic) and explained to them that there are so many correct ways to answer a task that they should answer a task in the way that makes the most sense to them mathematically. I stressed that I was not going to be answering lots of questions during this task, so they were to rely on their group and "figure it out." (I still coached a minimal amount when groups were quite astray, but I wanted them to feel independent.)
- I assigned groups of four, making sure each group had at least one or two strong math students and a mix of boys and girls. (Side note: I use pocket charts for grouping and it has been a breath of fresh air this year. Something about this system, perhaps the groups being on the wall when kids enter the room, has kept the whining/eye rolling/ugliness entirely at bay this year. I so much as mention the word "group" and their little heads spin to the back wall to check out who they'll be with, but they don't complain!)
- I presented the task they were responsible for, indicated the variety of materials available, and set them to work.
- After 30 minutes the first day, none of the groups were even close to fully answering the question. Most had talked for 90% of their time and written very little. All the groups stayed on topic and remained focused during that time frame.
- The next day, I made some general comments about the task and gave a small insight or two into the problem to give a few hints related to common misconceptions. The groups reconvened and were charged with finishing their answer.
- We did a jigsaw grouping to share out. Two students stayed put and presented their group's work to two students who came from a different group. We rotated again so all students had a chance to present and a chance to review another group's work.
- The original groups had some time to debrief about what they would change after getting input from other classmates.
- Homework was to write a reflection on the process.
- The problem is embedded into the task in a way that students must make meaning of the situation. Since the meaning wasn't immediately clear to the students, most every group restarted or made significant revisions to their work during the process. (Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them.)
- Students have various ideas about the meaning of the problem and how to go about solving it, so they have rich discussions. My students were holding each other accountable for their ideas, asking pertinent questions to better understand their classmates' points of view. (Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others.)
- Students were able to use any of the materials in the room, so some groups gravitated toward calculators, while others preferred to sketch a graph by hand or write out a table. (Use appropriate tools strategically.)
- The real world context leveled the playing field in an unexpected way in at least one group. I overheard one student who is a weak math student leading his group through this task at the beginning because he was the only one with the real-world background knowledge to understand the problem. His more "book smart" teammates were lost without his guidance. He was more engaged in this task than I've seen him since school started.
Some students were already asking to do more tasks on Tuesday before we finished our first task. They loved the interaction and I loved how involved they felt in solving the problem.
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