Sunday, August 16, 2009

Teaching Observation

Dinah and the other Skyscraper teachers observed me taking a Maths problem solving session with my 'Einsteins'. Dinah had a really good suggestion - of getting the kids to think of their answer and hold out a certain number of fingers behind their back and then bring their hands forward at the same time. This worked pretty well - but clearly only suited to numbers less than 10. More recently I've really worked to try to get students to feel secure enough to say their answer even when it is different from the others'.

Problem Solving

I have back copies from Mathex - many good and interesting problems to solve. I've put them on our Room 13 Website.

I thought I could be really clever and put the answers in white, thereby making them invisible until I was ready to reveal them. Clever kids discovered them when they dragged the mouse across the apparently empty space!

Much good discussion followed, but I really need to work with my Stage 5 kids who really struggle with basic Maths conceptualisation. This is becoming a priority. It is in my plan, but I think this is central to all Maths understanding. While kids can learn how to do things, they won't be able to apply their skills to other areas without the deep understanding. This certainly applies to all of learning.

Some kids just need practice at solving problems, while others need to learn how.

POD Meeting

We all shared our Inquiry plans with every other individual pea. This was a good way to refine and re-think. Karleen's inquiry is about unpacking the maths from the word problem. This strikes me as something I also need to do.

Dinah's Session about Open Ended Maths and Problem Solving

What did I get out of this? The idea of open ended Maths suits me - and probably the students because the outcome is not pre-ordained, so it means that all levels can be catered for and challenged.

We were also given a scrap book to collect Maths problem and Open ended Maths ideas in. I'd prefer a digital version, so I may change that, but it's useful for some old Nick Reed hand-written Maths problems.

What's Happened So Far

Inquiry plan to Matt

Survey Monkey Questionnaire

Great session with Dinah, about problem solving and open ended questions. Started a scrap book of ideas.

POD meeting to share and refine our plan.

First critical friend visit (didn't happen for me - I was friendless)

Problem Solving page (on Room 13 Website)

Videoing our teaching, sharing and discussion

Critical Friend Visit by Liz

Survey

Time to set up my Inquiry blog and record what has happened so far.

Here are the results of the survey about current attitudes to Maths:
Interestingly the kids all see themselves as being OK or good at Maths. This must be a good thing because they need to have good self esteem to progress. Most of the class enjoys Maths usually or always. Fantastic!
The Basic Facts Ladder is perceived as being helpful. Although Dinah Harvey suggests it shouldn't be done in maths learning time, my observation is that it is highly motivational. Kids like to know they're improving at something and the ladder provides for that.

Another notable result is the lack of students who don't know if the modeling books and FIOs are helpful. We use modelling books, but seldom use FIOs. I've noted in my Inquiry plan that I should make better use of them to allow kids to get used to the link between literacy and number - as per PAT tests.