What I’m emailing myself (Thanksgiving Catch Up Edition)

Friends,

There are things I emailed myself in September that are still in my inbox.  It’s the end of November.

It’s been a fall.

But, on this too brief, carb-filled holiday break, I’m doing a bit of catching up.

Last, last, last review (from Stephanie Minor) ((I’ve got my standard spiral review, but I’m still intrigued))

Retrieval Practice Materials

A Desmos take, on an exponents puzzle (From Cathy Yenca)

 

And, bonus, I caught up on my TPT work. An idea I tried out in September is finally together and posted. A card sort based on percent word problems, and using my (and my students) favorite proportion method.

percents 1

 

Lesson Sketch: Proportions Project

Lesson Sketch:  Not a lesson plan, but a sketch, an idea, adaptable to your context and content

 

Theory: If you’re going to do math you need numbers. And they might as well be about something. And that something might as well be how learning happens.

DSC_1495

Practice: Tonight’s lesson on ratios and proportions.

  1. Conduct teeny (anonymous, paper) survey about big learning topics.

For my class,  three yes/no/maybe questions: learning preferences (aka, learning style*), do you know yours?; math anxiety, do you have it?; studying independently, do you do it?

(Here’s a version, if you’d like to borrow it

2. Three questions, become 3 student groups. Groups convert data to ratios, then ratios to proportions as they estimate the number of students in the school who do or don’t have math anxiety, study independently etc. Statistics become posters as they present their findings. (Or not, if like me, you run out of time for posters)

 

Expansion possibilities:

-Offer resources on learning preferences/styles, anxiety etc. when students complete math project.

-More statistics! Sample vs. population, survey methods etc.

 

Easily adapted to: Making bar/pie graphs, percents, simple statistics.

 

 

*Yes, I know the research that learning styles aren’t a thing. But for students who’ve always experienced school as a disempowering struggle, thinking about their preferences and the different ways one might learn is still a useful conversation.