Student Reflection and Goal Setting in Mathematics

Click here to submit your MS Sunday Funday post! #msSunFunIf you would like to add a post about student reflection and goal setting in mathematics, please click the link above.

Next week, we will blog about projects and project based learning in the mathematics class.  Please join us!

“Flipping” the Math Classroom

Click here to submit your MS Sunday Funday post!

 #msSunFun“Flipping” a classroom is usually thought of as having students watch video lessons at home, and then coming to class the next day prepared to work on problems during class time.  This week middle school teachers are blogging about their experiences with flipping the math classroom, even if they have only flipped one lesson.  I am excited to see the different ways teachers are improving on this model, as I haven’t had much success with all students in my classroom when they watch a video at home.

Next week, we will blog about student reflection and goal setting.  This can be academic, or character building.  To suggest a topic, fill out the survey below.

An Amazing Response for “A Day In the Life…”

THANK YOU TINA for putting together all of these Day in the Life Posts!  It was such a great idea and I know it was a huge amount of work for you.  Thank you for giving us all the chance to share with others (and even see ourselves) how busy we all actually are as educators.  OVER 50 teachers contributed!  The amazing Food Blogger by night, English teacher by day across the hall from me was even inspired to blog after reading my post.  AND, she included a recipe for pimento cheese cookies on her post!  Totally stealing Sam’s idea, I have copied Tina’s summary post below.  You can also read directly from the source, on her amazing blog, Drawing On Math.  If you would like to read the initial information for Day in the Life, you can find that here on Sam’s Blog.  It was an inspirational idea!

Day in the Life: Recap and Moving Forward (from Tina

THANK YOU for reading, writing, sharing your day or spreading the word.  Since the last update there have been 14 new submissions, which puts us over 50 total!  And it sounds like there are still more coming.  I’d love for this initiative to continue expanding, so I created a tumblr.  The latest submissions are below, but from now forward contributions will only be posted on DITLife.tumblr.com.  I’d never used tumblr before but now that I’ve set one up it seems most appropriate for sharing links.  You can still follow it by RSS and read the posts in google reader or similar, but it’s also searchable by tags and maybe we will discover a new community of tumblrs who can join the twitterblogosphere!

Now that the “Day in the Life” week is officially over, what’s next?  I’ve asked for ideas and come up with a few of my own.  I’d love to hear your feedback on these, other ideas and volunteers to kick these off!

  • Re-blog, re-tweet, share on facebook and send this to big people/media (Justin Reich, Dan Meyer, Diane Ravitch and Arne Duncan were mentioned specifically)
  • Continue getting new people to share a Day in their Life (try to reach different circles of educators)
  • Personally I found this challenging to do, so repeating the experience of logging an entire day is unappealing, but posting a snippet like I did on Sunday is doable.  Lots of short clips is just as good (better?) than a full day.  There’s a submit page if you’d like to contribute directly to tumblr.
  • Record yourself reading part of your DITLife post, it’s interesting to hear the voice behind the screen.
  • Make a video of yourself telling a story, no longer than 2 minutes, of something that happened to you that shares some aspect of teaching; good, bad, whatever.
  • Find a student to interview you, where the student asks questions they’re curious to know about, and the teacher responds. Then the teacher posts a podcast of the interview. (This wasn’t my idea, but I was talking to students about grading just the other day and it was interesting to hear their questions!)
  • Find another teacher to interview you on whatever and post a podcast of the interview.
  • Give awards to contributors: most papers graded, most hours at work, most uses of technology…
  • Compare our days to TV/movie teachers
  • Compare to each other (what was everyone doing at 7 am, noon, 3 pm, 8 pm?)
  • Running list of all the roles we play
  • Instead of recording everything in one day, record one thing every day and create a report a la Nicholas Felton
  • Link this initiative anytime you see anyone attacking teachers
  • Map where you go in a day or week (I know I never see some teachers since I don’t walk the same paths they do!)
  • Ask people what prevented them from participating (is that you? please comment!)

I also got requests for future themes and gathered a few ideas for those:

  1. The best lesson I taught this year.
  2. What I want PD to look like.
  3. If I was not a teacher I would be a ___.
  4. Classroom tours (started in June, I want to see more photos!)
  5. Teachers take a photograph of something meaningful that they’ve gotten from a student, and describe what that is and why it matters to them.

Thanks to Sam, Kate, Ashli, Julie, Greg, Kirsten, James, Jonathan, Lisa and Tom for their contribution to these lists.

Submissions over the weekend:

A Day in the Life: Berlin Edition on I Hope This Old Train Breaks Down


My typical action-packed, no-room-to-breathe Fridays.

Week as Math Educator – Day 5 on Mathie x Pensive


Entire Friday, in third person plural perspective, to wrap up five straight blog days. This last was a PD Day, but not as one might expect.

A Day in the Life: cheesemonkeysf edition on cheesemonkey wonders


Serving students and serving the dog.

A day in the life… on crazedmummy


Thursday, blow by blow. Aaagh!

A Day in the Life: 11.14.12 on Epsilon-Delta


Just a normal day–nothing super exciting BUT nothing super horrible either. So, I’ll count it as a good day.

Tuesday, November 13, 2012 on Bowman in Arabia


Just a normal Tuesday in my life as a math teacher at a boarding school in Amman, Jordan.

This is It (Extended Version) on Those Who Teach


All in a day’s work: star-crossed lovers, a skeleton, and essays galore

A Day in the Life on Discovering Delta


This is my not-so typical day of parent-teacher conferences. It’s also my very first blog post. This initiative enticed me to take the first step into the blogging world!

A Day in the Life of a Mathematics Educator on Algebrainiac


24 hours in the life of an 8th grade math teacher who has two jobs and two dogs and not enough minutes in the day!

A Day In My Life – I’m Sorry Mom and Dad on I Speak Math


I was excited to blog about a day in my life. I’m a parent, a teacher, a 6th grade adviser and service leader, the math team coach, and the cheerleading coach. All three of my boys play competitive soccer. So, my trouble was actually finding the time to blog. I didn’t realize how much I do in a day until I typed this up. I am doing the best I can, but it never seems like enough.
My Typical Day (2012) on MathyMissC


I’m a second year teacher at an urban school in AZ. I teach Algebra 1 & Algebra 2. The teacher next door is on maternity leave, so I look out for those kids too. Then add co-teaching to the mix, my days are usually eventful!

A Day in the (A.D.D.) Life on Approximately Normal (in the classroom)


Just my perspective of the craziness of a random day in my life. No epiphanies, no revelations. My life isn’t perfect, but it is what it is.

Pimiento Cheese Cookies (A Day in the Life of a Language Arts Teacher) on Willow Bird Baking


I’m a language arts teacher who moonlights as a food blogger. My recipes always include an anecdote — whether it’s a memory from my childhood, a funny story from school, or an interesting tidbit from my daily life. Today, I decided to accompany my recipe for pimiento cheese cookies (they’re good, I promise!) with “A Day in the Life of a Language Arts Teacher.”

Day in the Life of a Math Teacher 2012 #DITLife on Technology Integration for Math Engagement


Looking back at my day, I recognize the importance of tech in my job. I use it to stay organized, provide feedback to students, and collect assignments. Without it, I wouldn’t be able to make my commute due to the paper weight in my car!

A Day In My Life – I’m Sorry Mom and Dad

This post is dedicated to my Mom and Dad.  They moved all the way from Kentucky to live close to us.  But now with my work schedule and the kids crazy soccer schedule, I rarely see them.  I am doing the best I can, but it never seems like enough.

I was excited to blog about a day in my life.  The trouble has been actually finding the time to blog.  I didn’t realize how much I do in a day until I typed this up.  It took forever to type as it is at least double the length of my usual blog post.

4 am – I’m not sure what miscellaneous sound awakened me, but now visions of mult-step equations are running through my head.  At 4:45 I finally get a pencil out and scribble what I’m sure will be incoherent notes in the morning.  But, at least it is out of my brain so I can hopefully fall back to sleep.  Math haunts me.

5:45 am – I get up 15 minutes earlier today than normal because I have offered to host hot chocolate sales in my room.  Set up begins at 7:30.  Several of my 6th grade students are selling hot chocolate to raise money for Charity Water.  They are amazing.  I need to be there by 7:30 instead of 7:45.  I pre-heat the oven to make muffins for breakfast.

6:15 am – I wake up the boys then make the muffins and put them in the oven.  I put an over night load of laundry into the dryer, and a new load in the washer.  I’m going out of town for a soccer tournament this weekend and we are in desperate need of clothes.  The laundry never ends around here.  I finish getting ready.

6:30 am – I order groceries online.  I usually do this on the weekend but I need to get food to take to the soccer tournament with us.

6:45 am – I call the boys again to make sure they are on their way down.  One of them fell back to sleep and is way behind getting ready.  They make lunches, unload the dishwasher, and grab breakfast.  I make tonight’s dinner, Salsa Chicken, in the crock-pot.

7:15 am – We are supposed to leave by now but are running behind, as usual.  I still need to help fix hair and someone has lost their shoes – AGAIN.  One came down in shorts and it’s 35 degrees outside.  We may never get out of the house.  I make my lunch and load up the car.

7:20 am – After frenzied and loud encouragement we are finally leaving.  We can make it to school in about 5 minutes with no traffic.  However, it’s a school day so it will take us about 15 minutes.

7:40 am – I finally arrive at school.  Traffic was terrible.  The charter school on my way to school completely clogged up the roads today.  It’s really frustrating.   I’m supposed to be at school by 7:45 at the latest as I am the “early” teacher who opens our building for the students.  I made that in time but am late for hot chocolate set up.  I’ll need to get everyone up even 15 minutes earlier next week if we are ever going to make it by 7:30 am.

Hot chocolate doesn’t start until next week!  My conscience has a reprieve!  I’m so glad I didn’t miss it and let everyone down.  Whew.  I now have time to print out and hang up the signs for the different math groups just for today.  I make copies of centimeter grid paper for class.

8:00 am – Two students come for help.  I am the early arriving teacher this year and thought I would use that extra 30 minutes to lesson plan or grade papers.  However, after school help is hard to do with meetings, car duty, and student’s sports schedules.  Last year I offered help at work time but our schedule has changed so we only have one work time period every six days.  Thus, I have started offering help before school.

8:15 am – 1st period.  6th grade, dividing decimals – group 1.  I have split my two math groups into “exposure groups” just for the day.  The students in first period have never done division with decimals before and/or are still working on their long division skills.  I’m so glad that our science / math blocks allows me to do this, but it also means that I had to make two lessons for 6th grade instead of one today.  These students take some notes and do a couple of examples in their graph books before moving to dry-erase templates (centimeter grid paper inside page protectors).  This helps students line the numbers and the decimals up.  I have the students show me each step on their dry erase mat before they go on.  They LOVE anything dry erase so they are happy today, even if it is long division – with decimals!

9:15 am – 2nd period. 6th grade, dividing decimals – group 2.  These students have been dividing decimals since 4th grade.  After taking short notes and doing one example in their graph books (just in case), we play Decimal Review Trasketball in groups.  I give them killer hard problems.  They love it and don’t want to leave when the period is over.  I love 6th graders.  🙂

10:15 am – 3rd period. 7th grade, word problems with multi-step equations.  I get out the king sized boards, and I let them work together.  However, no matter how I slice it they do not love this.  I only give them word problems.  They have to write the equation individually and then confer with their group to come up with a group equation they all agree on.  When I approve their groups equation, they each solve it.  We then look at everyone’s methods and discuss which group’s solution was the most efficient.  As in YES, it is better to combine like terms as soon as possible so you don’t have to keep adding and subtracting to get the variable term alone.  Some students are not convinced.  Also, some of the problems are too easy for this group.  The classes change from year to year.  I’ll fix it for the next 7th grade class during my planning.

11:10 am – It’s my planning period but I have a student issue I need to deal with.  This takes most of the period.  The rest is spent revising my 7th grade lesson from last period at bullet speed.  My desk is a wreck and emails continue to pile up.  I have several students absent that have emailed me with questions about today’s lesson.  I quickly look over the emails so I don’t miss anything urgent, but I don’t have time to reply.  This is a deadly combination and what makes up my “Email Graveyard”.  Yes, I read it, I just didn’t have time to reply so I could get through all of the emails.  I even thought of my reply in my head later that day.  But that is dangerous because the email is not longer “new” so is off of my radar.  And, I often forget that I only replied “in my head”.  This always makes me feel bad.

12:05 pm – 6th grade advisory meeting over lunch.  We discuss advisory plans and students.  It goes fast.  Every day I have either a meeting, math help, or math team during lunch.

12:55 pm – Project Work Time with the students.

1:50 pm – 3rd period. 7th grade, word problems with multi-step equations, take 2.  This is the fixed version with more difficult problems.  But now I think I’ve made them too difficult.  I don’t think this class got as much out of the lesson as the previous class, even though I worked extra on this lesson.  It’s such a delicate balance!

2:45 pm – Advisory.  Today, after our homework roundup, I am conferencing with individual students.  My other advisees are doing homework and locker clean up.

3:15 pm – School is out.  I head to cheerleading practice until 4pm.

4:00 pm – We leave school and pick up the groceries.

4:25 pm – We arrive home.  I put away the groceries and dish out dinner for the boys while they get dressed for soccer.  Did I say how much the crock-pot is a working parents dream?  I fold the load in the dryer and put a new load in.  I eat a few bites.

5:00 pm – 9:00 – Two soccer practices.  My children soccer four nights a week from 5pm – 7:30 pm.  But, my husband has a meeting tonight so I’m doing double duty.  Two have practice from 5:45 – 7pm and one from 7 – 9.  I usually try to run during soccer practice.  I can’t tonight because I have the children that aren’t practicing in my car.  It’s freezing outside so we just camp out in the car and I help them with homework.  I brought quizzes to grade but this is so not going to happen here.  I try to check and answer emails on my iPhone.  I get way too many emails.

 9:30 pm – We get home from soccer and the boys are hungry again.  I make cheese quesadilla’s for everyone.  I do one more load of laundry.

10:15 pm – Everyone is finally fed and tucked in.  It’s a late night for the boys and I hate that.  My husband gets home in time to kiss them goodnight.  He looks more tired than I feel but starts making their lunches.  I feel bad because we didn’t have time to even get them started tonight.  I fold the last load of laundry for the night.

I then crawl into pj’s and then work on my lesson plans for tomorrow.  After that I try to grade the quizzes that they took yesterday.  I have four sets and usually try to get them back the next day.  But, this has been a rough week.  My husband has had more evening meetings than usual lately.  At midnight I realize I can no longer read the numbers on the quizzes.  Quiz grading isn’t going to get finished.  I finally go to sleep.  I’m so tired that I don’t dream.  The alarm seems to go off immediately after I set it.  I don’t mind because at least I got to sleep through the night.  I promise myself I will go to bed earlier tomorrow night.   I lie.

Developing Number Sense in Math Students

Click here to submit your MS Sunday Funday post!

 #msSunFun

Next week, please blog about strategies for flipping the math classroom.  “Flipping” the math classroom is normally though of as watching a video in the evening and working on problems in class.  This is not just for those who have completely flipped their classroom.  Please blog if you have even tried flipping a single lesson and how it went.  It can also be about your opinions on flipping.  I would like for us to share our real experiences about this topic.

Blogging!

This is another one of Sam’s initiatives that I love! I just hope I have time to do it! I encourage all of you to blog as well.

samjshah's avatarContinuous Everywhere but Differentiable Nowhere

For anyone out there — I’m fine here in New York City. I spent the hurricane  [2] at a friend’s place in the city, and we have power and all good things. When I was trying to pass the time, I decided to do one productive thing.

I would like to present to you the start of a one day blogging initiative.

We are busy. We do a lot. We are professionals. And you know what happens when we talk about what we do… most people who don’t teach just don’t get it. That’s why we go to each other for support — either in real life by unwinding over a glass of wine (or a mocktail) at a local watering hole, or by talking with each other virtually using blogs, twitter, email, or something else.

But I think that needs to change. Three years ago, my school got me…

View original post 805 more words

Differentiation in the Math Classroom

Click here to submit your MS Sunday Funday post!

 #msSunFun

Next week, we will blog about developing number sense with our students.  To suggest a topic, fill out the survey below.

Problem Solving in the Math Classroom

Click here to submit your MS Sunday Funday post!

 #msSunFun

Next week, please blog about differentiation in the math classroom.

Conference Notes

Links from NCAIS today.  I’m exhausted.  But I wanted to get these links down while I was still thinking of it.

Keynote:

Robotics

Flipping the Classroom

Other:

Infusing Middle School Mathematics with Technology

Welcome to my presentation!  Please click here to take a survey.  Next, we will work collaboratively on a Google Document with other teachers.

My presentation focuses on how I use Google Documents in the classroom.  I created a Powerpoint for my presentation, and in lieu of handouts, I created a LiveBinder for the participants (below).  The LiveBinder contains the information from my presentation, as well as links to the complete Google Document files I referenced in my presentation.

I hope that you find this LiveBinder informative and helpful.  Please do not hesitate to put any questions you may have in the comments section.

Thank you!
Julie Reulbach

I am presenting at the NCAIS Biennial Teacher Conference on Friday, November 2nd, 2012.  NCAIS is the North Carolina Association of Independent Schools.