As the weather has improved and the days have become longer it seems there is a correlation to the memories getting shorter and the focus getting more and more cloudy. As teachers there is a tendency to push and push, shoving more and more facts, figures, learning into an already saturated and sometimes exhausted mind of a young learner. As I was talking to an educator (not at my school, thankfully), she stated that she was "counting down the days." Then she smiled and gave me that "I-can't-wait-until-Summer-break" facial look. Had she given up? Was she counting out her students? Had she thrown in the towel?
In preparation for our state's annual standardize testing, I am tutoring a group of seven third graders in math. They weren't ready for what we did. Using techniques from Dave Burgess's Teach Like A Pirate (@burgessdave #TLAP) along with ideas from Richard Byrne's websites iPadsApps4School.com and FreeTech4Teachers.com these third graders began to experience math in an entirely different way.
The first day my seven learners (all third grade girls) were waiting at the assigned point in the school with the other learners that were participating for nine hours of interventions over three weeks in preparation for the standardized tests.
They knew who I was. Evidently I have a reputation. (Thanks, PIRATE DAVE!) I announced in my strong teacher voice, "Mr Don's Math Scholars! Please, form a triangle."
Quickly they struggled to awaken from their after school coma as they tried to comprehend. "What? Form a triangle? Huh?" One girl even stated, "Mr. Don, I'm not a math scholar, sir. I'm not really that good at math." To which I looked at her and whispering, corrected her, "I'm not good at math, YET!"
Breaking into a typical drill sergeant cadence. We marched from the meeting spot (as a triangle) to my room chanting,
"I may not know, but I believe,
mathematics is for me!
We will study, we will learn,
not just facts but skills we earn.
Math is everywhere we see
I can do it, You will see
Math is great and math's for me!"
We chanted down the hallway, now we were looking for triangles and identifying the types of triangles we could find all around us. We then continued the learning inside the room with activities, tech tools (iPads, Elmo, Projection systems) not by themselves, but as teams, as collaborators. We did this until we returned an hour later with a new chant exiting back to where parents were waiting to pick up their young mathematicians. No pencils. No paper. Math skills being enhanced by using our brains, powers of observation and using the tools we carry with us every day (yes, some had to user their fingers, but that's is a good purpose for them!)
We are now half-way through the intervention time. We continue to form geometric shapes as we cadence to the room. Yet, now, they are leading the cadence, calling out the geometric forms, identifying lengths/widths, and giving me formulas for finding area, circumferences, putting fractions into ascending and descending order all as we constantly move for the entire hour. No sitting (if at all possible) and continuously checking in with each other for understanding. We are noisy. We are learning. We are having fun, too!
The benefit to me has been enormous. I am just as rejuvenated at the end of the session as they are. We are making the time count not just counting the time.
We realize we have testing strategies as well as math skills to work on improving.
How do I know that learners should not be counted out as we approach the end of the school year? That young mathematician who "wasn't very good at math" celebrated yesterday with her team as she was able to solve a complex logic problem. Everyone in the room could hear her brain "click" and then see the light turn on as she "got it!" We all celebrated.
Let's keep counting down for events and stop counting out. Let's keep providing that hope of "Yet!" and not leaving learners in the ring thinking that they have been counted out and their match was lost, returning to their corner without hope.
"Yes, I know and I believe, all learners are extraordinary!" (Their favorite chant as we end!)
|D|
I love reading how excited you get over teaching your kids. At some point, I hope you take advantage of the summer in-service training sessions offered here at our Millard Oakley STEM Centre for Tennessee teachers. I sat in on all their training sessions summer before last as part of my physics scholarship and they are constantly coming up with new techniques for helping teachers maintain their excitement over learning so their students won't lose theirs.
ReplyDeleteOne disturbing trend I've seen for myself, since I am a teaching assistant in both the math and physics departments, is that incoming freshmen cannot exist without their GRAPHING calculators. That's right, you heard me. They are REQUIRED to purchase a $180 graphing calculator for their high-school ALGEBRA (!) classes--the same graphiing calculator that I am forbidden to have as an applied mathematics major. When I tell these transitional algebra students who came to the "MIT of the South" to study engineering that they will never be allowed to use a calculator on any of their calculus exams, you can almost hear the weeping. Their eyes get huge and they say dumb things like, "but how will we do our work? How do you do it?" And my answer is invariably, "Because I was FORCED to learn math without a stinking calculator! I busted my butt to learn my multiplication tables! I memorised the unit circle and the trig functions one summer--I had so many unit circles plastered all over my apartment, it looked like I belonged to some weird cult. And I have memory problems from my Lupus!" I think at that point maybe one or two believe me and decide to buckle down and pass the course, but the rest of them are still deluded into thinking that I'm delusional and it isn't the way I say it is at all. What's sadder is that most of these students are from Saudi and Kuwait, so transitional algebra and even pre-calculus are NOT included in their curriculum and if their governments think they are not making timely progress, they WILL ship their butts back home.
So, if you have any teachers at the high-school level, please remind them that we have to undo the damage they cause by making them rely on a calculator for everything instead of learning to do the math by hand. Because once they get to college, they are woefully unprepared, and that upsets me. Once a girl asked during her exam if she could use the graphing calculator. I quietly said no. She looked at me like I just lost all my clothes, and she whined as quietly as she could, "But how will I do this fraction? The four-function calculator on the computer doesn't do parentheses!" If I'd've had a shoe in my hand, it would've suddenly found itself upside her head.
But THIS is how these guys are coming into college--with the idea that we're not going to expect them to know times tables or memorise a formula. It's sad.
And with Common Core coming, I'm even more scared for education. I'm glad some states are standing up against that piece of garbage and saying they think more of their students than that.
Great article. See how much you got me fired up?! :)