The past two months have flown by. On October 11th, my wife
and I welcomed our first child – Will into the world. It feels like September was just a short
while ago and we were in Virginia Beach enjoying Labor Day. Will is starting to smile, make cute baby ‘coo-ing’
and sleep for solid four hour chunks at a time.
Those luxurious four hour segments were not always the norm. Sleep during the first month was scarce and I
would often find myself watching Sportscenter
or listening to sermons at 3am to pass the time while Will fell asleep. One night several weeks ago I stumbled across
a YouTube channel run by a math teacher I admire greatly – Dan Meyer. I initially heard of Dan during my first year
teaching in the Mississippi Delta and watched one of his more famous videos – ‘Math
Class Needs a Makeover’. I could
immediately relate to his struggle of making math engaging. In it he describes the math teacher – student
relationship as follows:
“I sell a product to a market that
doesn’t want it but is forced by law to buy it”
I distinctly remember the moment
during that first year when I realized, many of my students don’t like math,
believe they can’t do it and don’t see any practical application of the workbook
problems they’ve been encountering since kindergarten. In the
past five years of teaching I’ve worked hard to make math meaningful, engaging
and applicable to real life. Through technology
infusion in the classroom, the ‘maker curriculum’ and the push to make teaching
more than just preparing for the SOL, I’ve tried to make my classroom one where
the work we do has application that reaches beyond the annual standardized test.
A recent challenge posed while
watching one of Dan Meyer’s videos at 3am holding Will was to change the
progression of each lesson. About 98% of
the time I would start with a standard, students would take notes, work out
problems, ask questions then try an enrichment/application level activity. In Dan’s video ‘Teaching for Perplexity’ he
challenges educators to start with a real life, engaging, thought-provoking question
and embed the standards in the question.
Today
in class I handed my Core + students the 7th grade VDOE formula
sheet when they walked in and told them to create the six shapes on the formula
sheet and record the dimensions on a graphic organizer I created. It’s been amazing to see the change in
student engagement transitioning from the traditional ‘sage on stage’ teaching
model to challenging students to create something and asking probing questions
along the way. I’ve found that with this
new model students can learn at their own pace and they genuinely want to ‘complete
the challenge’ set before them. It also
allows me to circulate the room and give more individualized attention. The most astonishing aspect to this change
though was that during our 40 minute activity today we were able to discuss evaluating
expressions, order of operations, exponents, nets of 3D shapes, area,
perimeter, volume and surface area. When
I am teaching in front of the class and students are working on a worksheet, it
is incredibly difficult to teach more than one or two skills at a time. This may prove to be the most important
benefit to the change in classroom model.
In
all honesty, I do not use this model everyday but am trying to implement it
more and more each week. I will leave
you with a challenge Mr. Meyer posed during a recent TED talk. Study the graph below that shows water
consumption during the Olympic Gold Medal Hockey Game.
What
caused the highs and lows? Where is the
math in this graph? What standards could
this graph be used to teach?
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