Categories
Uncategorized

Last Night at Global Math….

Thanks to Megan Hayes-Golding for hosting last night’s session at the Global Math Department, where I shared some of my Tall Tales for Probability.  The recording is now available.  This was my second time presenting, and it is a unique experience.  I recognize that I talk WAY too fast at times, mostly because I am so excited to share my ideas.  But sitting alone on the couch talking to my laptop, and trying to assess reactions in the chat room make online speaking a wild ride.  I was the 2nd speaker of the evening, and enjoyed Chris Harrow‘s sharing the 4’s Game, and Chris Hunter‘s ideas for cooperative learning.  Always an uplifting experience to be around such excellent educators!

I had a few requests for the video of the hay bales.  I have put it on dropbox, but it is a BIG file.  Let me know if I need to zip it.

Categories
Uncategorized

Quality Assignments at #sbgchat

Another great topic last week at #sbgchat (9PM on Wednesday nights), where quality assignments were the theme.  There are so many people providing excellent ideas and thoughts each week, the action fast and furious, I have now found myself “favoriting” many tweets,  taking time on the weekend to read through the good suff, and reflecting upon what it all means to me as a math teacher.  You can review last week’s action on Sortify, and thanks to Tom Murray for hosting the recap.  Each week, there are a number of questions you can respond to, but I am going to focus on just one of them this week.

DESCRIBE THE IMPORTANCE AND ROLE OF QUALITY ASSIGNMENTS FOR STUDENT LEARNING.

Over my years of teaching, I have seen my approach to assignments change some.  As a beginning teacher, I did what I suspect many math teachers do: find a “good” worksheet which has practice problems tied to the lesson, or give the odd problems in the textbook.  In recent years, I added more reflective pieces to assignments, eventually using Google Forms to have students contribute ideas, in a move away from static assignments.  And my philospohies towards grading assignments has also changed to the point where I rarely grade nightly asignmnents.  Some of my favorite responses to this week’s #sbgchat question are helping to refine my attitudes further:

https://twitter.com/cevans5095/status/322154622917701633

If you ask students and teachers separately what the goal of an assignment is, how would the answers from each group be different?  Undoubetly, many teachers would point to the need for practice and their students to learn responsibility.  But what would students say?  Do students see the need to practice skills as a prmiary outcome of assignment completion?  Are your students asked to reflect upon why an assignment is valuable?  Have the learning goals been communicated and understood?  And finally, how do the math assignments math teachers give today look and feel different from those given 25 years ago?

What I really apprecaite about #sbgchat is that I am challenged to think about my classroom practices.  Sometimes, these are not comfortable reflections.  Often, the hard work required to shift to effective pracices seems monumental, and I wonder who is up to the task – me, my colleagues, my students.

THINGS I NOW BELIEVE ABOUT ASSIGNMENTS

  1. Students should understand how assignment completion will help (or not help) them develop skills, and this should be the primary motivation for assignment completion.
  2. Students should have the opportunity to personalize assignments, selecting problems and/or experiences which move them towards their goals.
  3. Students should reflect upon their choices, and communicate how their choices helped them (or did not help them) reach their skill goals.
  4. Teachers have the responsibility to provide appropriate options for skill mastery, and discuss those options with students.
  5. Students should be allowed to mess up.  It’s natural, and all young people will make a bad choice.  Learning to move on and adjust from bad choices is a lesson unto itself.  

In a post from a while back, I provided some ideas for differentiating assignments, and some of the ideas seemed to be quite popular.  I would add now that perhaps students should also reflect upon their assignment choices and be asked to justify them.   Are students choosing to path of least resistance?  Or are they choosing assignments based on their perceived areas of need?

To incorporate many of these ideas will require a change in culture from both teachers and students.  Why do we provide assignments?  And why do students complete them?

ONE THING I KNOW ABOUT HOW WE HAVE TRAINED OUR STUDENTS

  1. We have trained our students to play the school game.  Many assignments with point values cause students to play the point-gathering game, rather than reflecting upon their progress.  

Hadley Ferguson, a teacher near Philadelphia, has summarized her experiences with a non-graded 7th-grade class.  It’s inspirational reading.  The dedication to reflective practice, and creating a culture of saefty and authentic learning, have clearly changed the 7th grade.  It’s certainly not easy chaning a culture.

Here are more resources to help you assess and develop your own assignment philosophies:

Joe Bower – Real assessment for learning: Joe provides an outline of routines used in his classroom to provide feedback and information to students.

Creating Quality Classroom Assignments: Susan Brookhart provides a simple planning tool for evaluating classroom assignments.

Skills Mastery as the Beginning, Not the End: Justin Lanier provides his classroom experiences with a first attempt at standard-based assignments.  A sample checklist is given, and ideas of how to manage the grading.

ThinkThankThunk:  A wealth of resources and classroom experiences in SBG by Shawn Cornally.  The link here is for math, with ideas for fracturing your gradebook, but click around to find more resources.

Categories
Uncategorized

Redos and Retakes – #sbgchat on twitter

These days, all of the “cool kids” in twitter chats are checking in at 9PM on Wednesday evenings, where #sbgchat (standards-based grading chat) is growing quite an audience.  After just a few weeks, I am hooked into the discussions, and look forward to more challenging discussion from hosts Tom Murray and Darin Jolly.  This past week, the hot topic was redos and retakes.  Before the chat, I enjoyed videos by Rick Wormeli, whose ideas pumped me up to learn more, not unlike a football coach motivating his athletes.

Rick Wormeli on “Redos, Retakes and Do Overs”:  part 1 and part 2

This week’s chat featured some fantastic discussion about redo’s and retakes, with the following questions:

  1. Should students be given the opportunity to redo formative assignments, why or why not?  How about summative assignments?
  2. How should a redo or retake be altered from the first opportunity?
  3. What steps should occur prior to the retake of an assessment for the student and the teacher?
  4. How should the number of redos factor into a student’s grade?

If you have never participated in a Twitter chat, be prepared for information overload.  But the wonderful thing is that you will always find someone to share your ideas with, and you can always go back to the archives to pick up on pieces you missed.  You can check out the chat archive and review the ideas, and perhaps make some new Twitter contacts.

THINK ABOUT YOUR OWN EXPERIENCES

My advice to anyone considering redos in their classroom is to do some reading, think about your goals, and discuss your ideas with colleagues.  Perhaps you will find teachers in your own building who already have begun a system for retakes, which you could attach yourself to.  Or create a PLC in your building to think about how a system of redos or retakes would work.

One of the best resources for gettting started is the November, 2011 issue of Educational Leadership, which focused on effective grading practices.  You will need to be an ASCD member to access the article.  If you aren’t, contact your administrator and hopefully they can help you with access.  Rick Wormeli’s article on “Redos and Retakes Done Right” contain many of the same ideas seen in the videos, and a great starting point for thinking about your own classroom philosophies.

HOW TO DO IT: here are resources on retakes and redos from teachers who have implemented them in your classrooms.  Hope you find something you can use!

A Principal’s Reflections – blog by Eric Sheninger, with a how-to guide from one of his building’s math teachers.  Includes a contract for retakes, and a classroom policy to share with parents.

Dan Meyer’s thoughts on assessment – personalizing assessment and keeping track of skill progress in math class.  What I really enjoy about Dan’s thoughts here is the amount of responsibility students begin to accept for their own progress, and in making good choices.

Cybraryman’s List – a comprehensive list of grading practices.  From articles providing rationales for differing grading procedures, to classroom look-in, there is something for you to think about here.

The Solon District in Iowa has a implementation guide for Stanards-Based Grading.  Check out the sections on student re-takes, and how students initiate them.

Dan Longhurst – On his blog, Dan shares his experiences with Standards-Based grading and his classroom experiences with embedding redos into assessment on newer material.  Dan is a physics teacher, and his ideas are easily transferrable to math classrooms.