Monday, September 21, 2015

"What three words come to mind when you think of school math?"

This post is a duplicate of a post I made to my classroom blog.

In a survey at the beginning of the year, I asked my 125 Math 6 students to tell me what three words came to mind when they thought of school math. Almost everyone answered, and this Wordle, which I also shared at Back to School Night, shows all the words that were listed by two or more people. The larger a word, the more students listed it. (The colors are random.)


To my teacher mind, some of these words describe associations I'm pleased to see incoming sixth graders having with math, some are merely neutral or factual, and some are associations I hope will change. I'd class them like this (listing the words in each category in order of frequency):

Positive (8): fun, challenging, interesting, learning, challenge, exciting, yay, smart
Neutral/Unclear (22): hard, multiplication, numbers, difficult, homework, easy, complicated, addition, subtraction, division, fractions, shapes, adding, equations, algebra, practice, math, complex, school, long, work, ok
Negative (9): boring, confusing, ugh, scary, irritating, annoying, weird, meh, stressful

I think it's great for students to find math challenging, as long as they're not discouraged, so I put "challenging" and "challenge" into the positive category. But I'm actually uncertain whether to classify "hard" and "difficult" as neutral or negative. Hard work can be intensely satisfying and can lead to great learning, but when "hard" is one of the three primary associations eleven- and twelve-year-olds have with math, well, I worry that they're feeling overwhelmed. At the other extreme, "easy" can be OK if it is a word used by a happy and confident student, but it might also be contributing to why "boring" appears so many times, so it reminds me I need to provide challenges in math class for all kids.

By the end of the year, I'm hoping "fun" and "challenging" replace both "hard" and "easy," and that the rest of the negative words are wiped out!

As for the students' description of the subject matter of math, arithmetic looms large, which is not unexpected for students coming out of elementary school. I do find it interesting that many mathematicians describe math as the study of patterns, yet not one student listed that word, even though they've undoubtedly looked many times at patterns in math class. Could it be that they believe "real" math is the symbols and arithmetic, not the patterns and relationships? If so, I'd like to change that so their view of math is more expansive.

Finally, I would love to see the word USEFUL showing up by the end of the year. Middle school math is arguably the most useful math students learn, but I hope they will realize how powerful it is now, not just later in life.

Saturday, July 18, 2015

The Perniciousness of Negative Numbers: Are Our Children Safe?

What follows is a paper I just wrote for a class called History of Mathematics for Middle School Teachers. The actual name of the paper was "The History of Negative Numbers in Mathematics and Education," but that's not exactly click bait, so I livened it up here. Most of the paper is about how mathematicians sort of pretended they were ignoring negative numbers for a while, then publicly freaked out about how ridiculous they were, then finally came to love them. I'm sure many of us have had an in-law relationship like that, so maybe you can relate. The end of the paper is an appendix with some thoughts about activities for students that reinforce the methods and philosophies described in the rest of the paper.


Monday, May 25, 2015

List of List of Websites for Math Teaching Resources

In less than a year on the "MathTwitterBlogosphere," I've collected tons of great resources in Diigo lists, which I've now exported to blog posts here. Some ideas and lessons on these lists are ones I've used already in my middle school math classes; others are on my summer research list.

Here's how I've sorted websites (sometimes arbitrarily):

Math Websites: Specific Lessons
Math Websites: Classroom Culture & Mathematical Practices
Math Websites: Professional Development and Teaching Ideas
Math Websites: Meaty Problems
(Not Just) Math Websites: Games & Puzzles
Math Websites: Educational Technology

And here's one more I forgot to add originally! This is a list of sites I made for my students so they could investigate math in different contexts that interested them:

Math You Can See: Art, Nature, Patterns, Society, and More

(Not Just) Math Websites: Games & Puzzles

Some math games & puzzles are also included in my Meaty Problems list.

Math Websites: Specific Lessons

GOOD SOURCES FOR MULTIPLE LESSONS

RATIO AND PROPORTIONAL RELATIONSHIP LESSON

NUMBER SYSTEM LESSONS

EXPRESSIONS AND EQUATIONS (ALGEBRA) LESSONS

GEOMETRY LESSONS

STATISTICS AND PROBABILITY LESSONS

LOGIC/PROOF LESSON

Math Websites: Meaty Problems

See also my Games and Puzzles list.


GENERAL PROBLEMS AND PUZZLES (ordered very roughly by likely age of interest, youngest to oldest)

PROBLEMS AND PUZZLES FOR PARTICULAR TOPICS AND SKILLS (ordered roughly by age, youngest to oldest)

Math Websites: Educational Technology

ONLINE MATH TOOLS STUDENTS CAN USE

ONLINE MATH TOOLS & RESOURCES FOR TEACHER PREP

ONLINE RESOURCES TO HELP STUDENTS UNDERSTAND MATH CONCEPTS

OTHER INTERESTING MATH STUFF ONLY AVAILABLE ONLINE

Math Websites: Professional Development and Teaching Ideas

Here's a list (exported from Diigo) of some posts and resources I wanted to be able to come back to (often for the links within those posts as well!). The division between this list and some others I've made, especially Classroom Culture and Mathematical Practices, is rather arbitrary.

FEEDBACK AND ASSESSMENT

LEARNING ABOUT TECHNOLOGY

SPECIFIC MATH TOPICS

LESSON DESIGN

OTHER CLASSROOM TEACHING PRACTICES

OTHER/NOT YET SORTED:

Math Websites: Classroom Culture & Mathematical Practices

Here's a list (exported from Diigo) of some posts and resources I wanted to be able to come back to (often for the links within those posts as well!). The division between this list and some others I've made, especially Professional Development and Teaching Ideas, is rather arbitrary.

BUILDING CONFIDENCE, A GROWTH MINDSET, AND A SAFE CLASSROOM CULTURE

REASONING, SENSE-MAKING, AND PROBLEM SOLVING

HOMEWORK AND TEST REVIEW

FUN AND GAMES IN MATH CLASS

POSTERS

OTHER/NOT SORTED YET:

Thursday, January 1, 2015

"Value Added Model" for Teachers is Poor Modeling

Thank you, Anthony Cody, for prompting me to send a message before the January 2 comments deadline to the Department of Education protesting their proposed use of so-called "Value Added Models" to evaluate teacher preparation programs. Here is what I sent, slightly edited to remove details of a specific case (the teacher in question was not me, by the way; I knew her, but not well).

To: OIRA_DOCKET@omb.eop.gov
Subject: "value-added model" for teachers is poor modeling

To Whom It May Concern:

I am a public school parent and have been a math and science teacher since 2009, when I attended a teacher education program after a previous career in the scientific software industry. I am writing to register my objection to the idea of using student standardized test scores to evaluate teachers or teacher training programs. Although I would be in favor of putting teachers, schools, or even education programs under closer scrutiny in cases where scores plunge or where consistent losses are documented over multiple years, the test score data on student growth is nowhere near precise enough to use fairly for these evaluations. It would be like basing the Consumer Price Index only on strawberry jam prices. I agree with many of the objections listed in this article: http://www.livingindialogue.com/duncan-brings-sham-vam-teacher-education/

Data on student performance also inevitably reflects far more than the learning experience the student had in the classroom. For instance, availability of computers at school could have a huge effect. For another example, [horror story redacted in which test scores plunged for some classes one new teacher had because of events the previous year, when she was not even at the school]. Should the teacher or her education program be punished for [redacted]?

Furthermore, the SBAC and PARCC tests are at a "beta" stage. We all know there are going to be problems with the rollout; how could there not be, with such major changes? By putting so much pressure on teachers to "achieve" on inevitably faulty first-round tests, you risk alienating some of your best allies. Many of us want to improve our teaching with Common Core standards, and we want high-quality tests that will give us some information about what our students are learning and what we still need to improve in our instruction. Help give us a way to give feedback on the tests and improve them without the horrendous conflicts of interest you introduce when we and our education programs are punished for poor test questions or design that are likely to disproportionately impact our ELL, SpEd, and non-white-middle-class students.

I do believe that over time, education programs that produce the most valued teachers (and, of course, the most value for their teacher students) will be those that have the best record of placing teachers in schools. I completely approve of efforts to increase reporting requirements for programs of education on teacher placement, and could support programs gaining an advantage if they consistently supply teachers to high-needs schools. 

I hope you will carefully consider all points of view and ensure that any data-driven analyses are actually using high-quality, relevant data.

Sincerely,

Julie Wright
Portland, Oregon