Hello readers!
Another week has passed, which means we had the privilege of
learning more about teaching math more effectively. This week we focused on
getting rich in math class, learning about the value and wealth that revolves
around question and activity design. Rich Tasks follow guidelines that involve creating
activities that encourage the students to work collaboratively, logically and
the most important attribute: room for interpretation and discussion. How I
would describe the nature of math lessons that I was taught in the past would
be rigid and boring. I say rigid because I do not believe there was any goal of
making the lessons and the activities “rich”, they were structured so that we
were all to learn the same strategies, skills and get all the same answers. My
math classes were boring to me primarily because I didn’t excel in the class,
but also because they were not very engaging. I value my time in my math
classes in the past because my personal experiences are now my clear guideline
of how I never want to teach my math classes.
If we ever
want our student's to think math is fun, we actually have to make math fun. I believe
that math has an underlying tone of seriousness about it, a driving force that
has caused teachers to stay in their lane when it comes to lesson and unit
design. The amount of skill-based content math involves, means it takesa very creative mind to take
math curriculum expectations and teach them in different ways. Comparatively,
subjects like science, geography and history are often littered with lessons
and activities that would be qualified as rich tasks. I think the best way to create
math lessons based around rich tasks that bolster student engagement is through
differentiated instruction and blending other subjects into math.
Cross-curricular
planning is difficult, but can be the best tool to create rich tasks in math because
it. This weekend I took part in the Project Wild seminar day, which
focused on implementing outdoor and environmental education across all
subjects. I really like the idea of teaching math topics through an
environmental lens, because it directly connects math to the real world. One of the
activities we did at the seminar involved tracking the population of animals within
the same food chain. Part of the activity was the accumulation and organization
of the data, through math skills. This activity blended math with deeper
thinking in regards to population trends because of human impact. Teaching our
students that processes in the real world rely on math operations may bridge
the gap for the students between the skills they use in class and why they are
so useful.
Below is a link that takes you to a Webinar made by the Ontario Teachers’ Federation that focuses on bringing math out of the traditional classroom and into the great wide open. The webinar is catered for grades K-6, but involves strategies and activities that can be used in intermediate settings as well.
Taking Math Outdoors!
Math can be as fun as it is useful, exciting as it is challenging,
and flexible as it is rigid. It is very easy for educators to rely on the old
model of lesson and unit design for math class. It is up to us as educators to
try a little harder in order to create a math community in our classrooms that
is more about learning for understanding then learning for memorization and
repetition.
Thank you!!
