A wise man in a HBO television
show once stated that “time is a flat circle”, meaning that it is cyclical, destined to repeat
itself. So here I am again, asked to blog about math, but this time it is very
different. Following the completion of my first year math course, as well as my
time teaching Grade 7 and 8 math during my first year placement, I emerged on
the other side feeling very good about my effectiveness of being a math
teacher.
During
my placement, I was able to embrace my role as a math teacher and focused on keeping
my students engaged via blended learning and more group work than they were use
too in math class. I put forward a lot of effort in order to be the best instructor
I could be. I wanted to be open with my lack of experience when it came to math
in general with my students. I never wanted to give off the impression that I
was not qualified to teach them, but I wanted them to understand that the class
and I were learning more and more about math together. I think this type of
relationship is important in teaching, especially for the later grades as it
allows teacher to develop more of a learning community in the classroom instead
of an environment that is based on hierarchical order. I want to continue this way of thinking
throughout my time in my year two Math course.
During
the online section for this week, there was a lot of focus on combating myths
and stereotypes society and the education system has developed when it comes to
math. One of the most important skills I think students need to work on when it
comes to math class, is their ability to communicate to the instructor what
issues they are having with a specific process. All too often in my placement I observed
students ask for help, but they could not communicate what aspect of what they
were trying to do that was so hard to them. I attempted to combat this
phenomenon by keeping my lesson engaging, but also focused on scaffolding my
lessons so all students could learn at their own pace.
A main goal I have for this year’s math class is to develop more
knowledge on the use of virtual learning for math. Last year I was exposed to
numerous online math games and platforms, it was as overwhelming as it was
useful. I want to use this year to find what tools I really like to use and
would be best for constant use for students. All too often I found these online
games could only be used as a time filler for students who finished their work quickly.
Author Monica Burns complied a short list of what she considers effective
virtual math tools, all of which I would consider as being great tools for
classrooms. One tool in particular ,an app based tool called Geoboard , allows students to create and manipulate shapes of all sizes and types for the students to gather and develop better understanding of geometric skills.
I
really look forward to the next weeks, as I know I will be exposed to more and
more tools and strategies that can make me a better teacher. So let’s do this!
You should consider a career in rap, nice title.
ReplyDeleteAs for the rest of the blog, I can't help but stress communication with the instructor. In my placement students often did not bother to communicate what they did not understand and simply just left it blank and moved on. This year i want to find strategies to make communication a lot easier for my students and work on differentiating teaching strategies. Thanks for the virtual tools resource.
This is a great post! Looking forward to seeing how you would incorporate what you learned in last year in this course to enrich it. :)
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