Thursday, October 27, 2016

November 2016 Updates

Do you Bitmoji?
I hope everyone has a safe and happy Halloween! If you need any festive ideas for today, check out these 7 Halloween Themed Lesson Activities from Free Technology for Teachers or 13 Halloween Tricks and Treats from Yummy Math.

Though I know some have been struggling with random student devices dropping wifi (especially at the high schools), it is amazing to see what our students are researching and creating as I pop into your classrooms. Please know that our iPad technicians and staff at TSS are working together to find the fix for our wifi woes. So many wonderful things are happening in our classrooms every day, and I continue to be amazed at how far we have come in the past two years!

Fall is a great time for me to get out into classrooms for instruction and/or co-teaching! I also enjoy coming in to serve as an extra pair of hands for our youngest students or an extra pair of eyes and ears during group projects or station work. Please visit my BOOK ME CALENDAR to reserve a slot (or two) for me to come into your classroom!

The Thinglink below contains some important links and resources for the upcoming month. You'll notice I've included both an App of the Month and a Google Tip of the Month, along with the Tech Tip Calendar, PD Schedule, and Tech Check Up Form. 

Thursday, October 20, 2016

Guided Math Structure & Stations

I strive to make all of my PD sessions with teachers targeted and tailored to their needs, knowing that every minute of teacher planning time is valuable. In an effort to make training relevant and meaningful for the teachers I serve, I use Google Forms to collect some data in advance. Prior to meeting with Math teachers at Powdersville Elementary this month, I sent out the form below.



The information gathered from this survey helped me to identify the topic and outline for the Guided Math Structure and Stations session, which started with glimpse at what is going really well. I used Tagul to make an interactive word cloud of the positive feedback!

Next, we looked at the current challenges that teachers listed in the form responses. Many commented on issues with time management, organization, and letting go of the neediest students to allow them time to work independently. Another common theme was students struggling to work independently during small group time.


Several concerns were addressed through reflecting on the structure of the lesson and small group time. Several ideas were shared by teachers who have worked through some of these issues and have found a structure that works. Assistant Principal Melissa Tollison and I shared ideas from our own experience with Guided Math and emphasized that structure can change based on standard or skill being addressed and level of student understanding.

Looking at survey results, I found that my teachers wanted help with organizing and creating stations for students to visit during small group time.


Using ideas from classrooms in grades K-5, I created reusable task cards for teachers to customize and laminate. By laminating the cards and using a vis-a-vis marker to fill-in the details, the teachers are able to reuse the same cards for a variety of stations... saving paper and time!

Reusable Task Cards for Guided Math

Click the links below to make your own editable copy of the task cards that were shared!
Fact Fluency - Grades K-2
Fact Fluency - Grades 3-5
Number Collection - Grades K-2
Number Collection - Grades 3-5
Tell About It
Vocabulary

Organizing Station Work
Students have been using SeeSaw to submit station work for the teacher and parents to see. Though this has been an awesome way to see what the students are creating and share work directly with parents, many teachers were looking for an efficient way to track which students completed each stations during the week. (Some students were having trouble remembering which were already completed, and teachers found going through the feed with a checklist to be tedious.)

Borrowing an idea from the first grade teachers at Concrete Primary, I created a Task Completed List. Teachers can laminate and post this list along with each task card. When a student completes the station, he/she simply posts to SeeSaw and marks his/her name off of the list with a vis-a-vis marker!

Feedback
Teacher comments from this session were extremely positive... especially in response to the new task cards. I was excited to see that many of the teachers began to use the task cards and task completed list within days of our session together. My goal is to continue to add new task cards each month in order to give additional options for students as the year progresses.