Skip to main content

Home/ HCPS ITRT/ Group items tagged notice

Rss Feed Group items tagged

william berry

Using technology to facilitate noticing and wondering | The Reflective Educator - 1 views

  •  
    "The point here is that the technology made the conversation easier. Instead of creating 20 different examples of graphs and seeing what happens as each variable is changed, students were able to visualize the changes, both in the graph representation, and in the formula representation. When asked if they noticed anything after the "Point on the line" slider was changed, one student said they noticed the Intercept-slope form of the equation did not change. Another student responded to him with "that form of the line doesn't depend on which points you use.""
william berry

#NoticeWonder Love :: Annie at the Math Forum - 0 views

  •  
    How can a game help students develop mathematical habits of mind? "Then we talked about the game for a bit, and discussed the "habits of mind" they had employed to figure out the game - noticing and wondering, guessing and checking, persevering, struggling productively, learning from mistakes without worrying about making mistakes (since they knew the only way they were going to make progress was to make mistakes and learn from them), and working together. We talked about how these skills are as important as any content they learn in their school classes, and how they can use those skills to make progress on math problems they're not sure how to solve. In fact, much of the math programming we did the rest of the year employed huge doses of Noticing and Wondering and generating ideas about math situations, or scenarios (a math problem with no stated question). Anecdotal reports suggest that by the end of the year, most of the students felt pretty confident that they could generate ideas about most math situations we handed them. Big win!"
william berry

Build an Atom - 1 views

  •  
    This seems like a decent interactive for an introduction to atoms/elements/period table. Have the students click through several atoms in order and then discuss: - What do you notice? - What do you wonder? - Predict what the next atom (or the atom 17 clicks away) will look like. Explain your response.
william berry

Slow Motion Chemistry - YouTube - 1 views

  •  
    "Reactions filmed with a high-speed camera. New videos being added every week." Could be interesting to look at the reaction in regular speed and have students discuss: "What do you notice and wonder?" Then, play the slow mo videos and see what sort of observations pop up.
Emily Roberts

Using iPads to teach students selective highlighting - 0 views

  •  
    "....one skill that can help students succeed is selective highlighting. Notice that I said "selective" and not just highlighting."
1 - 6 of 6
Showing 20 items per page