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mkammerman

How Much Money IS That?! | Robert Kaplinsky - Glenrock Consulting, LLC - 0 views

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    Cool (interesting to students) activity to obtain higher level problem solving
timwright11

Culturally Based Math Education as a Way to Improve Alaska Native Students' Math Perfor... - 0 views

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    How to incorporate multicultural education in math education
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    There used to be a couple really active professors at USU researching this topic. There is alot of work that can be done in this area.
apejones

Crazy Teaching - Just doing what makes sense. - 2 views

shared by apejones on 27 May 15 - No Cached
Shane Brewer liked it
  • 1. Tardy passes.  The picture below represents all of the tardy passes I have received all semester, along with passes to the nurse and passes to assistant principals for discipline.  That stack represents a lot of lost learning time, especially when you realize that these passes are written for a lot of the same students over and over again.  If learning was really valued, there would be preventative action taken rather then just letting students be late and lose valuable learning time.
  • 2. Announcements during class time.  For the first four years of my teaching career, I worked in a district where it was in the contract that no announcements could be made during class time other than regularly scheduled announcements during a set period.  Consequently I started teaching not knowing the agony of having my class interrupted with announcements about homecoming, meetings, or sports cancellations, and then having student attention diverted to those topics rather than what they are supposed to learn.  I always hear about cell phones being a distraction to students, but random announcements that could have waited until another time (or be made in another way) during a class can be just as much of a distraction from the real reason students are in the building. 3. Letting students talk among themselves for the last 5 minutes of class.  I am known as the strict teacher because I believe in bell-to-bell instruction.  I only have 50 minutes a day to cause understanding in my students, and I want to use all of that time.  Some students and some teachers find this unreasonable of me.4. Pulling students out of class for things that are non-learning related.  This school year alone I had students pulled out of class to talk about sports participation opportunities and to do something for an extra-curricular activity that was supposed to be done after school.  I even had a student pulled out of my class during a test because another teacher simply demanded it.  Now, I'm not against sports or extra-curricular activities; I feel they are a valuable part of a student's school experience.  It's when they start to take priority over learning that I have a problem.
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    I like this girl, even if she's not a math teacher she is funny and I'll probably get some good teaching ideas from her.
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    Someone else bookmarked this, but I want it in my list.  Excellent resource for classroom setup and management.
austinsoper

Walking in Mathland - Teaching Math Blog - 0 views

  • Educator who loves math and working with students.
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    Whoever does a Barbie Bungee deserves some attention from me. 
mdrappleye

How Much Shorter Are Staggered Pipe Stacks? | Robert Kaplinsky - Glenrock Consulting, LLC - 0 views

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    This real-world problem-based lesson challenges students to determine how tall stacks of pipes are by using trigonometric ratios or the Pythagorean Theorem.
mdrappleye

Where Is The Freeway Sign Located? | Robert Kaplinsky - Glenrock Consulting, LLC - 0 views

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    This real-world problem-based lesson challenges students to determine the location of a freeway sign based on the distances to exits.
akhil12028

"I Am So Glad You Made That Mistake!" | On Teaching and Learning Mathematics - 0 views

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    Changing the way we look at work!
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