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Jeff Long

Tests of Statistical Significance - 0 views

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    Walks through a very nice example of the chi-squared test using a two way table. Explains degrees of freedom for this case. Also discusses when a t-test can be used.
Kim Ammons

The Learning Network - The Learning Network Blog - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • The Learning Network provides teaching and learning materials and ideas based on New York Times content. Teachers can use or adapt our lessons across subject areas and levels. Students can respond to our Opinion questions, take our News Quizzes, learn the Word of the Day, try our Test Yourself questions, complete a Fill-In or read our Poetry Pairings.
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    The Learning Network is a blog maintained by the New York Times which includes daily lesson plans and "test yourself" questions across all subject areas which relate to current NY Times stories.
Holly Williams

U.S. Students Lag Globally in Math and Science - 0 views

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    Average test scores not far behind other countries, but the proportion of students who scored in the top ranks in math and science was significantly lower.
dswarner

Last Week Tonight with John Oliver: Standardized Testing (HBO) - The Educator's PLN - 0 views

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    A video about testing
Holly Williams

How to Fix Our Math Education - 0 views

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    Poor performance on math tests cause alarm. Different skills are useful for different careers, math education should reflect this. General focus should be on real life problems.
Katie Dambrink

Test yourself - Exponents - 0 views

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    Fun quiz to test knowledge of exponents
Kim Ammons

MATHEMATICS - The Learning Network Blog - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    This links to The Learning Network for the NYTimes. Here you can find lesson plans that connect to current events. (You can search by topic.)
Jeff Long

Applet for checking boolean logic using Venn diagrams - 0 views

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    A nice applet from the National Library of Virtual Manipulates allows students to test their understand of boolean logic using Venn diagrams.
Kristin Riches

Grit - 0 views

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    This article is a great example that the focus shouldn't just be on the test scores, but that the effort the students' make is crucial. It shows that, once again, the input reflects in the output.
Kim Ammons

Teachers' gestures boost math learning - 0 views

  • The problem involved mathematical equivalence (i.e., 4+5+7=__+7), which is known to be critical to later algebraic learning. In the speech-only videos, the instructor simply explains the problem. In the other videos, the instructor uses two hand gestures while speaking, using different hands to refer to the two sides of the equation. Students who learned from the gesture videos performed better on a test given immediately afterward than those who learned from the speech-only video. Another test was given 24 hours later, and the gesture students actually showed improvement in their performance while the speech-only students did not.
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    A recent study shows that students learn math better when their teacher employs hand gestures in the lessons.  Though the study itself was done on a basic addition problem, the idea of using gestures in the classroom could be utilized in higher-level math classes as well.
Sheri Bradshaw

Brightstorm.com - 0 views

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    Time-saving Homework Help Videos from Brightstorm - Math, Science, English, Test Prep - Brightstorm
Marissa Utterberg

My Library - 0 views

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    Test run of new bookmark
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    This is just me practicing sharing to a group - I will delete this later!
Eric Thorson

Towers of Hanoi - NLVM - 0 views

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    Solve the tower problem and test your theory by varying the number of disks. Fun Math Puzzle.
Denise McCubbins

The Epidemic Of Media Multitasking While Learning « Annie Murphy Paul - 0 views

  • By the time the 15 minutes were up, they had spent only about 65 percent of the observation period actually doing their schoolwork.
  • Attending to multiple streams of information and entertainment while studying, doing homework, or even sitting in class has become common behavior among young people—so common that many of them rarely write a paper or complete a problem set any other way.
  • o detrimental is this practice that some researchers are proposing that a new prerequisite for academic and even professional success—the new marshmallow test of self-discipline—is the ability to resist a blinking inbox or a buzzing phone.
  • ...12 more annotations...
  • One large survey found that 80 percent of college students admit to texting during class; 15 percent say they send 11 or more texts in a single class period.
  • f you’re paying attention to your phone, you’re not paying attention to what’s going on in class.”
  • Now that these devices have been admitted into classrooms and study spaces, it has proven difficult to police the line between their approved and illicit uses by students.
  • ut listening to a lecture while texting, or doing homework and being on Facebook—each of these tasks is very demanding, and each of them uses the same area of the brain, the prefrontal cortex.”
  • First
  • Second
  • assignment takes longe
  • more mistakes.
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  • memory of what they’re working on will be impaired
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  • ur brains actually process and store information in different, less useful ways
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    Multitasking while studying is not effective
Katie Dambrink

Math Cartoon - 0 views

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    Testing
scrowe

http://www.weber.edu/wsuimages/vetsupwardbound/StudySkills/overcomemathanxiety.pdf - 0 views

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    Some really good information for overcoming math anxiety
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.
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