Skip to main content

Home/ UWCSEA Math/ Group items tagged practice

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Christine Chaboyer

Step Up to A-Level Maths - 1 views

  •  
    Some skills reinforcement and practice aimed at developing skills for IB. Could be used for Grade 10 or IB preparation.
Christine Chaboyer

Maths Questions and Worked Solutions - Laerd Mathematics - 1 views

  •  
    Students can do some of their own practice.
Sean McHugh

Video Story Problems 101 | The Tech Savvy Educator - 0 views

  •  
    Recommended by Dan Meyer, this teacher is pursing similar Maths practice but at Primary School level.
Christine Chaboyer

GCSE Revision - 1 views

  •  
    Lots of practice and activity ideas.
Sean McHugh

JUMP Math, a teaching method that's proving there's no such thing as a bad math student... - 0 views

  • Mighton has identified two major problems in how we teach math. First, we overload kids’ brains, moving too quickly from the concrete to the abstract. That puts too much stress on working memory. Second, we divide classes by ability, or “stream”, creating hierarchies which disable the weakest learners while not benefitting the top ones.
  • But too many children don’t have the building blocks from which to discover the answers. They get frustrated, and then fixed in the belief that they are not “math people.”
  • When I pause, even for a second, Mighton apologizes and says he clearly hasn’t explained it well, and takes another stab at it a different way.
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • But many teachers struggle with their own math anxiety, and research shows that they then pass on this anxiety to their students. (That happens with parents too, unfortunately.)
  • small, incremental steps which made the math accessible to all students and allowed some of them to experience success in math for the first time. “Because they can master the increments, they are getting the checks and building the mindset that their efforts can amount to something. That experience motivates them to continue,” she said. By continuing, they practice more math, get more skills, and become the math people they thought they couldn’t be.
  • it starts small and progresses in very small steps to a very sophisticated level in a relatively short period of time
  • collective effervescence,” the joy of knowing they can do it, rather than the joy of just getting a high mark
  • JUMP is a nonprofit, and all its materials are available on its website
  • math has been overhyped as hard, and all that students and teachers need is to have things broken down properly. Many have dubbed these simple steps as “drill and kill”. But he says the steps can be made fun, like puzzles.
1 - 8 of 8
Showing 20 items per page