Showing posts with label Kohia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kohia. Show all posts

Wednesday, 14 March 2018

Maths PD at Kohia 14/3/18

These are my notes from the maths PD session I attended at Kohia on 14/3/18.
The presenter was Lucie Cheeseman.


Give one - get one strategy. Activating prior knowledge.
What does it mean to be numerate?
To be able to use maths in everyday life.
To problem solve.
To be mathematically literate.
Less emphasis these days on the right answer, more how did you get the answer?
Efficiency - we need to ensure, even with little kids, that they are solving problems efficiently.  
Unpack the word ‘efficient’ with little kids - we are looking for the quickest way, the way that
is going to take the smallest number of steps.  
Eg. Why would you count from 1 when you could count on from the bigger number.
Pictures and diagrams just as important as mathematical equations.


Knowledge and strategy are interlinked.


Ask questions, rather than give statements, so that children are doing the thinking,
not being dependent.  For example, show a number, say 11. “How could you show me this number?”
Children can choose which materials they use, which are most efficient for showing the number.


If you can answer in 4 seconds, that’s knowledge.  Longer than 4 seconds to process
you’re using a strategy.  


Kids learn more from each other than us.  This is a good reason for mixed-ability grouping.
To be meeting the standard after the first year at school they need to know the numbers
1-20 securely, to understand the place value not just read the numerals.


STAGES
Emergent
Stage 1 - 1:1 counting
Stage 2 - Counting from 1 on materials. A lot of kids will move straight from Stage 2 to Stage 4.  
Stage 3 - Counting from 1 by imaging (need to be working with relatively small numbers).  
Stage 4 - Advanced counting - AFTER 2 YEARS Counting on from the bigger number.
Encourage them to use their fingers to track their counting on. They need to be able to count
on or back from the bigger number using numbers 0-100.  
Stage 5 - Early Additive AFTER 3 YEARS
AT AFTER 4 YEARS.
They would solve a problem like 9+5 by splitting the 5, by knowing that 9+1=10, 10+4=14.
Stage 6 - Advanced Additive - Solving problems like 132-59.


Can show difference between two numbers with sets of counters.  Subtraction is not always
taking away or finding what’s left.


Set up examples where the algorithm is inefficient.  Like 1007-999 - it’s more efficient to
know that 1 makes 1000 and 7 makes 1007, 7+1=8, rather than using the algorithm.  


Book 1 of the Numeracy Project books has all the strategies and the expectations at the
different stages.  


Components of group teaching
Knowledge check - opportunity to activate prior knowledge- should be quick and pacy.  
Can have cards and get kids to read the number. “How many more do I need to make 10?”
/Quik pix - for example subitising images. You don’t necessarily want the kids to count.  
They can look at tens frame and get a sense of how many there are. Sketch when image is gone.
About 90 seconds to draw what they see. Site good for occasional maths chat - Maths Eyes.
When they’ve got the hang of that they can add numbers to their drawing to explain it.

Mathematical word problem - NZ Maths is good for word problems Eg. Pete the Cat -
good picture book series for mathematical ideas - link to word problems.  
Launch problem, hook children into problem. Example problem - additive strategies -
Pete the Cat and his brother Tom have 10 buttons to share between them.  
What are the different ways their buttons could be shared?
The teacher’s role during problem solving is to monitor, to ask deep questions,
but not to rescue children when they are struggling. “Spray and walk away.”  
Can physically take children to another table to see another group’s strategy.

Parallel problems - differentiation - same problems, change numbers.

Use cards with job descriptions for people in the group - can put on lanyards to start with.

Use of materials - children choose which materials will be the most efficient for solving
the problem.  
Can give them play opportunities first - eg. using toy cars as maths materials.

Thinking groups = collaboration

Modelling books/thinkboards - these should be a record of student learning.
 A thinkboard is a piece of paper divided into three sections:
“Clues,” “Mathematical Proof,” “Reflection - where are you in the learning pit?”  
Co-constructed WALT or LI - at end “Were we counting from 1 or were we counting
on from the bigger number?  Were we skip counting?” Then they leave the teacher with
the idea of what they were learning.

‘We’re a whanau,’ not ‘we’re a team.’  Supportive rather than competitive.


$2 shop microphone for child sharing thinking.  Teacher needs to make strategic
choices about which groups will share and the sequence in which they will share.  


Teaching Channel - good youtube channel for PD in different curriculum areas.


Take away: These are some ideas I'd like to use from this PD
Co-constructing WALT at end.
Try Quick pix for maths warmup.  
Use cars as a maths context.
‘Thinking thumb’ when you’re ready to share.
Can use ‘what’s the pattern?’ rather than ‘what’s the answer?’
Choral counting - record on board and get children to notice the patterns.
When pairing up kids think about personality rather than maths ability.
 Don’t change the pairs all the time, give them some stability.
Finger on the arm as a signal ‘I need more thinking time.’
Revoicing - making what they said more succinct.  Remember to go back to kids
‘Is that what you meant?’

Class Dojo mindset videos - make links to them when kids are struggling.


Independent activities - purpose to these activities
Construction
Pattern blocks
Jigsaws
Threading
Focus or task card to support it.  
Number investigations - eg. have a number and they tell you all they know about that number.  
Maths detective activities for a guided reading book - make up a task card for a book.  
Maths detective box for little ones - make a box of some books with a magnifying glass
and they can find numbers and other maths in the books.
Spot the Difference books.
Simon Says/Boppit game
Memory
Memory match - one group per day, promote to parents too.  
Board games

Ipad games

Wednesday, 14 February 2018

Kohia PCT course 14/2/18

Today I attended the first session for the PCT course for 2nd year teachers at Kohia Education Centre. I did not attend the first year part of this course so it was interesting to see what was covered and I can see it will be valuable to connect with other teachers at a similar stage in their teaching journey. Below are my notes from the session:

Choose a picture and introduce another person not yourself - less social risk.

Teacher sharing little stories from morning tea - introduce new vocab - e.g. eating
lamingtons at morning tea…

Making parents feel welcome - share culture, what their child is good at, taking
away parents’ fear of school.  

Make sure evidence in portfolio links to PTC.  

Make sure reflections are targeted and critical - have a “so what.”
Can follow this structure: Description/Interpretation/Outcome
Make sure there is a narrative to follow.  

Deliberate Acts of Teaching
Questioning ‘“I wonder…”
Feedback - specific!

Record yourself….see how much you are questioning.  Effective questioning?
How much are you using the deliberate acts of teaching?
Can reflect on this.  
“I wonder why…” gives the impression that there’s not a right or wrong answer.

Importance of wait time/thinking time.
Can talk the night before about what children could write about the next day.  

Push number knowledge.

Setting up for success
“It’s your lucky day” - system for monitors - lucky day person gets to tidy library corner,
do lunches etc.  
Have alliterative name.
Set up better system for early finishers.
Morning routine photographed and put in steps.  Can send home to parents.  
Establish one out of reading, writing and maths first, then bring others in.  

Literate environment
Oral language is a prerequisite for writing.  
Rich oral language
Classroom filled with texts
Motivating area to inspire writing - eg. area that
Kids need to see good models of handwriting as well as typed words!
 Handwritten poems, for example.
Writing lessons should be about writing skills not content knowledge.
Writing topics need to be open enough for all children to access.  

Approaches to reading:
Reading to
Shared reading - modelling decoding, making meaning, thinking critically.
1st reading predicting, links to prior knowledge, reading for enjoyment.
Follow up could be dramatising the text!
Visual language - follow up
Innovating text - writing sentences based on the sentence structure in the book-
Eg. Brown Bear, brown bear what do you hear?  Honour, Honour, what do you hear?”
Shared reading book - sample weekly plan for Grandpa, Grandpa
M - WALT use our prior knowledge/make connections
Focus: what do you like doing with your grandpa? What makes grandparents special?
T - WALT understand punctuation
Focus: Full stop, question mark
W - make word families
Focus: -et word family
Th - WALT read fluently/think critically
Focus: What did the author have to know about fishing to write the story?
F - WALT be creative
Focus: Make a collage about your grandpa

What Does the Tide Bring In?
Where did your feet take you in the holidays?
Portraits?
Sand names?

Monkey’s Shoes
M - would a monkey really wear shoes?
Vocab around shoes

T - Introduce word ‘pair’ What else comes in pairs? Solve maths problem about pairs of shoes

W - Punctuation
  • Bring in a whole lot of shoes - classify the shoes.

Th - Make a list of ‘sh’ words

F - Design and make your own shoes - make an advertisement for your shoes. Identify positive
features of shoes - oral language - “These shoes are flexible and will make you run fast.”  

Guided reading
Tumble - a couple of activity they have to do: Browsing box, poetry book
Then...as long as you’ve done good reading to, shared reading, guided reading...they can choose
puzzles etc. Put say five things on the board. Playdough, cutting, construction, writing table
(make little books).  Blocks etc (learning to share).  
Lego - challenge to make things from the big book.  
Consequences for noise etc - “Pack up that activity and go to the library corner.”
Independent reading
Poems/songs
Another way to get children’s eyes across print!
Use nursery rhymes

Skills flow - match sentences with a picture.  
Kids listen to sentence, repeat sentence, match it with a picture.
Then describe pictures in writing.  

Eg. Before school I put up my star name.
After lunch I read quietly from my book box.  

4-6 pictures.

Book recommendations:

The Time it took Tom - good maths picture book
Row, Row, Row your waka

Discovery Time: Learning Through the Key Competencies

The Essential Oral Language Toolkit

Takeaway:
The main messages I got from today's session is the importance of reading to children (something I do a lot in my classroom), the importance of sharing stories about ourselves with the children (something I need to do more) and how to structure a week's worth of shared reading sessions around a big book.
I will try following Andy's structure for planning activities around the big book next week and see how these activities help the children engage with the text.
Another message I got from today was that it is important that children see good models of handwritten text in the classroom. I often spend time typing and printing things to feel like they look 'professional' and this was a good revelation for me!