280 likes | 466 Views
Math Differentiation Made Manageable Cheryl Beasley Yorkville School District # 115 mrs.beasley115@gmail.com. Differentiation. We want ALL students to have continuous learning. Not intended to put labels on students. Instructional grouping is key. Students are different.
E N D
Math Differentiation Made ManageableCheryl BeasleyYorkville School District # 115mrs.beasley115@gmail.com
Differentiation • We want ALL students to have continuous learning. • Not intended to put labels on students. • Instructional grouping is key. Students are different. • Can we meet needs when teaching whole class instruction most of the time? • Strategies to help implement differentiation.
Differentiation • Meeting all level learners • Pre-assessments (ex. use in order to have groups of 5 and 22) • Tiered work and lessons (create 3 leveled questions from facts) • Enrichment of curriculum • Learning Centers • Ability grouping • Assessment • Effective and Efficient Teaching • Guided Math
Pre-assessments • Unit or Chapter pre-assessments • Now that I know, they know this material what do I do? • I don’t want to know this information. • What can I do with the information? • Post – it note daily assessments • Your Name • Grade level • Number of years of experience • Do you use Guided Math in your classroom? • If no, would you like to learn more?
Learning Centers • Define • What makes a good learning center? • Why use them? • During the centers • Students Role • Teachers Role
Let’s see some Examples • http://www2.scholastic.com • Teachers at the top • Teaching Resources • Scroll down and select the grade level • Choose your subject area, start searching • http://www.prufrock.com • To the left select math • Best sellers, (challenge math Ed Zaccaro) • http://www.piecesoflearning.com • Professional Development • Conferences handouts • http://www.freespirit.com/ • At the bottom of the screen is a link for differentiation.
Mystery Number 1_. _ _ _ • Clue 1: The digit in the thousandths place is double the digit in the ones place • Clue 2: The digit in the tenths place is odd, and it represents the sum of the digits in the tens place and the thousandths place. • Clue 3: There are exactly two odd Digits in the Mystery Number. • Clue 4: The digit in the hundredths place is three times the digit in the ones place. Here is an example of a Mystery Number. A Mystery Number has clues that lead to only one correct number. Students will be practicing Place Value and problem solving. When a student creates their own Mystery Number, they will have to keep in mind to only lead to one correct answer with their clues. Total of 5 points ____________ Enrichment activity with Mrs. Beasley
How do you grade / assess?? • Math pass • Menus • Contracts
Math Pass Name________________ Complete 3 out of the 5 activities. You get to choose which activities to complete. When you feel finished with correct answers please have _________ check your work. You will get a hole punch for each completed activity. Due ________
Chapter 4 : Proportions, Algebra and Geometry Below you will find a check list of the items you need to complete. Feel free to work at your own pace. I will be meeting with small groups daily to check on your progress and teach the lesson if needed. If you are stuck some resources you can use are: your book, the math website www.msmath3.net, or the internet. Chapter 4 is a short unit and we will skip a few sections and do them later. (4-5 similar and congruent polygons and 4-6 scale drawings) Extra credit available this chapter 4-3 Enrichment 4-7 Enrichment 4-8 Enrichment I am hoping you can finish this by Friday December 3rd??
Learning Contracts Alternative Working Conditions Students who demonstrate an advanced understanding of the current topics will have a choice to do more challenging work for their skill level. This does not mean extra work but in-class problem solving. Students will attend the “lesson” portion of the class however will work on problem solving rather than extra reinforcement activities. There are a couple rules the student, parent and teacher need to be aware of. • Stay on task with the alternative activity. • Hold your questions while the teacher is teaching. • Never brag about your opportunities to work on alternative activities. • Work on your assignment and do not to interrupt other students around you. Thank You, Student Name_____________________________________________ Parent Signature___________________________________________ Teacher Signature__________________________________________
Classroom Model 1focus on helping below level students • Teach whole class lesson first. • Pass out or assign practice for current lesson • Above Grade Level students • Offer all students the opportunity to do the hardest 10 (10%) of the assignment • If they finish with 100% accuracy they do not need more practice. • The may work on “other” work • Independent ongoing project • Learning Centers • Investigations
Classroom Model 1focus on helping below level students • At Grade level students • Complete practice work • When complete they may work on learning centers • Below Grade Level • There always seems to be a group of students that need one-on-one help. • Work together at a back table. • Let them move on as they need “But the below level students never get the chance to do the ‘fun’ activities.”
Classroom Model 2Focus on the above grade level students • Teach whole-class lesson. Pass out practice work. • Above Grade Level students • Complete practice work and meet with teacher in the back. • Here you can do an extension lesson together and spend some extra time with higher group. • At Grade level students andBelow Grade Level • Let them complete practice work and then work on learning centers, games, computer stations or other extensions.
Classroom Model 3Flexible Grouping/Guided Math • Usually the class seems to divide into three groups. (the at grade level seems to be the largest group) • Think of two areas. • With the teacher and working in the classroom. • Deliver lesson in the small group. • Practice work • Learning centers
Compacting Curriculum Compacting Curriculum Chapter 3 Course 3 First set of questions are the challenge problems. If too hard move on to second choice and complete those indicated problems. • Lesson 3 – 1 Square roots Pg. 116 Find a square root Find a negative square root Use Square Roots to Solve an Equation Use an Equation to Solve a Problem • Pg. 119 Problems #39 – 48 Challenge problems _____________ • Pg. 119 Problems #14 – 40 all ________________ • Lesson 3 – 2 Estimate Square roots Pg. 120 Estimate Square Roots • Pg. 122 Problems # 21, 25 – 36 ___________________ • Pg. 122 Problems # 10 – 31 all ______________________
Template of Independent Project Theme_______________________
Learning Center / Extension Ideas Phone Books Grade 1 -2 Add up phone numbers and find the highest total. Grade 2 -3 Find a number higher than 60 Find a number lower than 60 A number that will equal an even or an odd total A number added to another number or subtracted Grades 4 – 6 Use order of operations to make a phone number equal 10,30, 60, 100 Grocery Ads Grades 1 – 3 Go shopping and get a sum close to $10.00 Grades 5 – 6 Use proportions and unit rate to find the best deal. 3 pizzas for $5.00 or 31 pizzas for $18.00 Find the price of juice per ounce Restaurant Menus Feed a family of 4 Compare two restaurants and how far will $20.00 get you? What % tip would you leave? Grocery Receipts Tape them to your front board. Figure out the percent I saved. Total spent $39.45 You SAVED $4.23 what is the percent saved? X = 10.7% Cereal Box Find the Volume of a cereal box. Create a box with 160 cubic inches. Stat Books Create problems Make Game boards Use pasta and beans
Steps to implement guided math • Pre-assess what will you use? • Groups • Menu or plan of who is doing what and when • Learning centers (organizing what you already have in the classroom to use for enrichment of curriculum) • Assessment (math pass) • Independent research or investigations