Showing posts with label Maths. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maths. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Creating Lessons from Holiday Decorations - A Big List of Ideas



It's time to decorate the classroom! Or to create fabulous decorations for your students to take home with them! But what other learning can you get from holiday decorations?

Creating Lessons from Holiday Decorations

Find the Maths

  • What angles can you find in a 5 point star? A 6 point star? 7 points?
  • What's the circumference of the bauble? The diameter?
  • What shapes can you find in holiday decorations?
  • What nets do you need to create 3D decorations?
  • What's the area of those nets?
  • How many decorations do you need to decorate a classroom? To decorate a tree?

Find the Writing

  • Write about why we need holiday decorations
  • Write about the history of holiday decorations
  • Write a procedure for making holiday decorations
  • Write a short story about holiday decorations
  • Write a newspaper article about how your class is decorated

Find the Engineering

  • Which decorations are the strongest?
  • How can you made decorations stronger?
  • How do you test the strength of a decoration?
  • Can you use decorations to make a machine?
  • Can you make decorations move on their own?
  • Can you create structures out of decorations?

Find the Creativity

  • How can you portray decorations using paint? Pencils? Clay?
  • What recycled materials can you use to create decorations?
  • Can you create a dance about decorations?
  • Can you create a play or a song about decorations?
  • How can you use colour in your decorations?
  • How can you use shapes in decorations?
Don't forget to leave your holiday ideas in the comments!


Christmas Paper Chain Challenge





Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Surviving Christmas in an Australian Classroom



Ah, Christmas. The students are tired. Admin are insisting that it's business as usual until 3pm on the last day. There's activities and performances and assemblies and you never get a full class for more than half an hour at a time. You've just found out you need to move your whole classroom across the school. Oh, and it's swelteringly hot!

Of course, what you need are Christmas or holiday themed activities which promote real learning - while fitting into the spaces of time you get in the classroom!

Surviving Christmas in an Australian Classroom

Bring on the Games

This is a great time for reinforcing everything you've taught during the year with a series of games. Your students will love you, they'll have a better chance of remembering things into the new year and then their next teacher will also love you! 

Short multiplication games, grammar games and spelling games are great for filling in the 5 or 10 minute gaps before you have to be somewhere. You could also hold a trivia quiz over the last few weeks, breaking the class into teams and covering all sorts of information from the year (things you've covered, books you've read, events you've attended plus general trivia).

Board games and adapted board games can work really well for those times when you're missing some of the students. 

You can also take the games outside to rejuvenate students. Use the first hour of the day when it's a little cooler, or find a covered or shaded place to play. 



Writing Tasks

Writing is one of those tasks which is wonderfully adaptable to any event or time of the year. Students can create their own creative writing prompts, create stories, poems, songs or plays about Christmas or the holidays. They can respond to articles in newspapers or online. They can write letters to family and friends or write reflections about the year they've had. 

Persuasive writing is now a big feature of Australian classrooms and an excellent technique to work on at Christmas time. Students can write advertisements or letters to the editor or they can respond to a persuasive text prompt.


Australian Christmas Persuasive Writing Pack
Australian Christmas Persuasive Argument Writing Pack


Reading

Although the Christmas season might not allow enough time for a Christmas novel, there is enough time to examine Christmas picture books. Students can examine picture books based on old carols and stories or picture books which tell new stories. They can talk about the way Christmas is portrayed, the emphasis which is put on Christmas in the books (is it about Santa? Giving? Where Christmas is held? The food?) or how different Christmas books compare with each other. Alongside the reading discussion, there's plenty of room for accompanying writing and craft activities.

An Aussie Night Before Christmas Book Study
An Aussie Night Before Christmas Book Study

Maths Investigations

Christmas and holidays are great for maths investigations. You can plan for Christmas lunch (time table for cooking, menu planning for 4 people or 6 people or 8 people, working out the cost of ingredients and creating a budget.

Or you could create an investigation around wrapping presents - how can you wrap different sized boxes? How much paper will you need? 

Or look at patterns of Christmas lights. What patterns can you create? How does it change when you use different numbers of lights or colours?


There are so many easy to set up and easy to implement ideas to create real learning at Christmas time - even with the heat. And don't forget my Christmas freebie - available here!


Friday, October 21, 2016

What are Math Investigations?



Picture of stairs. Text - what is a math investigation


When we teach mathematics it can be very easy to get caught in the nuts and bolts - the mathematical processes and ensuring that students get the 'right' answers.

It's important, though, to extend past the basic rules and processes, to get our students understanding how they can be combined and where they might have real-world applications.

Maths (or math) investigation allow students to apply their maths understanding in various situations. They usually start with a 'real world' mathematical question - big or small:

Text - Real World Mathematical Questions


Students then formulate plans to answer the questions, collect data, use multiple processes to solve the problem, communicate the answer and reflect on their learning.

The joy of maths investigations lie in their flexibility. You can ask students to solve a large question which might take a few weeks to solve, or give them a smaller, more focused question to solve in one lesson. You can provide measurements or partial answers, or require students to collect them themselves. You can combine them with science or engineering or history or the arts. And you can cover a wide range of maths standards.

Have you used maths investigations? Have you got any good maths questions to share?

Head to TeachersPayTeachers to find a Halloween Maths Investigation!

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    Friday, October 7, 2016

    Five Quick Alternatives to Holiday Busywork



    With lots of holidays approaching, you might have made the decision to step away from holiday busywork. But planning integrated learning activities can take time - especially when they begin to grow and get overwhelmingly complex. And time for teachers is always a precious thing!

    With that in mind, here's five easier ways to bring great holiday learning into the classroom.

    Image of Halloween teaching products. Text - 5 Quick Alternatives to Holiday Busywork


    1. Creative Writing Prompts

    If you've been covering creative writing in your English classes, this is a perfect way to combine holidays and lessons. You can share one prompt for the whole class to respond to, give students a choice of four or five prompts or allocate a different prompt for each student.

    Take it Further

    • Challenge students to try a different creative format like poetry or a fictional memoir
    • Ask students to work in groups or pairs - collaborative writing can create some interesting results
    • Students can publish their work to create a class book or website


    2. Persuasive Arguments

    While persuasive arguments are often about big important subjects, students can also develop persuasive writing skills with smaller holiday related topics. 

    Think about elements of the holidays which could be (or have been) changed. For example, students could write a persuasive essay arguing that trick-or-treating should involve non-food items only.

    Take it Further
    • Persuasive arguments can be essays, letters to the editor, advertisements or debates. Students can engage with them as part of a wider project - like creating a holiday podcast or a holiday newsletter or news website
    • You can mix up presentation - students can turn their arguments into posters, blog posts, displays, newspaper articles or podcasts

    3. Read About It

    Picture books, short stories or text excerpts can be a great way of exploring a holiday through literature. As well as reading the story, students can discuss how the holiday is portrayed, if it feels realistic or connected to their own experiences and if the author has done a good job of portraying the holiday. They can also explore holidays in different parts of the world.

    Take it Further
    • Reading holidays texts can be done as a whole class or different groups can discuss different texts. Students can come together to compare different texts, creating images to show how they're different and alike.
    • Students can create reviews or advertisements of the texts - turning them into images, videos, short articles or audio files.

    4. Maths Investigations

    Maths (or math) Investigations can easily be condensed or simplified if you're short on time. To do this, pick an element of your holiday - eg. valentines for Valentines Day. Then brainstorm some mathematical questions:



    Any one of these investigations can be presented over one or two lessons. Or, if you have more time you can combine and expand them!

    Take it Further
    • Ask students to create their own mathematical investigations
    • Brainstorm several investigations and set up maths centres. Or create a choice board allowing students to explore the maths investigations in their own time.

    5.  Create a Maths Question


    A lot of the time we give students maths problems and ask them to find the answers. But what if we turned that upside down and gave them the answer - then asked the students to develop a range of problems to match it?

    This gives students an alternative way to look at mathematical processes and can help them understand how word problems or multi-step problems work.

    It's easy to give answers a holiday feel. For example - the answer could be 720 Christmas Lights. Students can then create simple and complex word problems which match the answer.

    Take it Further
    • Students can share their questions with classmates, other classes or the wider community
    • Challenge students to match their questions with what they're learning in class. Can they make an area problem? A chance and data problem? A problem involving fractions?


    Although combining learning with the holidays can seem daunting - especially when you need to fit it around parties, parades, events and the excitement of a class of students - these quick alternatives can give you a great way to celebrate and learn.


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