Monday, February 13, 2017

Blending Math Class

Since Christmas, I have been working alongside Mrs. Justice to help personalize learning in her 5th grade math classes. It's been an interesting ride trying to find practices that best fit her students and her style.  We're nowhere near ready to call this a completed project, but we've come so far already. I wanted to blog about where we've been and the direction we're going.  Hopefully by the time school lets out I can create a post about how we've totally personalized learning in 5th grade math.

Station Rotation Model
When I first started visiting Mrs. Justice's room, she already had a station rotation model in action.  Students spent time in three stations each class period -- small group, individual, games.  With my presence, we were able to add a fourth station -- technology.  Since it's really hard to get meaningful work done with four rotations a day, we rotated through the four stations over two days.

The big question at the time was WHAT technology to use.  We use Envision Math at our school, and they have a website with student activities. The original goal was to use that site for the tech station, but it just wasn't conducive for personalized learning. So, we went with MobyMax, a site I use with younger students.

What is great about MobyMax is its personalization.  Before you do any work in math, you take a placement test that figures out your holes in learning and gives you lessons to help fill those gaps. Another thing MobyMax does well is review math facts in an app called Fact Fluency.  However, as students continued learning missing skills, we realized there was obvious things missing with MobyMax.  For one, it lacks a lot of bells and whistles. While a second grader may not realize the difference, a fifth grader will visibly react to "the MobyMax voice" and less than optimum graphics.  Another thing that tripped us up was the lack of flexibility.  If a student bombed a kindergarten skill in the placement test, the only way to get past that skill was to go through all the lessons and practices -- even a retest didn't solve the problem.

We had to find something else.

Flexible Learning
Our simultaneous searching lead various places with great blogs and articles, but we hit pay dirt when Mrs. Justice found Mrs. Meehan's math website for a couple reasons.

For one, this led us to the Engage NY curriculum which is something Mrs. Justice was familiar with from her previous school.  She printed out the modules and used them to revamp her entire approach.  Students were assessed and given a starting point in the curriculum based on their assessments.  This helped students start exactly where they need to learning.

We also found the resources for blended learning page, and that opened my eyes to a whole new set of math websites I didn't know existed.  For now, we've landed on Zearn as a favorite.  In Zearn, students are placed in specific lessons by the teacher but are scaffolded through the process from there. Each lesson has warm-ups, fact practice, a video lesson, more practice, and a wrap up that will teach a particular skill. And, say good-bye to freaky voices.  Zearn has actors who play the part of teachers on their instructional videos.

That leads us to our next blended learning model, which I'll call flexible learning for lack of a better name.  Students are expected to learn in three modes:
1.  Small group instruction.  Some students are required to spend 10-20 minutes with Mrs. Justice each day.  Others are expected to check in face-to-face a couple times a week to make sure they are learning the new content.
2.  Individual work.  Students are given paper lessons to work on in class and are expected to complete 3-5 a week.  If questions arise, they can ask peers or a teacher for help. As mentioned above, students are given papers each week based on how they have performed on assessments so they are personalized to an extent.
3.  Technology.  While we really like Zearn, we also have left the door open for them to continue with MobyMax or use DreamBox (a site they had been using since the start of school). Each of these sites enable personalization based on performance and allow students to move at their own pace.

And the room looks different than it used to look too as evidenced by this panoramic picture I took.



Math Menu
Moving forward we want to work toward a math menu model, where students will be able to choose each day between main dishes, side dishes, and desserts.  These will include some of the pieces mentioned above but will also include creating and playing math games and creating and watching math videos to name a few.  We'd also like to open up a few other math programs to students as well. (Click the link for my most recent ideas.)

We are constantly reading up on new ideas, so if you have an idea, web site, or blog you could recommend, please send it my way!

Thursday, February 9, 2017

2nd Grade Book Commercials

Inspired by this great article, I set out with Mrs. Zureick in second grade to make book commercial videos.  We hit some hiccups along the way, but I'm really happy with the final product and how we grew through the process.

Step One:  Selecting a video production tool.
In the article, Mr. Buetow's class used Adobe Spark for their videos. I immediately fell in love with Adobe Spark for its look and ease of use and wanted to run with it.  Sadly, Adobe has a 13 and over policy for its users.  We discussed the possibility of creating a generic school account that students could access. Sadly, that plan was not approved at the district office, so we had to look in other directions.

That search didn't take long at all. With three WeVideo projects under my belt, I felt comfortable using this platform.  While I would have liked the animated look from Adobe Spark, WeVideo is an excellent and easy program to use for 30 second video spots.  (Feel free to click here, here, and here to read about our previous projects.)

Step Two: Read the books and write the scripts.
I didn't help with this part of the project, but Mrs. Zureick's class spent a lot of time in the school library reading books that may interest younger students. Then, each student wrote up commercials for two books. Using markers, they created their own cue cards to read on camera.

Step Three: Getting pictures.
This turned out to be a minor hurdle to jump over. When I started working with the first two kids, I realized they needed to take pictures of illustrations in the books.  I spent a while trying to teach myself how to take a picture using a Chromebook webcam and get that saved into WeVideo on the fly (while wondering how I would teach it to 30 2nd graders) when it hit me that we have a small stack of iPads assigned to each grade level.

In the end, we took pictures with iPads, plugged the iPads into Chromebooks, then loaded them directly into WeVideo.  That added a couple hours to the project, but it worked just fine.



Step Four: Recording and editing the videos. 
When I started working with students on this project, we were in the library.  I loved the bookshelves in the background, so we made sure that all our "production studios" had a set of bookshelves we could use.



WeVideo is literally so easy a second grader can do it. As you'll see in the example videos at the end, we had three elements: a video of students talking, three pictures from the book, and background music.  Once we got cooking we could do multiple videos at one time and crank one out in less than 15 minutes.

As you can see in the picture, we tried to work in small teams.  I never felt that I had to have control of the Chromebook or the cue cards. I was quite fine with kids helping kids. It worked great! When I was being observed by my principal I made sure one of the best helpers was there working alongside me.  That was a positive part of the observation -- I had a protege working with me.

Step Five: Get rid of last names.
Our school policy is to not post student last names online.  Our librarian made the realization that WeVideo automatically displays the video creator's first and last name.  We had to scramble together notes home asking parents for permission to use the videos.  Just before we started deleting videos, WeVideo came through and showed us how to change the names. Whew!

Step Six: Publicize the videos.
The final step was to make these videos available to other students.  We are doing this two ways.  One, the links to all the videos will go into our school-wide computerized library catalog. So, when a student goes on the webpage for that book, she can view a video commercial about that book.  Two, QR Codes will be printed on labels and affixed to the inside cover of these books.  This will give students instant access to our book commercials.




As I wrap up, I'd like to thank a few people:
  • Jesse Buetow not only wrote the article that gave this project life but was willing to answer questions for me from the outset. 
  • Debbie Schroeder is our school librarian.  She's been on top of this project from the moment I sent the email out to the school. She's excited to get more videos created by more students. 
  • Tina Zureick is not afraid to do something new and has invited me into her room on more than one occasion.
  • The guys at WeVideo bailed me out of a jam. They were willing to help me with questions -- again -- that I could have probably answered myself if I didn't go into "freak out" mode. 
Here are a couple of videos for you to enjoy.



Comments System

Disqus Shortname