Showing posts with label Math. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Math. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Multiplication Games

     During the first few weeks of school this fall August/September (I no longer live in a place with seasons; my students don't even believe that they exist), I want my students to work on reviewing their multiplication facts since this is an integral part to forth and fifth grade math. I'll have to see where they are at, but I'm hoping to use a variety of games and methods to review multiplication. Here are some of my ideas (mostly borrowed from other places and linked to the actual information):

War - Use Uno Cards to play war where they have to multiply for the answer to win

Matching Game

Hidden Picture (Find the Wrong Equations) (Courtesy of Pinterest Pin)

Using Legos in Socks to Write Multiplication Equations

Ping Pong Multiplication Game

Multiply Four Ways Worksheets

Musical Chairs

Spiral Multiplication Game

Multiplication Board Game

Multiplication Bingo

Fact Ball (I really like this one!)

Color By Multiplication Sheets


     I also really need to have math centers (also called stations) since I am covering two grade levels and a variety of current levels. Here are some ideas I found from others who are doing math centers/stations:

BEAM Math Centers
MATH Stations
Guided Math in a Multi-age Classroom
Math Centers Linky Party


Do you do centers with your class?
How do you review multiplication? I'd love more ideas.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Number Rhymes

     I've been busy this summer cleaning out my closets, preparing to move, and getting ready for my first classroom. While I cleaning, I found these rhymes for how to write the numbers 0 through 9. I believe I originally copied these from my little cousin's preschool or kindergarten teachers who wrote them on a newsletter. Some of these I love, but others I think I've heard better in the past and can't remember them. Do you use a fun rhyme to teach little ones how to write numbers or letters?
 
 


Sunday, October 7, 2012

Ways to Make Ten - Rainbow Style

     For the last three lessons that I would be teaching math to my first graders, I knew that I wanted to make them the best yet. I had taken a break from teaching math for a little bit to observe my teacher (since I did not observe her before I began), but I was ready to do the last few lessons and finish with a bang. The first day, we had to learn which numbers add to make ten. The second day, they found the missing part of ten (how to subtract from ten). My last day teaching math, we worked on problem solving using charts.

     I wanted to plan an engaging lesson that would still go with our curriculum and use part of it since that is expected (see a previous post). On Pinterest, I saw a pin with a rainbow to teach the numbers that add to be ten. It was from Dawn Gray's blog, Blooming Kiddos. She made a fabulous worksheet that used this rainbow to teach about  adding 3 addends. I decided it would be great to make a similar worksheet for the beginning of the year since my first graders are only learning which numbers make ten now.

     My students loved this activity! I warned them that I was mainly grading them on how well they listened, which meant that they could not work ahead. First graders love to color and love rainbows, so this was perfect to incorporate in with our math lesson.

   When we completed our rainbow sheet, the students did the inside of the enVision lesson independently. When they finished and had it checked by me, I sent them to the carpet area. They playing a finger game where one person would hold up however many fingers they wanted. The partner had to hold up how many more fingers it would take to equal ten. This was a simple and quiet activity, and it kept them occupied while I helped a couple of struggling students. It was also a great lead into the following day's lesson, where we found the missing parts of ten (subtraction).

     When teaching subtraction, we worked on dry erase boards. I sent groups off to play a matching game. I used pumpkin die-cuts and wrote the numbers 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10 on them. They put all of the cards face down. Then, they played like a usual matching game with their partner, except that matches were the two numbers that added to make ten. Most students enjoyed this game a lot with the exception of a few partners who had to return to their seats because they were not working together or were too loud.


     Now, it's freebie time! In case you wanted a copy of the fabulous rainbow worksheet, here it is(inspired by Dawn Gray and Pinterest). You can also click on the picture. Enjoy! Does anyone see the mistake in the example I posted? Please leave me a comment, especially if you grab a freebie. I love reading every one!

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Tales about Teaching Math and enVision

     The first subject I started to teach during student teaching was math. Growing up, I loved math. In fact, during freshman year I was a math major and took Calculus 3. Since then, I have been a peer tutor for math at my college. Last year, I took math for teachers and loved all the great ideas our professor gave us about how to teach math. He taught us so many different ways, we were definitely prepared. I found ways to make it fun with my fifth graders in the spring such as playing BattleGraph. I came in very excited to teach math to my first graders.

      Last year, the school I am at began using enVision. I had used enVision in my previous schools, and I was fine with it. It worked well with my small second grade class in fall 2011, so I figured it would be okay.

     The first unit for first grade is called "Understanding Addition." Each lesson has different parts you can use such as an online introduction to the lesson, a worksheet, a Common Core review, a workbook with differentiated pages (we assign homework from it), a lesson review page, and three differentiated games. Typically, my teacher told me that she starts with the introduction on the computer. Then, she completes the worksheet with the students. The front of the worksheet is always done together and uses manipulatives. On the inside, one page is labeled guided practice, and the other is independent practice. Finally, the back page has word problems.

     During the first math lesson, which was also the first lesson I taught during student teaching, our principal walked in to do a snapshot. At this point, the students were completing some problems independently with my teacher and I walking around to help. When his report came back, it said that 95% of our students were engaged, which is great for a first lesson in my book.

    Throughout the first unit, I noticed that my math lessons were not going as well as I would have liked. The same five or six students were always raising their hands to answer questions and participate. Most of these students would have been able to complete the lesson worksheet without my help. When I called on other students at random, they either were not paying attention or really did not understand what we were doing. Some of these students, I would pull aside the next morning to work with them in a small group on what they did not understand.

     Slowly, I became frustrated with having to follow our curriculum directly. We planned with the other math teachers, and I had to follow the curriculum and was expected to use the lesson worksheets. These worksheets are long and often confusing for my first graders. I did not have an issue with them in second grade, but in my opinion, they are not always appropriate for first. My students also had a very hard time with the manipulatives. They were not using them or putting them away properly, despite reteaching the procedures multiple times. I would love to use the differentiated games more, but there just is not enough time, plus it always leads to arguments or confusion.

     To finish the first unit about addition, I had a review day. Together, we worked on dry erase boards. Then, I gave each student a matching game. It had a problem, picture, and sum. I cut the pieces apart and put different amounts in different color bags. Then, I gave students who needed a challenge a bag with 15 matches, most students received 10 matches, and lower students received 6 matches. This worked well! First, I modeled how to make them and ways to make it easier such as sorting the three categories first. Then, I walked around as they were completing it to help students who had trouble with sorting. Most understood the math concept though!

     For the first unit, I did a pretest and post test, and I saw improvement in every student! Well, except for one girl, who actually understands it, but thought she would do so well that she did not listen to directions. Despite my frustrations, they really were learning. They may have not showed it to me in class, but they did understand it much more than before, especially the word problems.

     In my future class, I would love to set up some sort of math stations at least 2 or 3 days a week. This would allow me to challenge high students more, re-enforce lessons with students that need it, and review all of our skills through different engaging games and activities.

 
     If you have read this whole post, I am proud of you for sticking with it! Here is the addition matching game. It's not a colorful game because I don't have a color printer available to me, so I do my best by printing it on colored paper instead. EnVision uses a domino look for addition in unit one, so the pictures reflect that.

 
How do you teach math? What strategies have worked for you?
 
 
Update: After taking a pre- and post-test on the first section, I found that all of my students did improve and learn from this curriculum, even when I felt very frustrated with it.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

BattleGraph

     A few weeks ago, the fifth grade teacher I am working with asked me to teach a lesson practicing plotting ordered pairs on a coordinate graph. She had introduced the new concept the day before, and the students certainly needed more practice. I found this game online that is very similar to the Battleship I grew up playing, except it was adapted for teaching coordinate graphs. This awesome PowerPoint was made by Sarah Grabowski.


     Originally, I was going to change it a little bit so that my students only had to graph positive ordered pairs (that's all the standard asked for), but my teacher said she had taught them to graph positive and negative numbers, so I didn't have to change anything. One additional requirement that I did make was that they had to write on the blank part of their hidden board all of the ordered pairs of the locations of their ships. This allowed me time to walk around and see who was understanding coordinates and who needed more help. I also had them play on the same team as a partner so that they could figure out where the point needed to go together (they still each had to fill out their own board).

    The students loved this game! Unfortunately, it took a little while to get set up, so no one finished it before library time, but my teacher said they would finish it another day. I love math lessons/activities like this where students can practice and have fun with it. Too often I see these students hate math, which I believe is very sad as math was usually my favorite subject.