Over the past three years, I have learned that getting students to discuss math is sometimes more important than anything else. I always encourage students in my classroom to talk to each other about WHAT they are thinking and WHY. Today, in my last math class of the day, it happened and it was a dream come true!
The warm-up on the board was a question about Mr Rey's bank account. He had a balance of -26.00 and deposited some money and ended up with a balance of 23.00. I pulled this question from our fall benchmark test and thought I would see how they did. They had 4 options to choose from. A. $3 B. $23 C. $43 D. $49. I instructed the students to justify/prove their answer. Students talked talking to each other at the table clusters then before I knew it, students were talking to each other across the room! I made a quick decision, pulled some tables together and made one large 'conference' table as the kids called it.
The things that I noticed that students were doing...
- Speaking up for kids that were too shy to share
- Silent leaders surfacing
- Little to no off task behaviors
- A sense of group and ownership
- Explanations beyond the, "I picked C" solutions
- Students asking other students to explain
- Modeling of real life problems/discussions/solutions
When I felt that they were at a point where they had come to a general consensus, I stepped in and summarized the behaviors I listed above. Then we went on to present our findings. This group of 13 kids had 5 different ways to solve this one multiple choice problem! I was so proud of them and what they had accomplished without even knowing it. Needless to say, GEMA had to wait but this was too good of a teachable moment to pass up!
Ever have something like this happen? Till another day!
Katie
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