Posts

Peach Plains Revisited - Design Thinking and a Jar Full of Skittles

Image
My math education class visited Peach Plains Elementary one more time before the semester ended to work with the kids in design thinking. We arrived at around 2:00 at the elementary school and broke the class into our two groups from before, with half of the GVSU students working with first graders and the other half, including myself, working with the fourth graders from our previous visit. Upon entering the room from before, the kids we had worked with seemed excited with the prospect of working with us again. In order to make sure that we got to work more quickly, we sent the prospective teachers to work with the same group as last time. In hindsight, I can't really tell if that was the best decision, as some groups reported less focus on the activity. In our group, the kids were laser-focused on uncovering my partner's age (which was not the purpose of the activity). Anyways, after reuniting with our kids from last time, we began with a short activity that would get

Family Math Night - You Must Cross The River!

Image
During the semester, my class signed up for a few Family Math Nights where we, the students, taught the kids at the event how to play a math based game. While some might have a little bit of work that they would need to do to come up with a math game, but I have been sitting on something for the entire semester and before. You see, one of my favorite hobbies is a little game by the name of Dungeons and Dragons, a very popular role-playing game. Now one might ask, "Dungeons and Dragons? What makes that a good math game?" It's a good question, but it all is based on the method that the game is carried out. Most everything substantial is run through die rolls which dictates whether the action of the character is successful. Ultimately, D&D is just a probability-based game with fantasy flavor, and my partner and I leaned into that. Naturally, some other questions might be "Doesn't that game take forever?" or "Isn't that game a bit too complicate

Peach Plains Elementary

Recently, my math class went to Peach Plains Elementary in Grand Haven to teach a lesson on measurement to a first and fourth grade class. We split up the class into groups of two and divide ourselves between the first and fourth grade classes. I was sent into the fourth grade class. The activity that we ran was measuring three items in the school building, which was a backup plan from the playground equipment we had planned to measure because of the rain. My partner and I had a group of four kids, three girls and a boy, and we were able to measure the three objects pretty easily. One girl was rather energetic, measuring the objects quickly enough to prompt us to tell her to measure the objects from another direction. At the end, we went back to the classroom to perform a bit of multiplication to determine how long the objects were in inches. This is where I had my moment. The one boy in my group was an energetic boy, seemingly a troublemaker, and he didn’t seem to enjoy the math he

Math Activities

Since I am interested in being a math teacher, I am taking a class that is dedicated to teaching aspects of math. While most of the students in the class do not have a math education major, math is the primary focus of the class. One idea in the class was to break down larger math concepts into little pieces so that big picture ideas are easier to learn. One activity that made this lesson easier to understand was finding the are of irregular shapes on a grid sheet of paper. We had to find the area of the shape without using common formulas for triangles or using other complex issues. As a result, we made observations that lead to us getting the area correct. I believe that using this method in classroom would really benefit the kids, as they would begin to make connections understanding the area of triangles without ever learning the A= 1/2bh formula. In the lesson, just like in class, we would encourage our students to design their own shape on the grid and get the creators of the s

First Post! My Math Background

Hello Readers! If you are reading this, clearly you are at least a little bit interested in math and/or teaching. As a elementary math teaching major, I am learning what it means to be a teacher in one of my favorite subjects. However, I did not reach the decision to become a math teacher on my own. Instead, it took all my years through school and my first year at college to finally make that decision, but I feel that it was the right decision. As I grew up, I always loved school. School was where I got to broaden my knowledge and see the many friends I had made in my life. Every year, I would never be able to pick a favorite subject, so when asked, I would just say, "all of them." However, on the inside, I believe that my math classes were at least a top contender for Eddie's Favorite Subject, since I truly had some amazing teachers in those classes. Shout out to both Mr. Conklins in the Mattawan School District, because it was through them that I learned about my pr