SlideShare uma empresa Scribd logo
1 de 33
Kirsten Hope Walker, M.A. Ed., M.S. Ed.

 All life is an experiment. The more experiments you
make the better. – Ralph Waldo Emerson
 The true method of knowledge is experiment. -
William Blake
 I have always been more interested in experiment,
than in accomplishment. – Orson Welles
Quotes

 #4 Develop skills to
engage all students in
challenging learning
activities.
Danielson Framework

 Adapt curriculum to be more relevant to your
students’ world view.
 Explore the many ways interdisciplinary content can
be incorporated into all lessons.
 Appraise the knowledge gained through
stewardship opportunities, discussions, and debates.
Today’s objectives

Who am I to say?
How does my background and experiences play into this?

Childhood aspirations

Paths to teaching

My Formal Education

Formal, Non-formal, Informal
(Know the difference)

Where I have been
Outside the Box
Environmental Education

The Question
Why it changed the way I approached teaching.
Sophomore Physical Science Class

The answer
I didn’t want to give her.

My research/answer

Adapt curriculum to be
more relevant to
students’ worldview
What did I do?

 Challenge: Tell me the science of whatever you want.
Science is Everywhere!

 Capstone environmental education class
 Incorporate technology to lessons
 History, physical education, reading, problem
solving, alliteration, and fun!
 NIU Geocache Race!
Pre-service Teachers
Prairie Research
Institute Science
Camp 2013
• 12 students, 50+ scientists
• Rising high school juniors, seniors,
and recent graduates
• Exposure to work by scientists
• Instills the value of science
education
• Opportunity to job shadow the next
year.
Prairie Research
Institute Science
Camp 2014
• 12 students, 30 scientists
• Rising high school juniors, seniors,
and recent graduates
• Exposure to work by scientists
• Instills the value of science
education
• Opportunity to job shadow the next
year.
R/V Lake Guardian
Lake Michigan
Shipboard Science
Workshop
• Opportunity for 15 teachers/year
• Week-long trip one of the Great
Lakes
• Work with scientists on research
• Great Lakes issues
• Use experience to make science
relevant to their students
• Experiments
• Scientist connections
• Hydrolab
The Medicine Chest
http://www.iisgcp.org/medicinechest/
• Metacognitive
vocabulary
• Flipped classroom
• NGSS aligned

Explore ways
interdisciplinary content can
be incorporated into all
lessons.
Even the Pythagorean theorem?

Why do I need to know
a2 + b2 = c2 ?
 Build houses, decks,
buildings, and put
windows, doors and
floors in.
 Baseball diamond
 Art
 Anything that requires
a right angle.

Don’t stop there!
Tell the story!
 Greek History
 Psychology
 Pythagoras (560-500
B.C.E)
 Secret Brotherhood of
Pythagoreans, devoted
to the study of
mathematics (cult-like)
 “Numbers rule the
universe!”
 After completion,
sacrificed 100 oxen

 Cultural Biomes =Cultural and Environmental
Awareness
ESL Biology
(interdisciplinary approach)

Appraising knowledge gained
through stewardship
opportunities, discussions, and
debates
Testing long-term knowledge and not whether or not your
students can guess correctly on a scantron

More of this

Not this

How?
 Start from the first day
of class.
 Short essays with
specific talking points.
 Build with
stewardship,
discussions, and
debates
 Insist on including
relevance in life.
 Make the tests shorter,
but more meaningful.
 The final essay is
comprehensive and
personal.
 Have your students
evaluate the class as to
how much they feel they
have learned and how
they will use it.
 Incorporate NGSS
thinking

 Distributive law
 Optics
 Pablo Picasso
 Bacteria or viruses
 Civil War
 Isotopes
 Acids and bases
 Geologic time
 Drama
 Waves
 Story structure
 Biomes
 Balancing a budget
 Ecology
 Abnormal
Psychology
 Others…
 Give rationale, approach
(teaching methods),
possible outcomes
Your turn:
Why do I need to know this?

Share time

 I learned this, at least, by my experiment; that if one
advances confidently in the direction of his dreams,
and endeavors to live the life which he has
imagined, he will meet with a success unexpected in
common hours. - Henry David Thoreau
 When teachers complain about your class having
“too much fun” during school and it’s making them
look bad, respond with “You are the only person that
can make you look bad.” – Dr. Robert Carter (NIU)
Final Quotes

Contact information: walkerkirstenhope@gmail.com or
khw@illinois.edu
Thank you for your time and participation.
Questions?

Mais conteúdo relacionado

Mais procurados

Incorporating the Nature of Science Throughout the Year
Incorporating the Nature of Science Throughout the YearIncorporating the Nature of Science Throughout the Year
Incorporating the Nature of Science Throughout the YearJerrid Kruse
 
Science Matters Pres
Science Matters PresScience Matters Pres
Science Matters Presjohnwest
 
2019 20 pgce session 1 what is science materials me
2019 20 pgce  session 1 what is science materials me2019 20 pgce  session 1 what is science materials me
2019 20 pgce session 1 what is science materials meMariaElsam
 
Asgment hbsc1103
Asgment hbsc1103Asgment hbsc1103
Asgment hbsc1103KPM
 
Sarahpetersw0101628edx2260
Sarahpetersw0101628edx2260Sarahpetersw0101628edx2260
Sarahpetersw0101628edx2260Sarah Peters
 
2109 20 primary science school direct session 1 what is science me
2109 20 primary science school direct session 1 what is science me2109 20 primary science school direct session 1 what is science me
2109 20 primary science school direct session 1 what is science meMariaElsam
 
CONNECT open schooling - Phase 1 Piloting Adoption - findings
CONNECT open schooling - Phase 1 Piloting Adoption - findingsCONNECT open schooling - Phase 1 Piloting Adoption - findings
CONNECT open schooling - Phase 1 Piloting Adoption - findingsAlexandra Okada
 
Science Syllabus
Science SyllabusScience Syllabus
Science Syllabusllsinclair
 
2020:2021 CONNECT - ASE Conference
2020:2021 CONNECT - ASE Conference2020:2021 CONNECT - ASE Conference
2020:2021 CONNECT - ASE Conferencealeokada
 
Teaching Science
Teaching ScienceTeaching Science
Teaching ScienceiPagador
 
Stephen De Sousa resume Sept.
Stephen De Sousa resume Sept.Stephen De Sousa resume Sept.
Stephen De Sousa resume Sept.Stephen DeSousa
 

Mais procurados (13)

Incorporating the Nature of Science Throughout the Year
Incorporating the Nature of Science Throughout the YearIncorporating the Nature of Science Throughout the Year
Incorporating the Nature of Science Throughout the Year
 
Science Matters Pres
Science Matters PresScience Matters Pres
Science Matters Pres
 
2019 20 pgce session 1 what is science materials me
2019 20 pgce  session 1 what is science materials me2019 20 pgce  session 1 what is science materials me
2019 20 pgce session 1 what is science materials me
 
Philosophy of Education
Philosophy of EducationPhilosophy of Education
Philosophy of Education
 
Asgment hbsc1103
Asgment hbsc1103Asgment hbsc1103
Asgment hbsc1103
 
Sarahpetersw0101628edx2260
Sarahpetersw0101628edx2260Sarahpetersw0101628edx2260
Sarahpetersw0101628edx2260
 
2109 20 primary science school direct session 1 what is science me
2109 20 primary science school direct session 1 what is science me2109 20 primary science school direct session 1 what is science me
2109 20 primary science school direct session 1 what is science me
 
CONNECT open schooling - Phase 1 Piloting Adoption - findings
CONNECT open schooling - Phase 1 Piloting Adoption - findingsCONNECT open schooling - Phase 1 Piloting Adoption - findings
CONNECT open schooling - Phase 1 Piloting Adoption - findings
 
Science Syllabus
Science SyllabusScience Syllabus
Science Syllabus
 
Nature of science
Nature of scienceNature of science
Nature of science
 
2020:2021 CONNECT - ASE Conference
2020:2021 CONNECT - ASE Conference2020:2021 CONNECT - ASE Conference
2020:2021 CONNECT - ASE Conference
 
Teaching Science
Teaching ScienceTeaching Science
Teaching Science
 
Stephen De Sousa resume Sept.
Stephen De Sousa resume Sept.Stephen De Sousa resume Sept.
Stephen De Sousa resume Sept.
 

Semelhante a The One Question That Changed My Teaching Methods

Science presentation for Primary-Elementary Level by Saherish Aqib
Science presentation for Primary-Elementary Level by Saherish AqibScience presentation for Primary-Elementary Level by Saherish Aqib
Science presentation for Primary-Elementary Level by Saherish AqibSaherish Aqib
 
All about you! 16 17 intro
All about you! 16 17 introAll about you! 16 17 intro
All about you! 16 17 introKevin Conley
 
philosophies of_education
 philosophies of_education philosophies of_education
philosophies of_educationLexter Adao
 
Bctela oct 19 Building inquiry and engagement
Bctela oct 19 Building inquiry and engagementBctela oct 19 Building inquiry and engagement
Bctela oct 19 Building inquiry and engagementJeff Hutton
 
Science_Day 3_Session 9_5Es Presentation.ppt
Science_Day 3_Session 9_5Es Presentation.pptScience_Day 3_Session 9_5Es Presentation.ppt
Science_Day 3_Session 9_5Es Presentation.pptAJDoyen
 
Inquiry based labs
Inquiry based labsInquiry based labs
Inquiry based labscorinne01
 
Week 3 Integration in the Middle Years Classroom
Week 3   Integration in the Middle Years ClassroomWeek 3   Integration in the Middle Years Classroom
Week 3 Integration in the Middle Years Classroombgalloway
 
Webinar 2: The building blocks of Epistemic Insight.
Webinar 2: The building blocks of Epistemic Insight. Webinar 2: The building blocks of Epistemic Insight.
Webinar 2: The building blocks of Epistemic Insight. Lee Hazeldine
 
Scientific creations with food
Scientific creations with foodScientific creations with food
Scientific creations with foodMichael Ruzza M.Ed
 
Interdisciplinary Literacy - Science
Interdisciplinary Literacy - ScienceInterdisciplinary Literacy - Science
Interdisciplinary Literacy - ScienceEMichWP
 
Bringing Reading and Writing into the Biology Classroom
Bringing Reading and Writing into the Biology ClassroomBringing Reading and Writing into the Biology Classroom
Bringing Reading and Writing into the Biology ClassroomWesley McCammon
 
Promoting Student Engagement and Imagination Through Project-Based Learning
Promoting Student Engagement and Imagination Through Project-Based LearningPromoting Student Engagement and Imagination Through Project-Based Learning
Promoting Student Engagement and Imagination Through Project-Based LearningEduSkills OECD
 
Sharp powerpoint
Sharp powerpointSharp powerpoint
Sharp powerpointbtincher11
 
Hasti09 Notebooks Feb2 Km.Ppt
Hasti09 Notebooks Feb2 Km.PptHasti09 Notebooks Feb2 Km.Ppt
Hasti09 Notebooks Feb2 Km.PptJbellina
 

Semelhante a The One Question That Changed My Teaching Methods (20)

Science presentation for Primary-Elementary Level by Saherish Aqib
Science presentation for Primary-Elementary Level by Saherish AqibScience presentation for Primary-Elementary Level by Saherish Aqib
Science presentation for Primary-Elementary Level by Saherish Aqib
 
All about you! 16 17 intro
All about you! 16 17 introAll about you! 16 17 intro
All about you! 16 17 intro
 
philosophies of_education
 philosophies of_education philosophies of_education
philosophies of_education
 
Bctela oct 19 Building inquiry and engagement
Bctela oct 19 Building inquiry and engagementBctela oct 19 Building inquiry and engagement
Bctela oct 19 Building inquiry and engagement
 
Science_Day 3_Session 9_5Es Presentation.ppt
Science_Day 3_Session 9_5Es Presentation.pptScience_Day 3_Session 9_5Es Presentation.ppt
Science_Day 3_Session 9_5Es Presentation.ppt
 
Inquiry based labs
Inquiry based labsInquiry based labs
Inquiry based labs
 
philosophies of Education
philosophies of Educationphilosophies of Education
philosophies of Education
 
Week 3 Integration in the Middle Years Classroom
Week 3   Integration in the Middle Years ClassroomWeek 3   Integration in the Middle Years Classroom
Week 3 Integration in the Middle Years Classroom
 
Webinar 2: The building blocks of Epistemic Insight.
Webinar 2: The building blocks of Epistemic Insight. Webinar 2: The building blocks of Epistemic Insight.
Webinar 2: The building blocks of Epistemic Insight.
 
Inquiry, Literacy, and the Learning Cycle Webinar 090910
Inquiry, Literacy, and the Learning Cycle Webinar 090910Inquiry, Literacy, and the Learning Cycle Webinar 090910
Inquiry, Literacy, and the Learning Cycle Webinar 090910
 
Scientific creations with food
Scientific creations with foodScientific creations with food
Scientific creations with food
 
Interdisciplinary Literacy - Science
Interdisciplinary Literacy - ScienceInterdisciplinary Literacy - Science
Interdisciplinary Literacy - Science
 
Bringing Reading and Writing into the Biology Classroom
Bringing Reading and Writing into the Biology ClassroomBringing Reading and Writing into the Biology Classroom
Bringing Reading and Writing into the Biology Classroom
 
Ziang Wang Q&A: NSHSS 2015 Earth Day Award Recipient- National Society of Hig...
Ziang Wang Q&A: NSHSS 2015 Earth Day Award Recipient- National Society of Hig...Ziang Wang Q&A: NSHSS 2015 Earth Day Award Recipient- National Society of Hig...
Ziang Wang Q&A: NSHSS 2015 Earth Day Award Recipient- National Society of Hig...
 
The_case_for_inquiry_(1)
The_case_for_inquiry_(1)The_case_for_inquiry_(1)
The_case_for_inquiry_(1)
 
Promoting Student Engagement and Imagination Through Project-Based Learning
Promoting Student Engagement and Imagination Through Project-Based LearningPromoting Student Engagement and Imagination Through Project-Based Learning
Promoting Student Engagement and Imagination Through Project-Based Learning
 
Sharp powerpoint
Sharp powerpointSharp powerpoint
Sharp powerpoint
 
Hasti09 Notebooks Feb2 Km.Ppt
Hasti09 Notebooks Feb2 Km.PptHasti09 Notebooks Feb2 Km.Ppt
Hasti09 Notebooks Feb2 Km.Ppt
 
Science as a subject
Science as a subjectScience as a subject
Science as a subject
 
Final Unit Plan
Final Unit PlanFinal Unit Plan
Final Unit Plan
 

The One Question That Changed My Teaching Methods

  • 1. Kirsten Hope Walker, M.A. Ed., M.S. Ed.
  • 2.   All life is an experiment. The more experiments you make the better. – Ralph Waldo Emerson  The true method of knowledge is experiment. - William Blake  I have always been more interested in experiment, than in accomplishment. – Orson Welles Quotes
  • 3.   #4 Develop skills to engage all students in challenging learning activities. Danielson Framework
  • 4.   Adapt curriculum to be more relevant to your students’ world view.  Explore the many ways interdisciplinary content can be incorporated into all lessons.  Appraise the knowledge gained through stewardship opportunities, discussions, and debates. Today’s objectives
  • 5.  Who am I to say? How does my background and experiences play into this?
  • 10.  Where I have been Outside the Box Environmental Education
  • 11.  The Question Why it changed the way I approached teaching.
  • 13.  The answer I didn’t want to give her.
  • 15.  Adapt curriculum to be more relevant to students’ worldview What did I do?
  • 16.   Challenge: Tell me the science of whatever you want. Science is Everywhere!
  • 17.   Capstone environmental education class  Incorporate technology to lessons  History, physical education, reading, problem solving, alliteration, and fun!  NIU Geocache Race! Pre-service Teachers
  • 18. Prairie Research Institute Science Camp 2013 • 12 students, 50+ scientists • Rising high school juniors, seniors, and recent graduates • Exposure to work by scientists • Instills the value of science education • Opportunity to job shadow the next year.
  • 19. Prairie Research Institute Science Camp 2014 • 12 students, 30 scientists • Rising high school juniors, seniors, and recent graduates • Exposure to work by scientists • Instills the value of science education • Opportunity to job shadow the next year.
  • 20. R/V Lake Guardian Lake Michigan Shipboard Science Workshop • Opportunity for 15 teachers/year • Week-long trip one of the Great Lakes • Work with scientists on research • Great Lakes issues • Use experience to make science relevant to their students • Experiments • Scientist connections • Hydrolab
  • 21. The Medicine Chest http://www.iisgcp.org/medicinechest/ • Metacognitive vocabulary • Flipped classroom • NGSS aligned
  • 22.  Explore ways interdisciplinary content can be incorporated into all lessons. Even the Pythagorean theorem?
  • 23.  Why do I need to know a2 + b2 = c2 ?  Build houses, decks, buildings, and put windows, doors and floors in.  Baseball diamond  Art  Anything that requires a right angle.
  • 24.  Don’t stop there! Tell the story!  Greek History  Psychology  Pythagoras (560-500 B.C.E)  Secret Brotherhood of Pythagoreans, devoted to the study of mathematics (cult-like)  “Numbers rule the universe!”  After completion, sacrificed 100 oxen
  • 25.   Cultural Biomes =Cultural and Environmental Awareness ESL Biology (interdisciplinary approach)
  • 26.  Appraising knowledge gained through stewardship opportunities, discussions, and debates Testing long-term knowledge and not whether or not your students can guess correctly on a scantron
  • 29.  How?  Start from the first day of class.  Short essays with specific talking points.  Build with stewardship, discussions, and debates  Insist on including relevance in life.  Make the tests shorter, but more meaningful.  The final essay is comprehensive and personal.  Have your students evaluate the class as to how much they feel they have learned and how they will use it.  Incorporate NGSS thinking
  • 30.   Distributive law  Optics  Pablo Picasso  Bacteria or viruses  Civil War  Isotopes  Acids and bases  Geologic time  Drama  Waves  Story structure  Biomes  Balancing a budget  Ecology  Abnormal Psychology  Others…  Give rationale, approach (teaching methods), possible outcomes Your turn: Why do I need to know this?
  • 32.   I learned this, at least, by my experiment; that if one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams, and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with a success unexpected in common hours. - Henry David Thoreau  When teachers complain about your class having “too much fun” during school and it’s making them look bad, respond with “You are the only person that can make you look bad.” – Dr. Robert Carter (NIU) Final Quotes
  • 33.  Contact information: walkerkirstenhope@gmail.com or khw@illinois.edu Thank you for your time and participation. Questions?

Notas do Editor

  1. Good afternoon, My name is Kirsten Hope Walker. I currently work for Illinois-Indiana Sea Grant, but this presentation really has more to do with my personal teaching throughout the years and how I approach writing curriculum no matter where I am. This talk has been modified from a original presentation I did here two years ago called “Teaching as an Ongoing Experiment” and so much of what I said then holds true now with the Danielson Framework that I decided to rework it and add the objectives as a framework for this presentation.
  2. These are some of my favorite quotes regarding life and learning as an experiment. We are all scientists in that way. We are all experimenting with what does and doesn’t work in our lives. The experiments are never perfect, but they are all learning opportunities. Our jobs as teachers is to facilitate positive student learning opportunities and allow for experimentation so our students can grow into healthy adults.
  3. I hadn’t heard of the Danielson Framework before this conference. I’ve been out of formal teaching for 10 years now, but I do mentor in a local middle school. As I read through the framework clusters, I think that all of it should be common sense and part of every day teaching, but from what I have seen in the school where I mentor, an official framework for teaching seems like a supportive way to help faculty have a more effective learning experience for their students.
  4. So these are our objectives for the day and I will go through each one and provide examples.
  5. When I was little, I dreamed about being a veterinarian, but chemistry and math were not my favorite subjects. A friend of mine remembers my dream of being a marine biologist, but there was that chemistry thing I just couldn’t get passed. I just wasn’t wired to be either. I did find myself teaching about the environment from a very young age in Houston where I lived. I played with snakes, lizards, rabbits, birds… you name it. Everything I learned I taught to my friends and family. I guess I was an environmental educator from a very young age.
  6. Many of you may have seen this drawing in one form or another. I agree and disagree with it. I think both lines are true. I know many teachers that started teaching right out of college and stayed with the same school their entire career. How many of you feel you will be on this path? That works for some. Some of us have very different paths to get to teaching and it may not be all with the same organization and that’s okay too. I’m a very squiggly squiggly and my squiggle is still squiggling.  The point is, those of us with very squiggly lines bring a variety of experiences to whatever we do because don’t stay still. Again, both are good and fine, they are just different.
  7. A.S. in Biology at William Rainey Harper College Prescott College in Prescott, AZ (Rock Jock school) B.S. in Environmental Biology at Eastern Illinois University M.A. Ed. in Secondary Education – Science at Roosevelt M.S. Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction (EE) at NIU
  8. There are 3 different forms of education and we probably all do all of them at some point in time. The first, of course, is formal education. Formal education involves instruction that will be tested for knowledge retention and school metrics. Non-formal education is instruction that is not usually tested. It is often used for enhancement of a topic in a “change of pace and place” venue. Some examples are nature centers, museums, and aquaria. Finally, informal education is what you do when you talk to your friends, neighbors, co-workers. It involves casual talk about information you have learned and wish to share with others.
  9. With every position I have had, I have learned. We all have. I bring those experiences into the positions I have had as ways to add value. I have taught informally at the McHenry County Conservation District, American Express, and the Hoffman Estates Police Department. Have taught non-formally at the USFW, ISTC, and IISG. And of course I have taught formally at HEHS and NIU.
  10. I was teaching about isotopes to a sophomore level physical science class in 2004. A student named Megan Cleary raised her hand and asked one simple question, “Why do I need to know this?”
  11. If you are every asked a question like that or are ever compelled to say to a student, “Because it’s on the test.” please consider a new career. This is probably the worst answer a teacher can give a student and makes learning completely invalid. I instead said to her, “ That’s a really good question, Megan and I don’t have a good answer for that, but I will tomorrow.” I was willing to be vulnerable enough to admit that I don’t know everything (including admittedly why I’m teaching about isotopes). I should have stopped class at that moment and had them do the research on why isotopes are important, but that was part of my learning.
  12. So I found out that isotopes are used to track monarch butterfly migration. There are many more reasons that isotopes are important (cancer research, smoke detectors, control rods that prevent nuclear power plants from melting down, and forensic analysis for example), but this is what I found. I don’t know if it was sufficient to answer her question, but I will never know.
  13. So how did I go about changing my curriculum?
  14. I started the next year with my sophomore physical science class with an introductory unit called “Science is Everywhere!” I challenged my students to find a topic (of their choosing) and tell the class about the science of that topic. Of course there were students who wanted to push the envelope with topics including marijuana, napalm, tattoo application (and removal), and meth. I allowed them to tackle those topics as long as they investigated ALL of the health implications and presented all sides of the topic, not just what seemed cool. They did a great job on their presentations and some said they liked that they were allowed to research a topic of interest.
  15. At Northern Illinois University, I was a graduate student in the College of Education and we wanted to show the pre-service teachers how to incorporate technology in their curriculum. We used GPS devices to make a game that traversed the entire campus to find clues to the next location as well as historical information about the buildings (Gidden, Haige, and Ellsworth families and barbed wire). It was a fun way to get everyone moving and problem solving.
  16. In 2013 and 2014 when I worked for the Illinois Sustainable Technology Center, we created a high school day camp that went to each of the five scientific surveys so that students could learn how science is done in research and how many of the researchers use math, science, technology, problem solving, collaboration, and literacy in their everyday lives.
  17. Last summer I was lucky enough to be part of the EPA’s R/V Lake Guardian Teacher Shipboard Science workshop. 60 formal and non-formal educators from all over the Great Lakes region applied for 15 positions to work with scientists on research conducted on Lake Michigan. My job was to connect curriculum to the work they were doing on the ship. Honestly, it was 7 very busy days and to get curriculum in was tough because the teachers were so engulfed in the research and they loved it. I saw many teachers just brimming with ideas on how to incorporate the science into their classrooms. Some great videos of the trip can be found if you look for Jed allen Freels or Science Quest on You Tube. Jed was one of our teachers from Indiana who’s goal in life is to film all of the experiences he has during the summer and bring that information to his classes. It’s like first hand stories from their teacher and he has a great personality.
  18. I recently finished The Medicine Chest curriculum. I incorporated metacognitive thinking, a flipped classroom option, and NGSS alignment to lessons on pharmaceuticals and personal care products. You will be leaving here today with a copy if you wish to take one.
  19. I see jokes on social media platforms about how someone feels they got through the day without doing anything with the Pythagorean theorem or other complex math functions. And although it’s funny, it’s also another great reason to support the “why I need to know this” mentality in your classroom. If you have ever done anything that required a right angle (examples here) then you have used the Pythagorean theorem.
  20. So you have taught how the Pythagorean theorem works, don’t stop there! Pythagoras was a pretty whacky guy! Tell some of the history of where the theorem originated. It helps bring the a face and story to something that isn’t exactly tangible. It also makes math more interesting.
  21. Another example. I taught ESL Biology. I ended up doing a digital story for my first master’s degree on these students. I realized that I was trying to teach the language of science to students who came from so many different cultures. That meant I needed to approach teaching differently. The unit I needed to teach was biomes. I decided that the students were going to teach about the biomes of their home country. They needed to also talk about their culture and teach us some words that related to their biome. If they were in a desert, they could teach us the names of some of the common plants and animals. It was and interesting experiment where everyone learned a lot about each other and their we all became closer.
  22. Use alternative assessment more. Stewardship projects, meaningful discussions, and debates can really give you a better idea of what they understand as well as what they don’t. I’m also a huge advocate of essay tests. Try this. For a final exam, instead of a scantron of 200 questions from the beginning of the year, have the students pick 3- 5 topics from throughout the year and explain them in writing (or type them, disabling the internet for searching) as if they were teaching it to other students. Do this 2 class periods ahead of the exam. The class period before the “final exam” time have another student from another class assess if they understand what the student is explaining and ask questions in writing about what was written. Then you (the teacher) look at the essays and student assessment. Create a grade based on the essay and feedback (which will be reflected on the student who assessed) and provide your feedback.
  23. This is just a test of guesswork and doesn’t really prove anything other than they either knew or guessed the correct answer.