How do I Design Lessons for Building Thinking Classrooms from Scratch?

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 7 ก.พ. 2025

ความคิดเห็น • 12

  • @HayesWorldofMath
    @HayesWorldofMath  9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Find more lesson ideas and other BTC ideas with my playlist: th-cam.com/video/v8mYF5jcGeQ/w-d-xo.html

  • @cschaef4388
    @cschaef4388 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Would like to see more examples. Also, do you have any videos of student interaction during activity.

    • @HayesWorldofMath
      @HayesWorldofMath  11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I had planned to record and upload a video about first steps yesterday but between a sub shortage and then all my recording preferences being deleted due to a hard drive issue, I couldn't get to it. Monday is the new plan.
      Also have a lesson from another teacher in the division that was used for a different district. Will see if I can get permission to edit that down and post. Kate is great at interactions and hope to have her on for a discussion at some point.
      I appreciate the feedback!

  • @danlevasseur2950
    @danlevasseur2950 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This video was great! Very helpful

    • @HayesWorldofMath
      @HayesWorldofMath  ปีที่แล้ว

      Glad you found it helpful! Hopefully will get some more out here in the next two weeks as retakes and such start to even out.
      Any topics you'd find helpful in future videos?

    • @danlevasseur2950
      @danlevasseur2950 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@HayesWorldofMath I’d love to see you focus in on consolidation if you’d like too!

  • @ChekkersYT
    @ChekkersYT 12 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    How do you give them problems? I just read about defrosting the classroom. Do you write it on any white board or display somewhere or is there a sheet?

    • @HayesWorldofMath
      @HayesWorldofMath  12 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      I've done both. The teachers in our department tend to fall into one way or the other. I tend to prefer to put it on main board and have kids copy stuff over so we can stay a little bit more together to class. In my experience there's also sometimes a little working together as one person would read it and the other person writes it.
      Other people do it out on worksheets and post those around in each of the groups. There are places with a "Stop" to check in with and get feedback from the teacher.
      If you look at some of the resources in the link I have in the description, you should see a few of each.

    • @ChekkersYT
      @ChekkersYT 12 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@HayesWorldofMath Thank you! I am just starting out in an alternative school. Thinking of ways to make it work for may students, some of whom are absent for weeks at a time. I'd like to be flexible in the way they learn, but also encourage them to be confident and independent instead of waiting for me to "go over" worksheets with them. Do you have a video on how you teach graphing systems of inequalities? Or anything else that requires visuals and kind of hard to draw on the whiteboard?

    • @HayesWorldofMath
      @HayesWorldofMath  10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@ChekkersYT Systems? No. We tend to show it to kids but not always assess it in Algebra 1. I do have individual inequalities here - it's a full lesson.
      th-cam.com/video/lxbnE0Oixsk/w-d-xo.htmlsi=jZt0nIN2o80JI7Pq

  • @pammydreid
    @pammydreid 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    It's when my class has 4 students eg) who are THAT far behind. OK, get them in at the level they are at...and that is a good teaching practice...but they just can't keep up. What is your process for when students fall behind - the class is too far advanced- even though you are trying to bring them up. What to do when you just. Have. To. Move. On. And they are no where near the rest of the class. It seems so many teacher just pass students with a 52%to the next class and they really are not there

    • @HayesWorldofMath
      @HayesWorldofMath  5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Couple of ideas:
      1) I always give more problems per slide, page, etc. than I necessarily want kids to get through so that there's some challenge for groups who are on top of stuff. So say we are solving equations. I would have three problems on the board - a basic level, focus, and maybe a challenge (I don't label them per se though colleague calls them Mild, Regular, and Spicy in class). Focus level is like a problem that would be at 80%. I would tell groups to get started on these three problems and see how far they can get. Most of the time a standard group will be wrapping up the middle problem when we move on so most groups don't finish. But that way the slower group never feels like they are always the last one done.
      2) My lower kids who want to learn tend to quickly catch on that they want to be the ones with the marker as much as possible especially in the beginning. Then they can get ideas from the kids who get it and not have to look like they don't know what's going on.
      3) Try and make random groups ahead of time to spread the four kids out OR just get really good at looking for them in the random groups from the website and accidentally bump the random button again if needed. I don't do cards anymore since kids trade a lot and I don't like policing that.
      Hope that gives a few places to go but definitely putting it on my questions for colleagues list for a future video.