Thursday, November 27, 2014

The Return of Practice Standard #6

    Thanksgiving means many things...


Turkey and trimmings...

the Macy's parade...

Detroit Lions football...

and, at least at our house...


     I have documented the importance of Practice Standard 6, Attend to Precision, in a previous post.  In that case, the failure to demonstrate proficiency led to disastrous consequences.  Here, it's a different story.
    Early on in the movie, Santa comes to Toyland to check on his Christmas orders.  The irascible Toymaker asks Stan and Ollie, two of his bumbling employees, to bring out the wooden soldiers Santa has requested:

Stan, Ollie, and a wooden soldier.

Toymaker (turning to Santa): Isn't it wonderful?  It does everything but talk!

Santa: Wonderful, yes, but not what I ordered.

Toymaker: What do you mean?

Santa: I ordered 600 soldiers at 1 foot high!

Toymaker: What? (turning Stan and Ollie, disapprovingly): You took that order!  What was it?

Stan (sheepishly): I thought you said 100 soldiers at 6 foot high.

"Ho!  Ho!  Ho!  You got the order all wrong!  I couldn't give those things to my children to play with!


"Put it back in the box and get out of here!  You're through!"

   Lack of attention to precision leads to their getting fired from their jobs!   However, as we all know, the 100-strong regiment of 6 foot tall wooden soldiers save Toyland from the invading boogeymen.


The boogeymen are no match for the relentless wooden soldiers.  

     Is the lesson that sometimes our mistakes lead to providential outcomes?  I'll leave that up to you to decide.  In the meantime, Happy Thanksgiving everybody!






















Monday, November 24, 2014

Mr. Whalen Goes to Chicago: A Problem in 3 Acts

     By now you all know that Mr. Whalen is a talented teacher.  But what you don't know is that he is an accomplished long-distance runner!   I suggested he use his recent participation in the Chicago Marathon as the basis of a 3-act with our fifth graders, and, well, he ran with it.

ACT 1:

    • What do you notice?  What do you wonder?

There he is, in the middle of the photo, with the black headband.
The chatter started immediately:
  • Is that Mr. Whalen?
  • When was the race?  How long was it?
  • Where did he run?
  • Was he running for charity?  How long did it take him?  
Rich explained that they were looking at a photo taken of him running the Chicago Marathon, and that for the next few periods they would be working on finding the answer to one of their questions.  That set the stage for...

Act 2:

This was the question that would inspire the problem solving activity.
He asked both classes what they thought they would need to know in order to figure it out:

What the AM class wanted to know.

What the PM class wanted to know.
    Rich and I looked over their requests.  We decided to give them most of what they wanted, and would wait to see if they could separate the essential from the non-essential.



Rich divided the class into partnerships and provided each with this information sheet.
   But before they got started, we wanted them to make an estimate.  In  order to give them some frame of reference, he showed them the following: a time-lapse video of the entire 26.2 mile course.


The kids sat back and watched.  As the video progressed, the kids began to make some observations and comments...

  • Why would someone want to do this?
  • You went to Chicago?
  • I'm getting tired.  Did you really run all that way?
  • It's 26 miles?  I can't survive 10 miles without falling asleep!
...and when it was over they had a much better sense of the length of the course, which they were able to translate into some quite reasonable estimates.  One student justified her thinking by explaining that her father had run a half-marathon in 1 1/2 hours, which she doubled to get an estimate of 3 hours.  Another student explained that he had run a mile in about 10 minutes, so figured Mr. Whalen's time at about 260 minutes, which he converted into 4 hours and 20 minutes.
   We let them work for a while, then called for a mid-workshop interruption.  We had noticed that most groups had started in on the problem by attempting to find the elapsed time between his start and finish, but we were interested to know what information they felt was not useful.  Most students agreed that the total number of runners (40,802) was unimportant, but one student disagreed: "Maybe they all got in Mr. Whalen's way and made him run slower!"  A minor dispute erupted over the significance of his coming in 7,230th place overall. That's when I overheard one student whisper to his neighbor, 
     "That's bad.  But don't tell Mr. Whalen."
     "No it's not," his neighbor responded.  "Actually it's good!"
     We let them get back to work, and the answers began to roll in:

Uh-oh.

     Clearly they could not all be right.  The most common mistake was treating his times, 11:16:58 and 7:35:08, as whole numbers that could be subtracted following the normal regrouping rules:

We had covered this last year.  Obviously the lesson did not stick.  Although some groups were able to convert 3:81:50 into 4:21:50, it still did not help.  Further complicating matters was the fact that all these times seemed reasonable given their estimates.  Except, that is, for one group, who somehow came up with a time of 34 hours and 14 minutes.  This elicited a comment of, "What the heck?!" and a return to the drawing board.  Rich and I were pleased that the group had used their estimate to realize their answer was unreasonable.

     After about a period and a half of work, the kids began to realize that the elapsed time number line they had explored last year was the better option:


Something like this...


...or this.

     Understanding why operating with time does not always yield the same results as operating with whole numbers was a very difficult concept for many of the students to understand.  Even after repeated explanations, I could tell that their knowing nods and comments of, "Oh yeah, now I get it!"  were not sincere.  Rich and I decided to revisit this in the future, perhaps with an "Always, Sometimes, Never" activity, or another problem solving project that would have elapsed time embedded within.
    Yet overall we were pleased with the 3-act, and there were some side benefits to the project, including:

  • Two more estimation activities, one for the first place time and one for the last place time;
  • Some spirited counting circle activities centered around counting by tenths from 0 to 26.2;
  • An attempt by some students to find his time by multiplying his average speed by 26.2;
  • A lively class discussion about whether coming in 7,230th place was good or bad.
And in case you're interested:

Eliud Kipchoge won the Chicago Marathon with a time of 2:04:11.  



   


Thursday, November 13, 2014

Number Grids and Number Lines: Can They Live Together in Peace?

     "Numbers do not just evoke a sense of quantity; they also elicit an irrepressible feeling of extension in space."  
     Stanislas Dehaene, The Number Sense: How the Mind Creates Mathematics, pg. 69

     There's one hanging in every kindergarten...



first grade...




second grade...


and third grade...




classroom in my school.  Yes, the ubiquitous "Class Number Grid".  These grids hang out with big number lines on classroom walls:



Sometimes right next to each other!


And are often seen in smaller versions going hand in hand on desks:


This type of name tag appears on  student desks in many first and second grade classrooms in my school.  It includes a hundreds grid on the left and a number line running across the top.
     But how do number grids and number lines exist in the minds of the students?  How do students see the numbers arranged and extended? Can multiple conceptions exist in their minds at the same time without conflict?
     The kids use number grids to do exercises like this:

Grade 1

Grade 2

Grade3

And to play games like this:

This game, along with the activities above, are designed to reinforce facility with a number grid.  The grids make patterns appear more apparent and help build place value concepts.  When they first play, you may see kids counting each space as they move closer to 110.  Most catch on quickly to the idea that to move 10 or 20 they can move their token "down" one or two spaces.  Of course there are the few that continue to count by 1s, unconvinced that the moves down the grid actually work to advance them them 10 or 20 spaces on.

But most kids lose interest quickly.


Last year I tried a small innovation:


Play on a blank grid and fill in the numbers as you go along.  After three or four trips from 0 to 100 the grid begins to fill up.
       I had tried this out last year with one of my basic skills students, and liked the results.  This year I had the entire second grade give it a spin.  The more they played, the more their grids filled up with numbers, and those numbers became benchmarks for empty squares.  Looking for a way to help them see the relationship between number grids and number lines, I had them try something different:
   

Turn the number grid into a number line by cutting the grid into strips and taping the strips together.
Play on the number line.
This was a different kind of experience.  Instead of simply moving "down" to go +10 and +20, the kids had to move to the right.  It was interesting to see how they worked.
This student was on 76, rolled a 1, and jumped 10 to 86.  How did he know where to land?  One more than 85!
I was happy with how this activity played out, although the number lines were long, and finding room to play became an problem (some kids went into the hallway).  Then there was the issue of storage:


We hung them from a clothesline in the room.

    I decided to try the experiment out in third grade with Capture 5:

First we gave them some time to get familiar with the game.

Next, cut out a number grid into strips and glue together to make a number line.
However I couldn't resist adding in an estimation challenge:
How long do you think the number line will be once we put it together?

Normally I would put these estimates on an open number line.

The number line measured 64 inches.  We needed the 39 inches of a meter stick, plus 25 more.  I turned this addition problem into a little number talk.  There were many ways the sum was calculated mentally, and reinforced moving by 10s, 20s, and 30s in the Capture 5 game.

Playing Capture 5 on a number line.  

  I asked the kids to comment on the difference between playing on a number line as opposed to a number grid.  Some reflections:
  • "I had to use my my mind more because I couldn't go up and down."
  • "I had to do more thinking, but it got easier the more I played."
  • "I like the number line better.  The grid is more confusing."
So what's next?  Graham Fletcher has written about the potential benefits of "upside down"  grids, another way for kids to conceptualize how numbers can be arranged.   How about playing on a vertical number line?  Could we adapt games like Capture 5 and the Number-Grid Game for play on a yardstick, tape measure or meter stick?  A thermometer?  Will this cause confusion or help build number sense?  And is it possible that some of our students see numbers in ways we cannot imagine?


Number Forms


    "Though a majority of people have an unconscious mental number line oriented from left to right, some have a much more vivid image of numbers.  Between 5% and 10% of humanity is thoroughly convinced that numbers have colors and occupy very precise locations in space."
     Stanislas Dehaene, The Number Sense: How the Mind Creates Mathematics, pg. 71








Sunday, November 9, 2014

Bill (and Phil) and Me

   I am not an autograph hound.  However I have amassed a pretty cool collection of signatures over the years, mostly from the world of sports and literature.  Here's a sampling:

Willis Reed was the captain and fighting heart of the Knick championship teams of the late 60's and early 70's.

This program cover, from a November 17, 1974 game between  Washington and Dallas, was signed by  almost every member of the 1974 Redskins, famous as "The Over-the-Hill Gang".  I remember standing outside the Redskins locker room with my father's friend, the personal physician to several players on the team,  waiting for it to emerge.  Six players who signed are now in the NFL Hall of Fame.  Extra credit if you can name them all.

My dad got this for me when he attended Yankees Fantasy Baseball Camp in 1990.  It's also signed by Whitey Ford, Enos Slaughter, Hank Bauer, and Johnny Blanchard, but Mickey got the sweet spot. He always did.


I saw John Updike give a reading soon after this was published.  Taken together, The "Rabbit" tetrology  is the greatest portrait of post-war America, 1950-1980, ever written.    My personal favorite: Rabbit is Rich.


Harry Bosch is one amazing detective!  


My most prized possession.  I was a counselor at a day camp out on Long Island, and had Kurt Vonnegut's daughter in my group.  One day I asked him to sign my copy of Breakfast of Champions.  He sat down on a bench, scribbled for several minutes, and handed me this.  
But I am really excited about the most recent addition to my collection:

My tattered copy of the Common Core.  Signed by...Phil Daro and Bill McCallum!

  I met Phil Daro and Bill McCallum at the recent AMTNJ  conference.  The document they co-authored (along with Jason Zimba), has been the subject of  intense and heated debate, both in the political arena and within the mathematics community, and commentary of near-Talmudic proportions.  Math teachers, coaches, specialists, and supervisors have combed over the standards in minute detail, attempting to align their lessons, curricula and instruction, and decipher and decode the intentions of its authors. Teacher evaluation, student placement, and now, at least in New Jersey, high school graduation are all predicated on their mastery, as measured by the new PARCC and Smarter Balanced assessments.   Love them or hate them, their impact on the landscape of math education is undeniable, as a quick look around the exhibition room at the conference illustrated:








This is just a small sampling of what I saw.  I'll also add that half of the sessions at the conference had the words "common core" in their title or description.
   









    I listened to both Phil and Bill give their presentations, looking for a window into the minds of the men who, intentionally or not, set so many wheels in motion.  And I couldn't help but wonder: When they sat down to write the standards, could they ever have imagined what would follow in their wake?

Bill and me.