math workshop 2009

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Mary Walter Elementary School Math Workshop by Beth Buchholz & Kateri Thunder

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Page 1: Math Workshop 2009

Mary WalterElementary SchoolMath Workshop

by Beth Buchholz & Kateri Thunder

Page 2: Math Workshop 2009

Our Purpose

To help students become stronger learners and mathematicians by thinking deeply and flexibly about authentic problems that make connections across the curriculum

Page 3: Math Workshop 2009

Why a Math Workshop?

Predictable yet flexible structure

Time for students to work and revise

Sharing with community of learners

Deeper thinking

Page 4: Math Workshop 2009

Agenda

A Math Task: The Neighborhood Problem Things to Consider When Choosing a

Task Plan a Math Task Throughout - Sharing Student Work

Page 5: Math Workshop 2009

Alex revises his work multiple timesTo learn alternate strategies from his peers as students share during lessons over multiple days focused on revision

Page 6: Math Workshop 2009

Alex struggles to communicate

The problem:

The Chicago Bulls starting

line-up jogs out onto the court.

Harper, Pippen, Rodman,

Longley, and Jordan each slap

high fives to each other

player. How many high-fives are given in all?

Alex Draft #1

Page 7: Math Workshop 2009

Revision after group share

Alex Draft #2

Page 8: Math Workshop 2009

Revision after focused conversation

Alex Draft #3

Page 9: Math Workshop 2009

Making math connections

The NEW problem:

“Groups of campers are going to island. On the first day two people went over and one decided it was to cold and came back. One the second day, four went over and two came back. On the third day six went over to the island and three camp back. If this pattern continues, how many people would be on the island at the end of seven days?”

Page 10: Math Workshop 2009

Applying strategy in new context

Third draft of previous problem

First draft of NEW

problem

Page 11: Math Workshop 2009

Our Math Workshop

Read Talk Think Write Share Revise

The Neighborhood Problem Our Plan

Page 12: Math Workshop 2009

The original task from Investigations

Page 13: Math Workshop 2009

The REVISED task

Page 14: Math Workshop 2009

Task 1: Building a Neighborhood

You are an architect. The city of Charlottesville is planning a new neighborhood. The city planners want to have space for exactly 60 families. The city of Charlottesville wants all the buildings to be the same size. You have been asked to find all the possible designs for the neighborhood.

Page 15: Math Workshop 2009

Task 1: Building a Neighborhood Use the multi-link cubes to help you find all the

possible ways to create housing for 60 families. Only one family can fit in each cube. You may stack cubes on top of each other to make tall apartment buildings. Remember, for each possible design each apartment building must be the same height. The design must hold exactly 60 families. How can you make sure that you have found all the possible ways? The city of Charlottesville wants a report of ALL the possible solutions at their next meeting. You should record each design in your notebook using words, pictures, and numbers.

Page 16: Math Workshop 2009

Task 2: Make a recommendation

The city planners now want your recommendation for the best possible design of the neighborhood. Remember, each building must be exactly the same height. Which building size do you think is the best? You should use the grid of the neighborhood to create your design. One box on the grid is the size of one multi-link cube. Don’t forget to include all the things besides buildings that a neighborhood needs.

Page 17: Math Workshop 2009

Design considerations:

Below are some suggestions from the families that will be living in the neighborhood:

Cindy Gola “I am a mom. I have a large family and I want my

children to have lots of room to ride their bikes, play baseball, and go swimming.”

Dwight Smith “I want to have my own backyard where my dog can

run around.” Jessica Hardy

“I want to live next to a large park with lots of trees so I can go hiking and mountain biking.”

Page 18: Math Workshop 2009

Task 3: Write a persuasive speech

After you design your neighborhood, you need to write a speech justifying your design to the Charlottesville city council. They will want to know why you chose the buildings size and locations. Also, they will look at how well your neighborhood will work for the families that will be moving in.

Page 19: Math Workshop 2009

Task 4: Revising

When we observe, talk, and learn about other’s ideas it can help us rethink and revise our own ideas to make them even better.

A few things I’d like to revise about my neighborhood:

Page 20: Math Workshop 2009

Beth’s Class & the Neighborhood ProblemHere’s what Beth’s class did.

Page 21: Math Workshop 2009

Lyndsey uses pictures and words

Page 22: Math Workshop 2009

Anand uses multiplication

Anand noticed that you can “reverse” the numbers

Page 23: Math Workshop 2009

Anand’s recommendation

Page 24: Math Workshop 2009

Anand’s design and map key

Page 25: Math Workshop 2009

Eric uses addition & multiplication

Page 26: Math Workshop 2009

Eric notices a pattern

Eric organized his findings using a chart based on “opposites”

Page 27: Math Workshop 2009

Eric writes to explain his choices

Page 28: Math Workshop 2009

Isaac’s design and map key

Page 29: Math Workshop 2009

Isaac explains his choices

Page 30: Math Workshop 2009

Isaac revises his design

Page 31: Math Workshop 2009

Choosing a Math Task

How does this problem challenge students on various levels?

How might the authentic context engage and motivate students in deep problem-solving?

What mathematics concepts and skills do students engage in through this problem?

How does this problem connect to concepts and skills across the curriculum (reading, writing, oral language, social studies, science, etc.)?

What questions could you ask to extend the problem for students who finish early?

How does this task fit into your pacing guide? SOLs?

Page 32: Math Workshop 2009

Henry revises his quarterly math prompt

To clearly and efficiently communicate his strategy after peer feedback and self assessment based on a rubric

Page 33: Math Workshop 2009

Henry’s first draft

Page 34: Math Workshop 2009

Henry uses rubric to assess work

“How do you know, or how will

others know, if you have

done quality math

thinking and recording on

this problem?”

Page 35: Math Workshop 2009

Peer & Self Feedback

Page 36: Math Workshop 2009

Henry revises based on rubric

Draft #1

Draft #2

Page 37: Math Workshop 2009

Your Turn

Work for 30 minutes (Individually or with partners).

Share with the whole group for 30 minutes.

Find one problem and develop a plan.

You might revise the problem. Consider the planning

questions we explored through the Neighborhood Problem.

Page 38: Math Workshop 2009

To clarify his thinking and to make connections between concepts in response to his peers’ and his own thinking

Jeremy revises and continues his thinking about odd & even numbers

Page 39: Math Workshop 2009

Jeremy’s Writing in October

Page 40: Math Workshop 2009

Jeremy’s Writing in November

Page 41: Math Workshop 2009

Jeremy’s Writing in November

Page 42: Math Workshop 2009

Jeremy’s Writing in February

October

February

Page 43: Math Workshop 2009

Jeremy’s Writing in February