Links Picnic #2

Links Picnic is an opportunity for us to share things from around the web that help and inspire maths teachers. Here are my picks. Please add yours in the comments section. You can leave a link to your own Links Picnic!

–A nice world clock that can be used between lessons or during registration. It includes world statistics that are continuously updating.

WiseStamp for an interactive email signature.

–The $2 Interactive Whiteboard. I’m calling this the medi-whiteboard, since I already use mini-whiteboards.

–An article I’m reading by Alfie Kohn about homework, entitled Do Students Really Need Practice Homework?

–Some ideas for displaying student testing data in the classroom. How motivating is this, I wonder?

–I am looking for an app or program that helps me organise my to-do lists over my mac at home, PC at work, and phone (Android). Pocket Informant does look useful, but is just for my phone. Do you have a suggestion?

What links have impacted you recently?

Marking–That Most Hated of Activities

I may have already mentioned that marking is something I find difficult, and that I also intensely dislike. As the school year ended and I was looking back on my marking especially I felt the same wistful longing as every year, “Maybe next year I’ll get it right.” I know how useful it can be to students and how important it is for them to know how they are doing and how to improve. So I feel that sooner or later I need to get out of my marking misery. So here’s an inventory of what went well this year and what could be improved.

What went well:

I made a lot of progress in terms of what I was recording in my (paper-based) mark book. I was more careful about writing in homework marks and I made more of an effort to collect these during class time when the students were on task with something. I was better at following up on students who didn’t do homework and applying the consequences I say that I will.

I was helped by a better way of recording missed homework in my mark book. I had a column on a separate page from the weekly homework columns where I recorded the dates of the first missing homework and any follow up offenses. Then I could more easily read these off, instead of trawling through the weekly columns. And I had a record there of detentions given as well. This made communicating with the Heads of Year or parents a lot easier.

I collected the books more regularly and more proactively. In some classes I collected them even when I thought I wouldn’t have any time to mark them, since on a few occasions this led to me spot checking and stamping a few books.

Still needs improving:

I have both paper-based and electronic mark books and this is confusing for me. My husband and I have talked about getting me some kind of hand-held device that I could use in my classroom tours when I am checking homework, but I don’t have one (yet?) and so paper still seems better. But electronic is the way of the future, and can provide data that is useful and searchable. It’s obvious to me that I need to move more electronically, but it just doesn’t seem convenient enough yet. I would love to survey other teachers about what they do electronically and how it is set up.

When I get busy, marking pretty much stops. I hate it and so I put it off and it is so easy to procrastinate from it completely. In my temporary job at the end of this term, I marked for the first half term, then didn’t bother. It was near the end of term and there were very few repercussions for me. I am ashamed of my dislike of marking and I want to know how to make it better!

I don’t always leave very useful comments for students. I am just moving to a school where the policy is that only comments are given in the lower school (years 7-9) and so I will need to improve my comment-making. Students deserve useful feedback.

I keep a lot of things in my head, especially those things I end up writing on reports. I wish I had a good way of recording them. My memory is out of space now and I am concerned that I won’t remember what I need. My students don’t have a great idea of how to improve because that’s not communicated to them very well. This could be done in lessons, not just through marking.

Ideas for next year:

I have a little stamper that says, “Lesson objective achieved” with my name and a smiley face and a thumbs up. I need to start using this at the end of lessons—work my way around the room checking work and seeing what I can praise.

I think it’s time to complete the transition to a fully electronic mark book. I hear a rumor that I might get a tablet laptop from the new school. That might make it all the more possible!

I have always talked about teaching students to peer assess. I know that this helps them gain an understanding of what makes good work. And, in the context of this discussion, it makes marking easier, and also more meaningful for me. It’s easier to comment on a peer’s assessment by saying what I agree with. And I can add comments that help a student assess better next time, as well as letting the student know what they can do to improve their homework.

The name of this blog reflects how much I value my own feedback loop, and so now I need to finally give the students the same positive feedback experience that I thrive on.

Dear Mrs A

This term I used Anne Schwartz‘s format for getting feedback from my students. I asked them to write me a letter. I’ve been teaching these students for ten weeks and I wanted to see what their impressions were.

Dear Mrs A,
1. The best thing you did was….
2. The worst thing you did was….
3. I am awesome because….
4. This summer I’m….
From, [name], your favourite student.

Here are some responses from top set year 7 students.

The best thing you did was let us play games.
The worst thing you did was giving us 3 exercises for HW.
I’m awesome because I did well on the fractions poster.
This summer I’m going to Taiwan, Beijing and San Francisco.

I’m awesome because I did well on the olympic stadium project and I learnt a lot about making sums simpler.

The best thing was you letting us choose our seats.
The worst thing you did was giving us a lot of homework.

The best thing you did was help me understand about shapes.

The best thing you did was let us work in pairs and groups.
The worst you did was give us quite a lot of homework.
I’m awesome because I improved my understanding in fractions, algebra and measurements.

The worst thing you did was give us lots of HW that was easy but long.
I’m awesome because I know year 13 stuff and beggining pre calculus and complex number and quadratic formulas.
This summer I’m doing an extra maths course and swimming class.

The best thing you did was giving us lots of practical tasks.
The worst thing you did was making us move the tables and chairs around.
I’m awesome because I went to every math competition, even purple comet and HKMO.

This summer I’m going to read a book of maths given to me as a present.

The best thing you did was to help me understand things when I am confused and made our lessons more interesting.
The worst thing you did was make us play a token game which was quite boring in my point of view.

The worst thing you did is… I really don’t know. You make your own mistakes, like every human.
I’m awesome because… I don’t think I am. I’m just a learner.
This summer I’m going to practise a bit of algebra.

The worst thing you did was give us far too easy work.

The best thing you did was talking for a minute about how people write.
The worst thing you did was not checking our homework.

The students quite rightly pointed out how much homework I gave and that after a while I stopped checking it. Marking is always my downfall. Sigh. I live in hope that one year I will get better at it.

marking: things i have learned

Get the students to do as much as you can.
Do some of it in class when moving about the room. Record all the homework marks.
Do it as quickly as possible. Write only the bare minimum. Do it as frequently as you can stand (every two weeks at the least). Take the books in every day there is not homework being assigned so that five or six books can be marked in an odd moment.
Keep track of homework religiously so that students know they can’t get away without doing it.
The key to this, as everything in teaching, is organisation. A well organised mark book makes marking easier. Classroom routines make marking easier.