welcome to math night! find a seat and fill out a name tag with the following information: name,...
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Welcome to Math Night! Find a seat and fill out a name tag with the following
information:• Name, track, & grade level
Take some time to visit the chart paper around the room to include your voice:• What are your reason/s for attending tonight?• What questions are you hoping are answered?
Who am I? Kristopher Taft – parent of two Spanish track TIS students:
Low-K & 2nd Grade
5th grade Beaverton School Teacher since 2004 Bonny Slope Elementary: PYP School: 7 years Barnes Elementary: Dual Immersion: Math & Science
Taught a variety of math curriculums
Been teaching 5th Grade Engage NY/ Eureka Math since 2013
Road Map for the Evening Common Core
Engage NY
K-5 Place Value Strategies
Homework
Resources
Common Core State Standards Content Standards AND Mathematical Practices
A standards baseline for TIS
Creation story: backwards design
Common Core Website
A shift rather than a complete departure
Shifts in Common CoreMathematics Standards
Focus: Learn more about less
Coherence: Skills Across Grades
Fluency: Speed and Accuracy
Deep Understanding: Know it/Do it!
Application: Real World
Dual Intensity: Think Fast/Solve Problems
Shifts in Common CoreMathematics Standards
What are your thoughts about these shifts?
What seems different (if anything) from the way you learned math?
Shifts in Common CoreMathematics Standards
FocusTeachers significantly narrow and deepen the scope of how time and energy is spent in the math classroom. They do so in order to focus deeply on only the concepts that are prioritized in the standards.
Coherence Principals and teachers carefully connect the learning within and across grades so that students can build new understanding onto foundations built in previous years.
Fluency Students are expected to have speed and accuracy with simple calculations; teachers structure class time and/or homework time for students to memorize, through repetition, core functions.
Deep Understanding
Students deeply understand and can operate easily within a math concept before moving on. They learn more than the trick to get the answer right. They learn the math.
Application Students are expected to use math and choose the appropriate concept for application even when they are not prompted to do so.
Dual Intensity Students are practicing and understanding. There is more than a balance between these two things in the classroom – both are occurring with intensity.
Focus: Learn more about less
Students must… Parents Can…• Spend more time on fewer
concepts• Know what the priority
work is for your child for their grade level
• Spend time with your child on priority work
• Ask your child’s teacher about their progress on priority work
Coherence:Skills Across Grades
Students must… Parents Can…• Keep building on learning
year after year• Be aware of what your child
struggled with last year and how that will affect learning this year
• Advocate for your child and ensure that support is given for “gap” skills
Fluency: Speed and Accuracy
Students must… Parents Can…
• Spend time practicing – lots of problems on the same concept, skill, or idea
• Push children to know/memorize basic math facts
• Know all the fluencies your child should have and prioritize learning of the ones they don’t
Key FluenciesGrade Required Fluency
K Add/Subtract within 5
1 Add/Subtract within 10
2Add/Subtract within 20Add/Subtract within 100 (pencil & paper)
3Multiply/divide within 100Add/Subtract within 1000
4 Add/Subtract within 1,000,000
5 Multi-digit multiplication
Deep Understanding:Know it/Do it!
Students must… Parents Can…
• UNDERSTAND why the math works, and MAKE the math work
• TALK about why the math works
• PROVE that they know why and how the math works
• Notice whether your child REALLY knows why the answer is what it is
• Advocate for the TIME your child needs to learn key math
• Provide TIME for your child to work hard with math at home
Application: Real World
Students must… Parents Can…
• Apply math in real world situations
• Know which math to use for which situation
• Ask your child to DO the math that comes up in your daily life
Dual Intensity:Think Fast/Solve Problems
Students must… Parents Can…• Be able to use core math
facts FAST
• Be able to apply math in the real world
• Notice which side of this coin your child is successful and where he/she needs more practice
• Make sure your child is PRATICING the math facts he/she struggles with
• Help your child think about Math in real life
The BIG SHIFT:Mathematical Practices
Make sense of a problems and persevere in solving them
Reason abstractly and quantitatively
Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others
Model with mathematics
Use appropriate tools strategically
Attend to precision
Look for and make use of structure
Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning
The BIG SHIFT:Mathematical Practices
Look through the “student friendly” Mathematical Practices Posters:
What are your thoughts?
What seems different from the way you learned math?
What make sense?
Engage NY/Eureka MathNot intended to be prescriptive, but a
basis for teachers to hone their craft
Created by teachers, college professors, and experts – NOT
publishing companies
In direct alignment with Math CCSS
Standards & Practices
Concrete to abstract Coherence AND Spiraling
Balance of partner and independent
work
Fluency practice
Application: real world connections through problem
solving
Place Value: K – 5th Grade K-5 strategies reinforce “Base 10 System”• Multiple strategies – a departure from solving JUST one
way
Concrete to abstract
Ten Frame
Tape Diagram
Chip Model – all operations
Area Models
Math Homework Advice
Directly connected to learning targets
Robert Marzano’s research:• 10 minutes/grade level
No homework is worth tears!
Resources Common Core Resources
Parent Road Maps: Grade by Grade
Eureka Math Tips for Parents
Engage NY Mathematics Modules
youcubed Parent Resources
OJUSD Math Homework Help
LPSS Math Resources
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