Our Classroom Poster of the 8 Mathematical Practices! |
Monday, November 18, 2013
Thinking Mathematically
Saturday, November 16, 2013
Common Core Connections -- Breaking the Mold
Last night I had a deep
discussion with my husband, who does not work in education, about the Common
Core State Standards. He was asking about my take on them, given the
frequent bad press that he has heard: that the Common Core will stick all kids
in the same box, increase conformity, etc. I kind of laughed, because hasn’t
that what traditional education has done all along, stuck kids in a grade level
and expected them to process through whether ready or not?
This whole conversation had me
reflecting on what the Common Core means to me and really what I expect of
myself and my students to achieve.
1. I
connect Common Core to the needs of the Whole Child through the focus
Students-Standards-Curriculum
Celina and I have always
approached our work within the classroom through the lens of students first,
their social-emotional needs as well as their academic needs. The 8Mathematical Practices and the 7 Capacities of a Literate Individual also speak
to students first. They are pushing for the development of habits of mind that
ensure all students are prepared for a world that is ever changing and are able
to think critically about their experiences. For myself and my students I see
the practices and capacities as the ways in which I can help all students
succeed. Students who persevere in math, become students who persevere in all
areas of life, those who demonstrate independent use of the skills of literacy
become students who can think and act for themselves.
The Whole Child blog recently had a podcast
that truly spoke to this idea: "Educators
need to prepare kids to be career and college ready, but they also need to
prepare them for their present world. The Common Core State Standards set out
to do that. They're not perfect, but they are a starting point" (Peter
DeWitt).
The blog continues with: The standards are not a curriculum. Standards are targets for what
students should know and be able to do. Curricula are the instructional plans
and strategies that educators use to help their students reach those
expectations. Central to a supportive school are teachers, administrators, and
other caring adults who take a personal interest in each student and in the
success of each student. A whole child approach to education is essential to
realizing the promise of the standards. Only when students are healthy, safe,
engaged, supported, and challenged will they be able to meet our highest
expectations and realize their fullest potential.” http://www.wholechildeducation.org/blog/
For me that means connecting with
kids, recognizing that their needs are not purely academic and making choices
for the classroom that support a wide variety. Working from the needs of the students, and
then developing their understanding of the continuum of standards helps them to
see learning as building up their foundation, something that is not solely
achieved in school!
2. Common
Core Standards are broad in nature and deep in focus, pushing for authentic
learning experiences, as opposed to discrete skills.
In order to meet the depth and
breadth of the standards, Celina and I have had to rethink the purely skill
focus of the past. Our classroom activities
of Passion Projects and inquiry based learning have helped us to infuse the
standards into learning experiences that incorporate a multitude of goals.
Students no longer read non-fiction text as an isolated skill, but rather to
build up their knowledge and understanding for expository writing, presentations,
multi-media projects and finding evidence to support their thinking. Students
authentically connect the once separate skills into a cohesive whole that helps
them to express and share what they know! Our day is no longer a segmented container
but a set of links and blocks that boost engagement and relevance.
3. Common
Core has increased the level of rigor, not just for students but for teachers
too.
Achieving the goals of the Common
Core means raising our level of expectations! We can no longer just accept a
curriculum as the end-all-be-all, or dumb down the work for students or
teachers. Building our professional capacities as educators means doing the
work that the Common Core requires of our students: reading for meaning,
finding evidence, thinking across the grades, boosting conceptual understanding,
as well as regularly interacting with complex text and academic vocabulary. It makes me grateful that my work with Celina
in creating a child centered classroom has pushed me to learn more and grow.
Truly understanding that message makes me more aware of the expectations I place on my
students, the growth mindset that is necessary and the goals that can be
achieved through this work.
So while the talk shows and
pundits can banter back and forth about what they think Common Core means, I am
left to marvel at the improvements implementing the standards has meant for
myself, my students and our classroom as a whole. Conforming? I think not, more
like connecting meaningfully and breaking the mold! ~Ann