Each year Quinn plants 24 flowers in his garden. This year he planted only red and purple flowers. Quinn prefers purple, so he planted twice as many purple flowers as red flowers. [How many purple flowers did Quinn plant?]
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Tue26Mar20247 PM - 8 PMOnline
Do you find that your students often need your help to get started on math problems, or that they shut down when they don’t know how to begin? This webinar can help. Click here for more information and to register
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Do your students struggle to remember math procedures or see math as a disconnected collection of topics to be mastered? This upcoming webinar can help. Click here for more info and to register.
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Are you looking for ways to help all of your students stay engaged and involved during full group conversations in math class? If so, this upcoming webinar can help. Click here form more info and to register.
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Tue21May20247 PM - 8 PMRemote
It can be frustrating when you ask a question in class and receive no response or when you try to facilitate a discussion, and no one participates. If you’ve experienced this, you may be interested in the upcoming webinar on Mathematical Discourse for all. Click here for more info and to register.
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Our sessions include, Strategies to Shine a Light on Student Thinking and Voice; and Reasoning Routines that Develop Individual and Collective Brilliance and Agency through Discourse. Click here to see our presentations.
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Mon07Oct2024Remote
In this course, participants will dive deeply into engagement routines to support students throughout three major components of mathematics learning experiences: sense-making, sharing and developing concepts and ideas, and solidifying understandings. Click here for more info and to register.
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Tue08Oct2024
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Wed16Oct2024Lawrence, MA
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Wed16Oct2024Remote
Authors Grace Kelemanik and Amy Lucenta are hosting this opportunity to unpack ideas, learn, practice, and understand how a relatively small number of instructional routines can support high-quality classroom teaching and learning. Grace and Amy will share why they wrote the book, answer questions, and bring experience from their work in classrooms around the country. Click here for more info and to register.
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Mon21Oct2024
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Authors Grace Kelemanik and Amy Lucenta are hosting this opportunity to unpack ideas, learn, practice, and understand how a relatively small number of instructional routines can support high-quality classroom teaching and learning. Grace and Amy will share why they wrote the book, answer questions, and bring experience from their work in classrooms around the country. Click here for more info and to register.
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Wed20Nov2024Remote
Authors Grace Kelemanik and Amy Lucenta are hosting this opportunity to unpack ideas, learn, practice, and understand how a relatively small number of instructional routines can support high-quality classroom teaching and learning. Grace and Amy will share why they wrote the book, answer questions, and bring experience from their work in classrooms around the country. Click here for more info and to register.
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Wed04Dec2024Remote
Authors Grace Kelemanik and Amy Lucenta are hosting this opportunity to unpack ideas, learn, practice, and understand how a relatively small number of instructional routines can support high-quality classroom teaching and learning. Grace and Amy will share why they wrote the book, answer questions, and bring experience from their work in classrooms around the country. Click here for more info and to register.
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Fri06Dec2024Sun08Dec2024Asilomar, CA
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Comments are closed.
I introduced this routine the first time during our first full week of school. We’ve been talking about growth mindset, and students had identified math (and specifically work problems) as an area where there was a need. The first go round was hardest for the students who just wanted to solve the problem. By the second time, students were more fluid and fluent within the routine. By our last presentation of this routine, students were able to talk about the story and (excitedly) explore each other’s thinking. The meta reflections were very informative! I was pleased and surprised by a couple of students’ reflections that indicated a better acceptance of and understanding of the routine as well as their mathematical thinking.
I also thought that the meta reflections were informative. Sometimes I forget to do this step, but it truly is valuable.
I used this task as a introduction to the Capturing Quantities Routine with my 7th grade special education students. I was pleasantly surprised with how quickly they jumped into the routine and that they all created fraction models (bar and pie) to represent the important information accurately. We had already done the Three Reads Routine multiple times, so I think that helped and I noticed them applying their strategies and vocabulary of quantities and relationships. It was a positive first experience for all of us and they were excited for a more challenging problem to follow!
I introduced this routine to a small group of students during a WIN (What I Need) block. I focused on this group of students because they are the typical general education student who needs to focus on the important information in the question. These students have decided their goal with me and capturing quantities (and the 3 reads they have already explored) should help them with their goal.
The first go around with this routine the students were hesitant, but pushed through the routine. They were able to identify the important quantities and relationships between the colors of flowers and how many flowers were planted each year. This routine allows students to slow down and really understand the relationships in the given problem.
I used this as my second task with a fifth grade class learning the Capturing Quantities routine. I had left off the question with the first task I had done – with great success – so I left it off again. The best part of this one was the diagrams students drew – they were much clearer (partly due to the content, partly due to the fact that it was the second time) in terms of how they showed the relationships between the flower colors. Many used an area type model because it was a garden and few students used a bar model which they had a lot of previous experience with in fourth grade. On this problem, we were really able to focus in on stating quantities as quantities, and not just giving the number, so “the number of red flowers”, etc. The problem lent itself well for this! I knew students were getting comfortable with the routine so for the 3rd task, I chose a pretty challenging one for them: Nuna’s Age