Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Everyday Math Online Program

Dear Parents, Guardians and Family members,

Thank you for coming to our workshop! I hope you find these links interesting.

Look through the older posts, and add the games and activities to your FAVORITES tab.

Enjoy!

Friday, October 28, 2011

Welcome Computational Commandos!

Thank you to everyone who attended tonight! I hope you all enjoyed it!

In this blog, you will find links to some of my favorite websites and resources.

My free trial parent password for Every Day Math is

Username: Password2
Login: 525

Watch the free videos we looked at tonight, re-read the student reference book in English or Spanish, and try the games.

VEDIC MATH link:
http://www.glad2teach.co.uk/fast_maths_calculation_tricks.htm

Marilyn Burns Link:
http://www.mathsolutions.com/

Hundred Pattern:
http://www.apples4theteacher.com/math/games/100-number-chart-one.html

or
for older children, an adjustable one:
http://www.crickweb.co.uk/ks2numeracy-tools.html

Factor Trees
http://www.mathgoodies.com/factors/factor_tree.asp


Some of My Favorite Websites:
http://www.arcademicskillbuilders.com/

http://www.internet4classrooms.com/

National Library of Virtual Manipulatives http://nlvm.usu.edu/en/nav/grade_g_2.html

http://multiplication.com

http://resources.oswego.org/games/

http://www.apples4theteacher.com/holidays/halloween/math-games/

http://www.mathplayground.com/games.html

Clocks- Interactive Game:
http://www.oswego.org/ocsd-web/games/BangOnTime/clockwordres.html

Remember, the key word to search is INTERACTIVE ...

Monday, September 26, 2011

Link to the Timez Attack! link to load at home

Hi Parents, Students and teachers,

Here's the link to load the free Timez Attack game at home.

PLEASE, load the SCHOOL version, so we can see and use the scores in class, and provide feedback!

Now, Timez Attack comes as a DIVISION game too!
And for Christmas 2011, Addition and Subtraction games will be available!

Check out these amazing multiplication games from Big Brainz.

Friday, September 16, 2011

Act Quickly! Free Everyday Math Apps!

I just received this notice:


"EVERYDAY MATHEMATICS
McGraw Hill Education is offering

five of its ten EM Games Apps

FREE
between September 24-26, 2011!

They are available via the iTunes App store.

These game apps work with Apple iPhones, iPads, and iPod Touches. We are currently developing these apps for Droid Devices.

Learn more about these great game apps and others available from
McGraw-Hill Education here
https://www.mheonline.com/apps/ "

Come see me for help if you would like!

Peter

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

WELCOME BACK to School!

Hello Everyone and welcome back to another year at Stark School.

On this site, I will be posting great links and suggestions that you can use to help your child succeed in school.

Stop back weekly for some great ideas!

-Peter

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

How to Log On to Everyday Mathematics Online Games

Hi Parents and students,

This video will help you get on to the EverydayMathonline.com website, and show you how to log in.



Thanks again for watching!


Peter

Monday, March 14, 2011

Helicopter Parents

Wow! I saw this article, and it made me think about seeing a high school friend this weekend at the Stamford St. Patricks Day parade. He lives in our school district and his son will be entering our school next year, but is concerned based on rumors he's heard. Yet he met with the Principal, and thought highly of our school. So why did he still apply to the four magnet schools?

Because his younger daughter would be allowed to enter the same magnet school. Grandfathered, he said. I'm not sure that she would be, (I thought that only worked if the older child was still there.) but regardless, they would still be able to attend the magnet AND move to a bigger house throughout the city. This is a nice selling point for magnets.

Read the article: http://articles.latimes.com/2011/mar/12/home/la-hm-parent-anxiety-20110312

Back to helipcopter parents. Why aren't these parents being logical? If they feel the local school could use some help, why aren't they trying to volunteer at the school?

"GET INVOLVED!" is my advice. Schools can always use volunteers, even in the evenings or weekends. Our school had a local company's employees come and clean our flowerbeds, and plant. Our school looked wonderful, and the kids really appreciated it.

If you don't like something in your life, you change it. Well, the same thing goes for your community. Small changes, moving in a forward direction, will bring change to also move in that positive direction.

Stamford has had a volunteer, Carol Henderson, who has spent years working hard to establish a chess program. Now it is in many schools in Stamford. Her newest pet project is Math Contests, and she is still working hard, without a lot of recognition and spending her own money, to create an opportunity for self-proclaimed Math Geeks to compete, win, and feel good about enjoying math. And I can happily say, I've helped her by bringing a team of math-athletes to competitions, and they loved competing, and she found ways to make them all successful.
Keep up the good work, Carol!

Friday, March 11, 2011

Do Failing And Affluent Schools Exist?

Oh boy, what a loaded question! I read this blog, and looked over her information, and I think she's saying they do not exist. But I think Martha Infante's blog entry is missing the point she's trying to make: rich kids are doing well regardless of school culture, and kid's home lives do affect school performance in enormous ways. Instead, biased readers will use her information to share the wrong conclusion and state that "Affluent communities can do it, why can't everyone else!"

In Connecticut, the State Department of Education is starting to shift focus from the yearly results, to our new vertical scale scores. The Department wants everyone to begin to focus on growth each year.

Connecticut has been using the Connecticut Mastery Test to test for quite a while now, over twenty years, and we are on fourth generation of test revisions. Ten years ago, classroom teachers began complaining (I and my grade level were very vocal) that students were arriving below grade level, and regardless of how much they improved in one year, we were not going to show the growth. So a new system, the Degrees of Reading Assessment (DRA) was adapted from an Australian reading program, First Steps in Literacy. We began to measure the students' reading level, and 'behind the Curtain' we teachers record and observe and focused our instruction based upon each student's instructional level. While it is a one-on-one performance test and it isn't perfect, we teachers crow about growth, and that's what should be getting our attention.

I mention this, because Martha's post does not measure student growth from year to year. This is what teacher effect and influence is all about. And, dear reader, remember; I as a teacher can have a great influence, or not, but I am merely a multiplier effect, not a cause of learning. The student has to be looked at, as well. Good learners will improve ALOT with good instruction, and they will improve mildly with mediocre instruction, and they will dwindle with bad instruction. But they do not decline because of instruction. Outside influences (divorce, home-life, accidents, death, fears, or truancy) are the ones that make a student's learning regress.

I mention all this because of two reasons: (1) Look at individual teachers, not schools to find the lack of learning progress, and (2) Are these superstar kids being pushed to excel, or are they merely being asked to complete objectives?

Affluent school parents are happy and impressed with their schools, but their students could do so much more than is being asked of them! The children come in, so ready to learn, that truly excellent teachers must push these students to the edge of their ability and understanding. Like we do in our "sixth year of failing" school, everyday.

I am very proud of the work we do in Stark School, and I will put almost every colleague up against any teacher from any affluent district, and I know who will help any student improve the most! I do have to say, though, that coordinating staff efforts and keeping everybody focused on our school goals, is extremely important as well. Teachers are not islands of excellence, and cannot be an island. Using the broad scope of year to year learning is important to sharpen, but noticing specific individual learning success is important daily. Principals watch the big picture, and Assistant Principals watch the step by step process, and everyone lends a hand in progress. Minute to minute.
-Peter


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/martha-infante/failing-public-school-education-reform_b_803368.html

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Have you heard of the Khan Academy?

Neither had I, until about a year ago. And, like many other great ideas in our lives these days, I ignored it until I heard about it, AGAIN. So this time, I'm sharing it. The Khan Academy is busy creating math instruction videos, (like I make on the Promethean) and posting them for anyone to access. Here is a great article, with weblinks, telling you more about the program by people associated with the program. Read and Enjoy!

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/shantanu-sinha/the-right-way-to-use-tech_b_833827.html

-Peter

Monday, March 7, 2011

John Stewart's Teacher Stance, Enjoy the Irony!

John Stewart's finally talking to teachers. If you are a teacher, you'll enjoy this. If not, well, just go to the next posting.

-Peter

http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/mon-february-28-2011/crisis-in-dairyland---message-for-teachers


John Stewart and Diane Ravitch

John Stewart has a conversation with Diane Ravitch.

http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/thu-march-3-2011/diane-ravitch
So you like math? Try out this website from Great Britain's University of Cambridge:

http://nrich.maths.org/public/