The Most Wonderful Time of the [School] Year

A teacher LIT ME UP today and it was unnecessary and so awkward.

It’s the most wonderful time of the school year.  All of us are so exhausted and tired and overwhelmed and…testy.  Everyone’s on edge because of the stress of closing out the first semester that we lose our patience with each other.

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I can only assume that this teacher was also tired and on edge and because of that she took out her frustration on me.  While this was a really negative interaction, that I do hope we can get past, I did learn a few things about myself.

To explain, let me share what happened:


Last year our district decided that we were going to move towards common assessments in lieu of benchmarks.  As teachers, we were thrilled at the idea that we wouldn’t have to give up class time to administer these extra standardized tests.

Well, it’s final exam season and as a Lead teacher I am responsible for working with my team to finalize the semester 1 final exam.  After discussing with everyone, and going back and forth with edits via email, we finalized the final exam.

The day before we were to administer the test one of our teachers asked if she could change one of the problems, just for her test, because she felt her students needed a different version of the problem.  She assured me it would cover the same standards as the original question.

I was quick to answer.  As she was explaining it to me it all sounded good.  It sounded logical;  she would be covering the same standard on her assessment as the original.  The math would be the same.  No big deal, right?

Me:  “Sure, that sounds fine.  No big deal.”

Teacher:  “Okay, are you sure?  You’re fine with me changing it?”

Me:  “Yeah, you’re covering the same math so it’s fine.  Go ahead!”

This conversation probably took a whole of 3 minutes.  When I got off the phone I immediately had a weird feeling about my decision.  While it all sounded very logical I started replaying other conversations I had the previous week, about this exact final exam, with our assistant principal (AP) that supervises the math department.

I remembered that our AP was not happy that our assessments were not the same.  You see, we had to write a separate final for another teacher on our team that is a chapter and a half behind the rest of us.  Even though it was obviously necessary for that teacher to have a different final, our AP was still not happy about it.  I realized that I probably spoke too soon and maybe it wasn’t the best idea to have authorized now technically a third version of the final exam.

So, I called the teacher back and explained all of this.  I explained that the intent is for us to have common assessments and if we continue to allow each other exceptions to the rule, however minor they are, we will never get to where the department is trying to go.  And because we had so much back and forth about this particular final with our AP, I expressed that we should run it by our AP first before she changed the final.

It did not go over well and that’s when our conversation went south (like, really south.)  I should note that this isn’t like her;  we have a great working relationship and I was floored by all of this.  Maybe it’s because she didn’t get her way, maybe it’s because I changed my mind and came across indecisive, maybe it doesn’t have anything to do with me or maybe it has everything to do with me.  In any case, that’s how it went and it was awkward.


So, what did I learn from all of this?

  1.  I’m so grateful to be a Lead teacher.  It’s a low-stakes, little leadership role in our department;  it’s a great opportunity for me to take risks and make mistakes, so that I can learn and grow.
  2.  I want my yes’s to mean yes and my no’s to mean no.  I don’t want to come across indecisive or give the impression that I’m not certain of the decisions that I make.  When I had to call back to change my mind, I wonder if it seemed like someone else influenced me after the fact and if that makes me appear to be easily persuaded.  I want to communicate that I’m confident in my decisions.
  3. I’m a people pleaser and, “yes,” sits on the tip of my tongue all the time.  For me, saying “no” feels like I’m shutting someone down.  I want to encourage creative ideas and make people feel validated.  I can accomplish that same thing, but also make confident and solid decisions, by saying the phrase, “Let me think about it and get back to you,” instead of an immediate, “Yes!”  I’m pretty good about looking at situations from all angles;  saying this phrase buys me the time I need to analyze something completely to make a sound decision.  I’m going to practice saying it so that phrase sits on the tip of my tongue at all times.

Eleanor Roosevelt

Eleanor Roosevelt had it right and I’ve got a lot to learn.

~PV~

Circus Animal Cookies: Predictions, Association, and Line of Best Fit

I teach Integrated Math 1 and during a Team meeting we were looking for ways to start a new unit on modeling two-variable data.  We knew we wanted the first lesson to set a positive tone for a new unit being introduced during a time of year when we are starting to get tired.  Like, is it winter break yet?

This first lesson needed to:

  • Remind students how to take data and transform it into a scatter plot
  • Remind students how to describe the association of the scatter plot
  • Review how to draw a line of best fit they feel best models the data and then write the equation of that line
  • And most importantly (well, for me anyway) be fun and memorable for our students!

We are blessed to have a department of math teachers that happily collaborate and share their cool stuff so we immediately turned to our resident statistician, Ricky Yip.  He teaches our AP Statistic classes and we had a feeling he had something good.

We were right!  Ricky shared with us that he uses Circus Animal Cookies for a similar lesson.  Our team took his idea and ran with it.  We built a lesson around our students working collaboratively to collect data and discover the math.


Here’s how the lesson goes:

We start with students sitting in teams of 4 and we give each student a small, snack sized bag of Circus Animal Cookies.  Already, we are off to a great start because who doesn’t love cookies?

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Problem #1:  Students are asked to examine their bag of Circus Animal Cookies and predict how many cookies they have and how many pink versus white cookies are in their bag.  Then they get to open their bag of cookies and see if their prediction was correct!

Circus Animal Cookie Drop

Problem #2:  After each member of their team has recorded their data (pink versus white cookies) students represent their data on a dot plot.  My colleague, Adam Varnes, took this opportunity to bring up students’ work to display and discuss domain and range of the data.

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Problem #3:  At this time students are instructed to collect data from all the other teams in the room.  In my class, I have 9 teams, and each student has a role.  Each team has a Reporter so I asked each of them to write their team’s data on the board for all to copy.  Students take the class data and create a scatter plot.

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Problem #4:  This problem gives an opportunity for students to review how to describe the association of a graph:  form, direction, strength, and outliers.  After describing our Circus Animal Cookie scatter plot, students realize that the data could be modeled with a line.  Students draw a best fit line and share their strategies with how to draw it with the class.  Students are asked to explain what the slope and y-intercept represented in the context of this problem and then write the equation of the best fit line.

Closure:  We wrap up the lesson with a Whiparound.  I ask each team of students to share one thing they learned today with the class.  When I call on their team, the Reporter is the one who shares for the team.  Students aren’t allowed repeats so they must share something new.  As they share, I compose a list on the board of their responses;  making sure to focus the discussion on how to describe the association of the scatter plot and how to find the equation of the best fit line.


If you’re interested in running this lesson, here’s the handout we gave to our students:  Circus Animal Cookies Lesson   I’d love to hear about how the lesson went for you and what improvements you made!

We are so pleased with this lesson and how well our students responded to it!  In fact, there were several times during class that I thought my students were off task because they seemed to be enjoying themselves too much!  Much to my delight, when I questioned them on their work they answered both correctly and with confidence.

A fun and memorable lesson for our students—check!

~PV~