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Useful website March 26, 2008

Posted by Mhairi Stratton in : International Developments, Sharing Good Practice , add a comment

The Count Me in Too website is worth a look.  It is informative and offers practical advice for class teachers.

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Count Me In Too is a project operating across New South Wales, Australia. It is designed to assist teachers broaden their knowledge of how children learn mathematics by focusing on the strategies students use to solve arithmetic tasks.

The project aims to improve the educational outcomes in mathematics for all students through professional development of teachers. It achieves this by increasing teachers’ understanding of how children develop increasingly sophisticated ways of solving arithmetical problems. The research-based learning framework used in the project provides direction for teaching and learning.

Supporting MR Tracker Training February 27, 2008

Posted by Mhairi Stratton in : East Lothian, Learning, Mr Tracker, Sharing Good Practice , 2comments

I have been trying to think of ways to support MR Tracker training. My first step was providing sub pages to this blog with information about the progressions (Click on the MR Tracker tab at the top and then click on  the sub pages). A possible way of sharing ideas could be that teachers add their tried and tested activities as a comment at the foot of the pages. CLICK HERE TO SEE AN EXAMPLE .

My next endeavour is to add some video clips of MR Tracker Interviews. These can be found by clicking on the MR Tracker tab at the top and then clicking on the subpages - Observations. I hope that these prove useful to those teacher who have had MR Tracker input but would like more opportunities to practise observing children solving the tasks. Again teachers could  post comments about these if they would like to start a discussion about any of the progressions.

Adding the video clips is proving time consuming. Hopefully I will have this part of the site complete over the next few weeks.

Sharing Good Practice - St Gabriel’s February 24, 2008

Posted by Mhairi Stratton in : East Lothian, Learning, Mr Tracker, Planning, Sharing Good Practice , add a comment

I was invited to go to St Gabriel’s and join P1 & teacher, Helen Maule, for their numeracy lesson today. What a fantastic experience. Helen was trained in MR Tracker in October and now uses the Maths Recovery techniques in her teaching.

This is how she structured her lesson:

Learning Intention - adding two groups together 

Warm up

 Problem Solving Task:

Plenary

 This is an excellent example. Helen linked all her progressions together. The warm up introduced/practised the key skills that were required to do the problem solving activity. The problem solving activity was simple and therefore children were working independently and on-task. Helen made sure that she used her time to challenge children’s thinking by introducing screens.

Thanks Helen!

Using Learning Assistants to Good Effect February 24, 2008

Posted by Mhairi Stratton in : East Lothian, Learning, Mr Tracker, Planning, Sharing Good Practice , add a comment

At Longniddry we roughly tracked a class of children and then considered possible ways of planning an effective numeracy lesson for all pupils.  The tracker made it very clear that the teacher could not use a differentiated lesson. She was required to deliver two separate lessons (Some children were working within numbers to 20 and the rest of the class were working with numbers up to a thousand, multiplication & division). This raised the issue of how much time we spend teaching numeracy each day, ensuring that every child gets quality learning and teaching experiences.

One solution is using learning assistants to effect: providing them with some training in the MR strategies so that they can be directed to groups within a lesson to practise skills (warm up), support problem solving and challenge thinking.

This is exactly what Longniddry are trying to do. The Learning Assistants had their first taste of Maths Recovery today. We looked at Number Word Sequences and looked at common errors and ways of supporting this. We also had a go at bunny ears (a fun ‘game’ that uses finger patterns to combine and partition numbers). The group  reported that they now felt confident delivering these activities under the class teachers instruction - fantastic!

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