Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts

Wednesday, 4 October 2017

Differentiation Strategy: Varsity Practice

Hi there!

In today's video for Vlogoween, I talk about how getting rid of honors classes, while it comes with more work around differentiation and lesson planning, has been incredible in making our district's math education more equitable.


The problems I mentioned are below--they're all compiled from other online sources and I only created the systems of equations problems at the end!



As always, I would love to hear about how this goes in your classroom if you use it. And if you make it better, please let me know how so that I can grow too! No one is as smart as all of us together!


FIND ME HERE: BLOG: http://grishmapolitan.blogspot.com/ TUMBLR: http://grishma.tumblr.com/ INSTAGRAM: http://instagram.com/grishmapolitan TWITTER: http://twitter.com/grishmapolitan


Geometry Project: Stained Glass Constructions and Art History

Hi there!

I get so excited any time an educator contacts me asking about something that piqued their interest about my classroom--whether you're from a different city, state, or country, thank you for reaching out! I'm sorry I'm not able to respond to every email I get, so I'm hoping to be more intentional about this year's Vlogoween and use it as an opportunity to share the documents and rubrics you might find helpful as I talk through different systems and activities in my classroom!

Today, I'm going to share a project that is inspired by an idea from two of my former students--using patty paper/tracing paper to make stained glass while we practice geometric constructions! I talk through the project and share student examples on today's video:



And the documents I made are below:



As always, I would love to hear about how this goes in your classroom if you use it. And if you make it better, please let me know how so that I can grow too! No one is as smart as all of us together!


FIND ME HERE: BLOG: http://grishmapolitan.blogspot.com/ TUMBLR: http://grishma.tumblr.com/ INSTAGRAM: http://instagram.com/grishmapolitan TWITTER: http://twitter.com/grishmapolitan
YOUTUBE: http://youtube.com/user/grishmapolitan

Sunday, 28 August 2016

Truth Tuesday: Visualizing Intersectionality

On Tuesdays, I take 10 minutes for a mini-lesson on identity development and social justice with my high school students. We set a weekly goal and free-write about it for 5 minutes on Fridays.

Week 1: Visualizing Intersectionality

This week, we watched this TED Talk by Dave Troy:



My students pointed out that it was weird that Troy's map had "geek" and "african american/latino" on opposite sides of a spectrum, but didn't have "white" on it. They wondered if he assumed that POC couldn't be geeks, and why, when talking about his home city of Baltimore, he said "I'm here on the green side, down on the far right where the geeks are... Now, on the other side of the network, you tend to have primarily African-American and Latino folks who are really concerned about somewhat different things than the geeks are." They wondered why he didn't say 'down on the far right where the white people are.' They agreed with him when he says that segregation is a choice, and I pointed out that I didn't. I shared a story about how, when I was in high school, I always wanted to join the debate team but never did because I didn't think I'd be welcome in that space. I believed that many people on the team were friendly and wouldn't be assholes to me, but I had a gut feeling (or an anxiety) that they wouldn't take me seriously. I told my students that it makes me feel weird to think that segregation is a choice because me choosing to join a community doesn't always mean that the community wants me there and would include me. 

Then, we set our goals for Friday:


Reading their responses on Friday almost brought me to tears. I'm so proud of them for being vulnerable and doing the assignment, and so many of them wrote about how they felt closer to their friends after having that conversation. Some of them also pointed out that it felt strange/awkward to have a conversation about their values and identity because it's not something they do very often. Some found that it was hard to talk about themselves at all (which I hope, with practice, gets easier as the year goes on!) Here are a few excerpts from their letters:




As for me, I took the time and had lunch with a teacher whose classroom is near mine but I haven't really talked to all that much. We talked about why we became teachers, what we value in our students and this work, and how we like to spend our free time. So... sweet, I made a new friend!

When was the last time you a vulnerable conversation with someone in your community? I'd love to hear about it! 

Saturday, 5 March 2016

Why We Can't Have Nice Things (Like Affirming Your Identity)

It's Tuesday, and "Julie" is crying. When I ask her what happened, she says that "Kate" is being mean to her in Spanish. I ask her if Kate knows how she feels. She shrugs and goes to tell Kate that she's sad. The two second graders come back hand-in-hand and tell me Kate has apologized for forgetting about The English Rule.

The English Rule, I learn, is exactly what it sounds like--you can only speak in English during recess. Some adult at some point in their lives (someone on recess duty, I'm guessing) decided that the way to stop kids from teasing each other in languages they don't understand is to stop them from using them entirely. Hearing that reminded me of the time I worked at ASU, when a manager decided that the way to avoid people leaving food wrappers at our front desk was to ban food altogether. This kind of behavior management is, I'm learning, ridiculously common. People arguing because of toys? No, let's not teach them how to share or respect each other's property, let's just ban toys from school. People arguing during lunch? No, let's not teach kids how to resolve conflicts, let's eat silently. Let's ignore these opportunities to teach kids really important social skills and ban things instead.

This is not the kind of educator I want to be.

Kate and I had a conversation about why it's not nice to tease people at all, let alone in another language.

"But Julie is my friend, I was just joking!"

"What's the difference between a joke and teasing?" (We had already talked about this last week.)

"Laughing with someone and laughing at someone..." (She remembered!)

"Can someone laugh with you if they don't know what you're saying?"

"No..."

She told me she hadn't thought about it that way before. She apologized to Julie again, not for breaking The English Rule, but for doing something hurtful. Before they left, I told both of them that they shouldn't think it's bad to speak other languages at school, and that it's cool that they know Spanish and Mongolian, respectively. I then learned how to say "Hola, me llamo es Grishma/Sain baina uu, minii ner Grishma baina" and taught them how to say "Namaste, mera naam Julie/Kate hai."

Taking "the thing" away when "the thing" causes conflict feels wrong. But it feels especially wrong when "the thing" is someone's culture. I don't want any child thinking their culture is inappropriate at school. You, your family, your background, your food, your holidays, your opinions, your personality--they're all needed at school. So speak in Spanish all you want, Kate. Just don't tease people.