You've also probably gathered that I get excited about articulating cool, interesting and differentiated ways for students to interact with texts and learning experiences.
Multiple choice tests and essays will always be part of our repertoire but I'm constantly looking for new ways we can process and reflect on learning.
You may have a sense of how I operate from other playlist entries like:
As you may have noticed, a lot of these ideas are informed by popular culture. Today's playlist addition is no exception to that rule. The advent of new and more powerful technologies for processing mathematical and visual data has created an bit of a pop culture sensation around infographics - a genre
Wired Magazine
gleefully refers to as "Infoporn."
This artistic & mathematical mode of expression that entered American popular culture through
USA Today is now so pervasive that there are International Infographic Awards and the
New York Times maintains a mind blowing Infographics department - see
these samples and this
wild interactive graph.
Pop books like
The Visual Miscellaneum - a book given to me by homeboy and MC POP chemistry teacher
Alexander - are using mathematical expressions to explore "the worlds must consequential trivia" (BTW - if you don't own this book, buy it, it is super fun and useful for the classroom).
Magazines like Fast Company have a monthly section of the magazine called "Numerology" where they add cool grapics to a "number story" like this one:
Academics like
Edward Tufte (Yale), are collecting and popularizing their visual data in books like
Visual Explanations &
Beautiful Evidence. Other academics, like my former professor
Graeme Sullivan (Columbia) is busy articulating ways that visual representations
can be viewed as research. The qualataive and quantitative are finding ways to
"connect the minds!" This exciting merge of visual and mathematical culture is slowly becoming an integral part of TV and online humor. If you want a quick mathematical insight or laugh visit
Indexed,
Graph Jam, or
More New Math. Maybe you were watching Comedy Central and caught mathematical expressions on television shows like
Dimitri Martin's Important Things - note the graphs used in this montage from season 1:
Naturally, this pop culture phenomenon was something I thought we could use to MAKE CURRICULUM POP!
To those ends, I created the Mathematical Expression Fun LEO© as a way for Logical/Mathematical students to strut their stuff in humanities classrooms.
When you have a learning experience or reading you want students to reflect on YOU DON'T ALWAYS HAVE TO ASSIGN A TRADITIONAL STUDY GUIDE, JOURNAL, ESSAY OR TEST! You can have students create mathematical expressions about the things they've learned using this LEO©
I designed four versions of this LEO©'s first page - one each for post-seconday, high school, middle school and elementary school (although this will probably only work for the upper elementary set) teachers.
I bundled the post-secondary and high school first pages into one PDF and the middle school and elementary into another (attached below). I tried to select age appropriate mathematical expressions for each group - and yes, it took a while.
Here are first page samples:
Better yet, here's a sample of "student" work from
Kim an MC POPPER, and Jr. High Social Studies teacher who is in my Differentiation of Instruction class this term:
I'm into assessments that tell us "what students know" as opposed to "what they don't know" - as such this bad boy fits the bill.
I'm proud of this creation, because I DO NOT lean toward mathematical thinking - but that is the point, isn't it? I want students that AREN'T LIKE ME to find ways into whatever curriculum we're studying.
I hope you enjoy this
playlist addition. if you USE it please do scan some of your coolest student work an share it with folks here at MC POP. Student models are extremely helpful to all of us!
As always comments, suggestions and general discussion are always appreciated!
RRG:)
ED ADDITION 5.25.11
MC POPPER
Camille Napier Bernstein (no known relation to the bears of the same last name) shared / attached a rubric she developed for this as well as some student samples from the novels
Into the Wild and
The Great Gatsby below. I thought that they were so cool that they needed to become a permanant part of this post. Talk about higher-level thinking!!! Enjoy...