Virtual teaching robs me of my reason

I have come to the realization after an entire year in virtual classroom purgatory that:

  1. This is no way to teach
  2. This is no way to teach
  3. This is no way to teach
  4. I hate teaching this way
  5. This is no way to teach

Today, I told my students that my heart was breaking. They were surprised that I got as emotional as I did. Even in this virtual hell, they are still able to see and hear the catch in my voice and the sad expression on my face, and today the sadness spilled over more than I wanted it to.

As I tried to explain myself, I found myself crystallizing my heartbreak into one simple phrase.

“My heart is breaking because you won’t let me help you”

Like every first responder…like ER nurses… like animal rescuers…social workers…public defenders…free clinic doctors…homeless shelter staff…and all those other selfless people out there…teachers are in the business of helping other creatures. It is the sole reason we do what we do. We want to help…whenever…however we can.

It is what I want on my tombstone…”Hope I was helpful”

This virtual reality has robbed me of my reason. I cannot see what the students are doing. I can only see what they allow on camera, often only ceiling fans, baseball caps, bed head and curtains. Most of the time I am speaking to myself. I can only hope that someone is listening. It does not snap, crackle and pop the way my classroom always has. I am in a vacuum…I am in space and no one can hear me scream.

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Still in the Middle Ages?

I do NOT correct homework at the beginning of my math classes.

In fact…I do not even give homework in my math classes at all.

Is this shocking?  It should not be, but I fear I am an anomaly in an industry that still focuses attention and energy on methods, techniques, practices and assumptions that are not only wrong, but harmful to both the well being and learning success of our students.

Please be aware that I am speaking from strictly a math standpoint here.  I do recognize the importance of time spent outside of the classroom on writing, free or assigned reading, creating models or presentations, practice for sports, drama, music, not to mention online collaboration or communication that can demolish the isolation of the home environment.  These are areas where time is necessary, even mandatory, outside the room.

I am speaking for the elimination of wasted time, not only at home, but in the classroom as well.  Time misspent on problems with no answers, on endless repetitive motion that devolves learning and kills the spirit, on effort that does not instill confidence and offers no satisfaction for a job well done.

I am speaking about CORRECTING HOMEWORK at the beginning of class because the problems assigned did not have answers available: “THE EVENS”.

I have read myriad tomes on how to run classrooms, how not to waste class time, how not to question, how not to single out students, how not to this and how not to that, but I find that…at the same time…I find so many books that tout correcting homework at the beginning of class, after assigning “THE EVENS” without answers available.  Is this the best we can do?  Is this the technique that guides the students acquisition of knowledge better than any other techniques known to man?


10 Reasons to NOT:

1) Correct homework in class

2) Assign the “EVENS”  (problems without answers)

1 – It is an extremely poor use of time, both at home and in the classroom.

2 – If work is not corrected until the next class period, the brain has erased all memory of the process, making the answer worthless as a learning tool.

3 – It is NOT cheating to check an answer as exercises are completed.  It is a powerful way to lock learning into long term memory.

4 – If the answer cannot be validated, it is neither right or wrong, making it worthless as a learning tool.  Even an incorrect answer is more valuable than one that cannot be validated.

5 – It does not support independent learning.  The answers help students learn to self-teach, self-check, recognize and correct errors.

6 – Immediate feedback supports long term memory and builds confidence. 

7 – If the focus is put on requiring students to show supporting work for every solution, then the process becomes as important as the correct answer and “cheating” becomes irrelevant.

8 – Students need to learn to use the answers as learning tools.  Working backwards from the answer is often the only way to find an error or understand a process, especially in upper math.

9 – It does not allow for differences in learning style or speed.

10 – It does not allow or empower kids to be responsible for their own learning

Math homework is overrated anyhow!!

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Accept and Be Made Obsolete!

I know the world is on a computer driven technology kick right now but…while I see the many advantages in medicine, business, entertainment… I have to admit I am not completely sold on the shift wh…

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Accept and Be Made Obsolete!

I know the world is on a computer driven technology kick right now but…while I see the many advantages in medicine, business, entertainment… I have to admit I am not completely sold on the shift when it comes to education.  From what I see, the kids are being enabled to the point of disability on some levels and I am greatly worried by it, especially in math.

 

In my classes, for the last two days, the kids have been working on geometric transformations.  They are doing it completely “old school” (I despise this term) with protractors, pencils and small trapezoids.  Sadly, they are struggling mightily in ways they should not be.  They cannot trace around a shape, cannot visualize mentally and many will not even attempt it if it gets even a little difficult.

 

The act of picking up a pencil should not be discounted as it is.  Current brain research supports the power that picking up a pencil does for the engagement of a brain.  A computer screen has no such power.  What I am seeing in action is the human hand and the ancient technologies of paper and pencil outstripping, outshining and empowering beyond anything a computer can do at this level of learning.  I see kids trying, persevering, creating, helping, enjoying and learning, learning, learning.  What is more important…I can see and know exactly what they are producing using my own eyes and I have the hard evidence to prove it.  I cannot do that with the computers.

 

I think we should be very, very careful of what we are so freely giving away to software and electronics.  It may just be that we are accepting our own obsolescence…at great cost to our children and without even a decent fight.

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Welcome from the Algebra Goddess

Here you may see, lead, learn and share all ideas and thoughts about teaching with Algebra in mind. What is the biggest need that we Algebra teachers are seeing after ten years of impossible standa…

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The Legacy of No Child Left Behind

We have taught them so much…

…they have learned almost nothing.

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