Revised Imb Math 3224
Revised Imb Math 3224
Revised Imb Math 3224
Clinical Assignments
(Note: Do not include school names, teachers name, students name, or any of
descriptors that would enable the reader to know which school you were placed
or any names of those involved than your own).
Part A: Context for Learning
1. Grade level:
2nd grade
2. How much time is devoted each day to mathematics instruction in your classroom?
An hour and ten minutes is scheduled for math instruction in the classroom.
Most days only one hour or fifty minutes are actually used for math instruction. In
the morning students do have math morning work. However, it is not discussed nor
gone over after students finish. The teacher checks the work and gives ice-cream
rewards for students who pass the work sheet.
3. Identify any textbook or instructional program the teacher uses for mathematics instruction.
If a textbook, please provide the title, publisher, and date of publication.
At my school they teach strictly to the standard. They do not use a program or
textbook. They make their own problems, and examples up based off of the
standard. They do have old textbooks and will occasionally pull these out for
activities. The book was not shown to me, due to the lack of use of the actual
textbook.
4.
From your observations, list other resources (e.g., electronic whiteboard, manipulatives,
online resources) the teacher uses for mathematics instruction in this class. Also, give a specific
example including the concept is taught and the resource(s) the students used.
Smart-Board, individual white boards, manipulatives- Cuisenaire rods Students use
their whiteboards to draw out each problem and during guided practice. Students
are allowed to use Cuisenaire rods to help them understanding the breaking downs
of tens or how ten ones is really a ten stick.
5. From your observations, explain how your teacher makes sure the students learn the
standard/objectives conceptually giving a specific example.
My cooperative teacher uses exit tickets as an assessment. He does not use the exit
tickets every day but usually once a week on fridays. This is what he asked me to
use as my assessment as well in my lesson. The other days during the week he
divides students into groups after his whole group instruction and puts problems on
the boards for students to work on with their partners. During this time he usually
calls back students who are the strugglers and works with them in a small group
setting. For both the small group setting and the exit tickets he collects he check
the drawing of students for accuracy of them correctly trading ten sticks for ones,
that they correct cross out the number of tens and ones the problem calls for and
that they are left with the correct number of tens and ones that matches the
answer.
6.
What did you learn most about teaching mathematics from observing this teacher?
For his class an extended whole group instruction worked best for his students. I
personally believe that he showed me that is important to know your students and
what works best for them. Students should start with manipulatives then move to
drawings. Finally, the should be able to do it from a numbers only way that makes
sense to them.
Subject: Math
Criteria- 75%
21st Century Skills (1):
Critical Thinking Skills
Collaboration
Prerequisite knowledge and skills needed (1):
minor knowledge from previous lessons:
Subtraction, Difference, take-away
Activity
1. Engage (3)
Time
6-7 min.
2. Explore (3)
10-12 min
3. Explain (3)
4. Elaborate/Extend (3)
5. Evaluate (Assessment
methods) (3)
Materials/Technology (1): Tens sticks and ones cubes, Elmo or white board, exit ticket,
7-8 min
5-6 min
8-9 min.
4.
0 Points
1 Point
2 Points
Procedural
Showed problem
equation and gave
correct answers.
Conceptual
a.
b. 10% of students only received 1 point out of the 4 possible points. 25% of the
students received 2 of the possible 4 points. 65% of the students received 4 of
the possible 4 points.
The students who only received 1 point earned partial points for procedural
understanding. Both the student wrote the correct problem equation of 25-8=?
But did not have the correct answer. Neither student earned any points for
conceptual. They had no pictures or labeling on their paper.
2 of the 5 students who earned only 2 points only gained points for procedural
understanding. Both students had the correct problem equation and answer on
their papers. Neither student earned points for conceptual understanding. One
student had drawings, but they were not correct and did not match up to the
problem equation or the correct answer. The other student did not have any
drawings or work on his paper.
3 of the 5 students who only gained 2 points received 1 point for procedural
understanding, and 1 point for conceptual understanding. These 3 students
received 1 point for procedural understanding because they correctly wrote the
problem equation of 28-5=? But did not have the correct answer. These 3
students also earned 1 point for conceptual understanding because they
correctly drew 2 tens and 5 ones. However, the students started messing up
when they were trading. One student only drew 5 more ones instead of ten
ones for the traded ten stick. One students did not mark through their traded
ten so when they went back to count they counted two tens which made their
answer 27 instead of 17. The last student correctly drew the tens, ones and
trades but did not mark through the correct amount of ones and came up with
the wrong answer.
c. Scan and insert here the copies of 2 students first work samples as follows (choose the
most representative examples from the whole class assessment):
Student 1 Mathematics Work Sample (student struggles with conceptual understanding)
Student 2 Mathematics Work Sample (student struggles with procedural fluency or reasoning)
Conceptual
2.OA.1 Use subtraction within 100 to solve one-and two-step
Procedural
1.