Year: 2011

Total 140 Posts

Students Tweeting About Clickers

I find it hard to get worked up one way or the other over clickers (or “student response systems” or what-have-you) but something I definitely don’t hate is Derek Bruff’s weekly roundup of student clicker tweets.

For instance:

@jackiesayswhat I need to buy a clicker? seriously? during my last semester?

@hornylizard Man who got a clicker that they aint using this semester and wouldnโ€™t mind letting me use?

@Thee_JadeE Oooohhhh Iโ€™m bout to drop this psych class! Something told me I was gunna have to buy a clicker!

You start to get a pretty strong sense of the student response to student response systems.

Pro Tip

Anytime anybody asserts anything disparaging (or affirming) about contextual problem solving in mathematics, it’s helpful to ask “what representation of problem solving are you talking about?” Because a) unless the student is actually outside the classroom in the context, you (or more likely your textbook’s publisher) have had to represent that context somehow for use in the classroom, and b) not all representations are created equal. Also, not to get too big for my first-year PhD student britches either but this seems like a blind spot in the existing research.

[PS] Pseudorejects

These are submissions I received that didn’t seem to fit the criteria. This isn’t to say they’re great problems. This isn’t to say that I’d throw water on any of these problems if they were on fire. This isn’t to say that they’ve even represented or examined their context well, just that the context itself isn’t pseudocontext.


Breedeen Murray

McDougal Litell’s Math Course 1:

 


Barbara Panther

McGraw-Hill’s Total Math – Grade 6:

Bill goes to a farm and sees cows and chickens. He counts 6 heads and 18 legs. How many of each animal does he see?

 


Melissa Griffin

Haese and Harris Mathematics for the International Student.:

 


Jeff Bowlby

McGraw-Hill’s Algebra 1:

 


Phil Aldridge

EdExcel International’s Longman Mathematics for IGCSE Book 1:

 


Iain Mackenzie

Scotland National Examination:

 


Christine Lenghaus

Australian Year 12 Exam:

 

Amulya Iyer

Pearson’s Algebra 2:

 


Steve Bullock

Unknown:

 

Fall Quarter Wrap-Up / Winter Quarter Kick-Off

Brief Encapsulating Remarks

  1. Academic writing is hard, especially if you’ve grown accustomed for the last five years to posting whatever random 450 words pass through your head at a given moment. Writing even something as basic as a literature review was like trying to run a marathon on sixteen tabs of Benadryl.
  2. Too many units. Someone on the welcome weekend panel โ€“ none of us can remember who it was โ€“ told us all to max out our units. Never again.
  3. Blogiversity. I was talking to Jo Boaler last night (name drop!) and she admitted she didn’t really get the whole blogging thing. I said I didn’t really get the whole peer-reviewed journal thing. Then I recommended blogging in two ways. First, I showed her the time I asked you to help me identify a core practice of teaching and you came through with 100 (mostly) measured responses. Second, I showed her our ongoing soon-to-end-I-swear investigation of pseudocontext. I’m sure it would’ve taken me many months more to come up with my working definition of pseudocontext had you all not come through with so many examples.

Current Coursework

I’m putting in the minimum this quarter, units-wise:

  • EDUC250B – Statistical Methods in Education. Eric Bettinger. Required.
  • EDUC325B – Proseminar. Hilda Borko, Brigid Barron. Required.
  • EDUC396X/176X – Casual Learning Technologies. Shelley Goldman. With an emphasis on iPhone apps in education. This one’s candy. Here’s the syllabus.

Fall Quarter #GradSkool Tweets

Favorite Papers

These are the ones I gave my highest rating in my aggregator.

Winter Speaking & Workshops

[Help Wanted] Seattle Qwest Stadium Beer Cups

Are any of my readers headed to Seattle’s Qwest Stadium anytime soon? If you are, see if you can score a small and a tall beer cup and take them home. If you’re game, I need three photos:

  1. the menu with beer prices visible.
  2. both cups side-by-side on a counter.
  3. both cups side-by-side on a counter with a centimeter ruler in the same visual plane.

And, yeah, my request ticket has everything to do with this fantastic clip:

[h/t @mcjhn]

[BTW: Bummer. Qwest has already pulled my math unit. Gotta admire their spin, though. “We weren’t ripping off the tall-cup customers. We were giving the short-cup customers a bonus!”]