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Math:The Only Subject that Counts!


I would use a blog in my classroom to share extra resources my students could use to further their curriculum learning. Parents and students often ask for ways to practice or received help outside of the classroom. In this blog, I would share weekly resources that align with the curriculum being taught in the class. I would use it to post the resources, and the students could comment on my post about the resources they tried and their opinion on them. By having the students post on my blog, it would let me know what students tried the resources and how helpful it was to their learning.

 Blogs are an excellent tool for education because it gives teachers and students a space to share ideas. It allows them to learn how to communicate and discuss through technology. Blogs provide a form of communication on a topic that can reduce anxiety and reinforce student understanding, encourage critical thinking, create peer interactions, and promote natural connections to classroom experience (Marshall et la., 2019). It also teaches students proper etiquette and grammar to post online (Laureate Education, 2015).

I am starting my ninth year teaching eighth grade algebra. I hope that my blog will allow students to break through the stereotypes of learning math. “Not to be too general, but in popular culture it’s usually a given that mathematics is nearly impossible to understand, it is boring, and it is lacking in innovation, “(Hobbs, 2010 p.170).  It will give students extra resources to feel more confident in the curriculum and help them enjoy learning math using engaging web tools. 

Two International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) standards met by students while blogging are Digital Citizenship and Creative Communicator. Blogs will guide students to learn how to manage their online identity and engage in positive and safe behavior while using it (ISTE, 2016). Two ISTE standards that are met by teachers are Learner and Leader. When teachers are actively reading blogs, they are learning new ways to improve student outcomes. They are continually learning from other educators to grow in their practice. When teachers are posting on their blogs, they are leaders in education. They empower others to learn through technology and use it to meet the diverse needs of their students (ITSE, 2008).  In conclusion, both the teacher and the student can learn and grow to be a successful learner in the 21st century.

 

Resources:

Hobbs, R. (2010). Voices from the Field: Math Goes Pop: Making the Media and Mathematics

            Connection. Journal of Media Literacy Education2(2), 169–176.

International Society for Technology in Education (ITSE). (2016). Standards for students.

            Retrieved from https://www.iste.org/standards/for-students

International Society for Technology in Education (ITSE). (2008). Standards for educators.

            Retrieved from https://www.iste.org/standards/for-educators

Laureate Education (Producer). (2015). Spotlight on technology: Blogging in the classroom

            [Video file]. Baltimore, MD: Author.

Marshall, A. M. S., Lane, S., Ruiz, R., & Sweet, S. (2019). Online Discussion Blog

            Assignments: Design Implications for Teacher Education involving

            Mathematics. Journal of Computers in Mathematics & Science Teaching38(4), 321–

            335.

 

 


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  2. I am also a math teacher and I love your idea of using a blog to post extra resources for your students. In addition to having your students post about the resources they tried and their opinion about how they worked, you could also have them post about which specific problems from the homework or classwork that it helped them with. Other students would then be able to connect which strategies or resources to use more easily. You could even have parents comment on which resources helped them the most.
    It may be challenging to get students to use those resources, but one way to motivate participation may be to make a game of it. Whoever uses the resource and posts about it gets 5 points and gets a bonus point for anyone that uses their suggestion (like a referral fee). But everyone can get their own points for using the resource and posting about it. At the end of the week or end of a unit, whoever has the most points gets a small prize. This could be a great conversation starter.

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