I just wanted to let you know what we're up to this week in math. Testing is not yet done (though we are through with most of it), so we launched a few experiments this week.
LarrabeeSchool.Org
Before leaving, Eric Paige gave us the okay to experiment with Google Apps for Education, Google's suite of productivity tools free and branded with your school district. Because of district email policies, we have disabled Gmail, but students have a docs account, a sites account, and a calendar account. So we are experimenting with using these online tools and this online storage system. It's very exciting and the kids have started experimenting on their own with some of these tools!
KhanAcademy.Org
The KhanAcademy is a site that I've shared about this year before as a collection of hosted videos of "how to do math." Self-admittedly, Sal Khan (the creator) learned in a very traditional and algorithm-based method of mathemtatics which is what he imparts to students in his videos. I believe that these videos are a poor substitute for a proper introduction to the concepts behind the math, but they serve as great reviews and reminders of how to do the formalized abstract representational stuff on paper.
The innovative thing about the Khan Academy is that now we can log in with our larrabeeschool.org accounts. Students have added me as their coach (they can add you, too, if you have a Google or a Facebook username) and I can see what they have been up to and where they are struggling. For their part, students collect points and badges -- kind of like in a video game -- as they work through the lessons and practices at their own pace. It's a very cool resource and so we are trying it out this week.
I think next Monday sees the end of our testing windows (MSP is done, MAP is in progress for reading, and DRP is open until Monday) and we can get back to a more normal schedule by then. Until then, my plan is to get students up to where they are currently comfortable on the Khan Academy so that I can see how it helps me identify needs and differentiate for students.
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