'I want to do really hard work - in a book!' shouted Jane.
The truth was Jane and her partner had just discovered Venn Diagrams for themselves - at seven.
In a relaxed and productive Maths session she and John had worked, chatting away - we call it Work Chat and you are allowed as much of it as you need - while sorting through some number cards from 0 to 100.
The Maths session got off to a great start when I produced the equipment for each pair:
- 2 hoola hoops (borrowed from the gym)
- number cards 1 -100
- work cards ( you can view mine here.)
The work cards aimed to consolidate the children's number sense and to provide challenges for those ready to move on.
Easy tasks included sorting the cards into odd and even numbers. One child was in charge of one hoop - for the odd numbers, the other for the hoop - for the even numbers, so each had a designated task. I chatted with the pairs at work and together we wondered who would have the most cards and how many each might have. When the task was completed the children were asked to find any number patterns - which they duly did. When they finished I sent them to look at the large 100 Square hanging on the classroom wall and to see how they could relate what they had just done to a different visual format.
Success!
Many curriculum objectives had been fulfilled including:
- Estimation
- Number
- Pattern
- Sorting and Categorising
John and Jane - both bright children - worked happily on sorting the cards into those greater than 20 and those less than 20. We discussed who would have the most cards, they wondered where 20 would go as it was neither more or less than itself. They told me the only way to work it out was to get on with the task.
Minutes later and with every card but one laid out in the hoops before them they puzzled over 20 which Jane held in her hand. I hovered, waiting to scaffold an answer is necessary.
More or less together they decided in a Eureka! moment to lay it between the two hoops.
But in the physical act of doing so, it occurred to Jane to do this instead:
While counting in 9s is simplicity itself - each number in the pattern adds to 9!
Another curriculum objective ticked:
- Higher Order Thinking
Jane and John were utterly thrilled to discover this and their enthusiasm and example inspired all the others working at similar tasks. Soon the floor was littered with Venn Diagrams! Jane declared she had seen it before somewhere. They went on last week to discover the relationships between counting in 5s and 10s and consolidating their grasp of
- times tables
3 6 9
12 15 18
21 24 27
30 33 36
More complicated in one sense, yet easier as it is entirely visual is the pattern which can emerge while counting in 6s:
0 6 12 18 24
30 36 42 48 54
60 66
But I'm waiting to see. Maybe they will have other ideas, perhaps I will have to scaffold a bit or we can share ideas. I know both John and Jane and many others in the class are capable of grasping it. But you see they a little stuck on this notion that hard work comes in a book.
Parents, educators, society in general has long subscribed to the notion that children, sitting at a desk in communal silence, scratching away on a book with a well chewed pencil while a deep frown takes root on their little faces is a sign of hard work. And only with that type of hard work will success come.
Nah! It comes with hoola hoops!
Annette Black
Annette Black
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