Making this week's board and my thoughts for math:
ABC's of Crazy's Game pieces made from students’ pictures. (This would be fun to make for family fun night too.) How could I use this in the math classroom? How about as game pieces for @Nutterbutter Smith's Games for Students by Students or my own students' board games for review.
aly mw's Onomatopoeia Art
I love the bright colors and the sense of fun that these pieces seem to evoke. My sweet friend, Kathleen, who teaches American History is having students create a graffiti wall inspired by the writers and artists of the Harlem Renaissance which reminds me of these colorful masterpieces. Art in Math? I love having Geometry students create art using specific shapes, angles and line lengths (I have had students create "stain glass windows" that contain required elements). I also like Coordinate Grid pics like Math Aid's Pink Panther. Maybe this year, I could have students create their own pics using piecewise functions for their friends to solve. (Future #Made4Math???)
I love the bright colors and the sense of fun that these pieces seem to evoke. My sweet friend, Kathleen, who teaches American History is having students create a graffiti wall inspired by the writers and artists of the Harlem Renaissance which reminds me of these colorful masterpieces. Art in Math? I love having Geometry students create art using specific shapes, angles and line lengths (I have had students create "stain glass windows" that contain required elements). I also like Coordinate Grid pics like Math Aid's Pink Panther. Maybe this year, I could have students create their own pics using piecewise functions for their friends to solve. (Future #Made4Math???)
School of Fisher's How-to for Printing on Sticky Notes Ummm...printing on sticky notes? Any subject! Anytime! Most obvious, exit tickets:)
Westover's Librarian, Katherine's idea for "What's your status?" Could be used for fictional characters, historical figures, and science elements. For math? Famous mathematicians would be the easiest, but I also thought about assigning the students a type of function like linear or quadratic and have them post from that point of view. If I took this route, it seems like a student would truly have to understand about the domain, range and graph to complete this extension activity. Perhaps, it could be more of a riddle in which students have a function and they could write descriptive "clues" until classmates guess their equation...????...just thinking out loud...but, I am always looking for meaningful ways to keep my fab 4 (early finishers) working from bell to bell.
Want to create your own analog board? This week's finds ready to print:
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