Teaching maths online - Issue 2

We are all online. We are on a Google Meet. I can see all my learners, great. Job done. Let's replicate what I normally turn up for in the classroom and away we go! No? What? I'm wrong? Yes and no.

Issue 2 - checking learning

In my first session I set a variety of activities that checked for right and wrong answers. I was quite proud of that. I knew I wouldn't be able to read answers aloud and get them to mark. I wasn't confident I could use my homemade CD visualiser and model answers. So I picked self marking exercises. I set them to work and got them to share verbally with me how they got on. Eugh I was disappointed in myself. 

How did I know how they had got on? I didn't. Don't get me wrong we verbally discussed it and I would say I had engaging conversations from over 3/4 of them. But I didn't know how they got on. And I didn't hear anything from 1/4 of them. If I am trying to replicate my classroom, what would I normally do? I would go round and check work. How can I do that?

On reflection I quickly shared a Google Form asking learners a couple of exam style questions on the topic and looked at their results. Great now I knew didn't I? Nope still in the dark. I could see how they got on but I didn't know how they got on. I'm missing their confidence factor. I'm missing their self reflection. I'm missing their working out. I'm missing watching them tackle a problem cheering from the sidelines prompting and nudging when they are struggling. They are all the way over there and I am all the way over here. That is issue 3.

Back to issue 2, normally in class I pulse check with an exam question on the board after each episode. I model the answer. I ask learners to evaluate their progress based against their performance in that episode summed up by their attempt at their exam question. I had partly replicated that in setting the question but I was missing all the other valuable bits too. I am still not at a level where I could model confidently turning my visualiser on, flipping my camera and keeping all my learners focused.

What I am confident with is sharing my screen and modelling with finger writing on my touch screen. I always join my Google Meet twice. I use my chromebook and my phone. That way I can use one for presenting on. I can use the other for responding to chat. In doing this I have a touch screen device connected in my phone. I can flip to a blank Jamboard or Drawing and finger write my multiplication model answer. Instantly I felt that connection. My learners did too, I asked! They were connected and invested in my modelling. They connected their work with the model. They self reflected and learnt from any mistakes that they made. They copied my model down. They made a revision guide model note. They celebrated their success! Modelling is always fab, it's not chalk and talk, it's oration of ideas and connecting the dots. You don't know which dots need connecting for your learner as they are individual. Modelling provides a model where the learner joins up those dots for themselves.

The other part I am missing is capturing their thoughts on their work. How did they feel? How did it look? Did they like it? Could they replicate it? How do I do this in class? They don't all pipe up and chip in. I only verbally hear from some of them. That's what I'm getting now. What am I missing??? Then I remembered normally in class we have a printed sheet of blank text message bubbles. They write in their thoughts as they go through the episodes. I then reply as I go round or after the lesson when I take them in and respond with setting tasks for homework if they've said they've struggled etc. They also have a progress line that they annotate at each episode. That's what I'm missing.

Remembering the Google form I used in lesson 1, lesson 2 I expanded this. I kept it simple. I asked learners to reflect on the learning intentions, pasted into the question, scoring themselves out of 5. How does it feel? Can you replicate it? Have you achieved?

 I included a second question to capture their thoughts too. I turned on collect email addresses so I didn't need them to type names in etc, I knew who was who from that. I also loved the timestamp feature. We used the same form multiple times after episodes and the time stamps reflected this. 24 responses at 630pm, again at 710pm, 740pm, 810pm, 845pm. It's all there in a Google Sheet! I could see that at 630 Maj was rating at a 1 but at 810 it was a 4. I could see Ben was a 2 still at 740 so I needed to speak to Ben and help. That is issue 3.

To make life even easier for me, I set up the Google sheet ahead of time for the responses. I used conditional formatting to turn red if someone pops a 1 rating in there. This worked like a dream. There was a lot of information coming in thick and fast from learners all the time, making it go red automatically made those who were struggling really stand out! I expanded this next lesson to go green for those who were 5s and then could throw some praise their way too. This led me to then getting those who were 5s to share their top tips and peer support others! 

What I liked about this is that I can clearly see the progress of my learners, or not, over the lesson. It's 1 form. 1 ranking question, takes seconds, repeated throughout. Students liked it too as they could leave me a message if they wanted or not. What they liked was an opportunity to reflect on their success and celebrate the joy of being able to rate at a 5. Yes this a confidence rating but it is informed by the exam question we have done so it is confidence with a measure for then to gauge against. Its not perfect but it wins on many levels for me. Its ease, its time stamps, its alignment to the learning intentions. The ability for me to analyse the data in class and after to out in extra support where needed. Most importantly hearing from every student, from every voice, that's why it wins. 

Teaching maths online- Issue 1

The first half term is always the hardest. The first half term is always the hardest. The first half term is always the hardest. This half term is the hardest!!! This half term already has had more twists and turns than we could ever have imagined! With a class of 24 and a maximum class size of 6 physically in the building my class, when I presented them with all the options, chose to study online. Phew what a relief, I thought. No cognitive overload for me. I can teach online. I do tech. Whoa was I wrong!

Issue number 1
Students can't login. 




No I will elaborate but essentially that's my point! Students struggle to login with almost everything. Various stages of enrolment and login set ups aside. There are still login issues. Mine are adults but I think they're universal issues. Some students fear pressing anything that might break anything. They are worried that my pressing a button nuclear war will be declared. Some students press all the buttons out of frustration when things are loading and login log out quick as a flash. They do the hokey kokey of logins. Some students zone out when you are speaking and miss the first set of instructions and forget to press the button. They miss the bus! There are some students who manage it and you can't even stop worrying about them either. Did they manage it first time or are they having anxiety issues and too scared to ask for help? Those students might not be able to replicate logging in when you're not live with them. Teaching online is hard.

In an effort to combat this I created a single website with numbered links. Each link took students to a step by step guide of screenshot after screenshot of what they needed to do. I shortened the link using bit.ly and named it the name of our community centre. Even this went wrong. I used capitals as it is a name of a building. English not my best but I thought I was right? Students forgot the capitals. Students spelt the building name wrong. Students spelt bit.ly wrong. All that effort of step by step instructions had a 40% success rate at best. In the end I ended up doing what was needed to get the learners online. Some now won't remember what we did and can't replicate logins and no doubt I will have to do it again with them at some point.

This isn't a tale of woe completely. My students are now all online. My students are happy, I have asked! I also know this because many have had the option to move to their preferred class time but have chosen to stay with me in the later time slot. This I think is partly to do with the community we built, quickly! Read how I did that here. Content was skipped for week 1 and actually week 2 for the main part. Week 2 we just looked at multiplication and short division. But because we were connected the flow was nice. And we had those aha moments that students could grow and develop with. What I didn't get right was my checking of learning. That is issue 2!

Building Community in virtual maths lesson

 I am a huge fan of building community when teaching online. It is a challenge but I like the challenge that it presents. I like getting to know my students, what their experiences of maths are and I like to get going quickly. My favourite tool for getting to know my students is Flipgrid. Flipgrid allows us all to record a video saying hello and answer some ice breaker questions. I quite like asking how many times you have sat the GCSE exam before or how many pets do you have. Something so that they can all connect. I make a video too showing off the bedlam that is my house and then they can connect with me. We can then use Flipgrid again because we have overcome any difficulties we have with using Flipgrid early doors meaning that we can harness it's full power when we start learning.

If Flipgrid isn't for you, you can replicate this in Google Slides. You can create a Slide deck with the name of each student written at the top and ask them some questions on the slide. They then record a video on their pwn device and insert it onto the slides. This is my default tool for asking students to reflect on how their revision is going and sharing top tips with other learners sometimes over Flipgrid. It is slightly more formal and I think that makes students be more succinct.

If video makes you or your students uncomfortable you can do the same activity but without asking them to insert videos. Using a named slide deck, students find the slide of their name and insert a collage of images that reflect them and their interests. They can add text too to personalise it further.

Once we have been introduced I like to give my students a space to communicate. Google Classroom is my space to communicate with them and Google Currents or Google Hangouts Chat can be their space. I turn on join via  a link and share the link to the students. I inform them that it is optional and I recognise that I teach adults resit GCSE so this may not be appropriate for all ages. I am obviously in the chat and the currents group too. But we set expectations at the outset that it is their space to communicate and I will respond if they need me to. I ask them to help me out and say if you know the answer to a question from one of your peers please respond to save me doing it. Not that I am lazy but that I am busy with many groups and if you see a peer in need please step in to help them out as you may be able to reply quicker than me.

Now we have established communication channels I like to make my students feel welcomed and connected with me throughout their studies. Where possible I leave verbal feedback as an audio file either by Read and Write voice note or Mote. I encourage my learners to do the same. Read and Write gives 1 minute and Mote is 30 seconds in the free version. It's a challenge to be personal and succinct in giving feedback verbally.

Every now and then I like to do a video update about things they might want to be thinking about. When to start revising, recapping a topic that was a while ago, or social information like Christmas activities. I record a Screencastify for less than 5 minutes on the free version and share it with my students. If I have marked a series of papers I like to record a video of me modelling the most common answers that were incorrect and again share that video. This helps me stay connected to my learners. Once they have their marked papers back I would ask them to do a Flipgrid about what would they like to tell themselves if they were to sit the assessment again.

Finally in every task, hyperdoc, choice board I insert my bitmoji doing a crazy thing to show my learners it is me, I created this work for them and I want them to do well.


I hope you manage to stay connected with your learners digitally too.

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