These guys are really amazing. If you haven't had a chance to see their stuff, you're missing out.
Two roads that too often run askew, math and pop culture, intersect here. Their data analysis is both clever and accessible. If you don't find their insights interesting, well, I don't want to find myself talking to you at a cocktail party.
I finally worked their material into a lesson plan. It came from their latest post. I posted stuff black people like on the board, and asked my students to guess what it was showing. I got some interesting guesses. I explained how these guys run a free online dating service so they can research dating trends. I told them this was from an article called "The real stuff white people like"...They chuckled. I told them they were looking at the things that were most likely to come up in the profiles of black males. I asked them what they noticed. Within minutes, we were talking about font size. They were polishing their estimating and proportional reasoning skills. I was asking questions like how many times more likely a black male was to list Lupe Fiasco to Busta Rhymes. We examined the trends in the races represented in my class.
I asked what this had to do with math. One of my classes played right into my hands: 'NOTHING!'
I told them I'd prove to them it has everything to do with math. I gave them an index card, asked them to write a survey question down about interests, hobbies, or something fun. I got a lot of good questions, ones that I wouldn't have thought of on my own. I turned it into an online survey. I found out surveymonkey doesn't offer all of the features we'd need, unless I forked over some chedda. I found a place where I could get all that stuff for free.
They will take the survey. They will look at their individual class results compared to the results for all my students. We'll use proportional reasoning. We'll create a poster. Hopefully they'll be fresh. I'll have wall decorations for the year.
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
The Excitement of Teaching
Teaching is the girl that can't help breaking hearts. When she gives you her number, you don't wait two days to call. You rehearse what you will say, but the words still come fumbling out your mouth. And she doesn't call you right back. Just when you've given up hope, her name shines through on your caller ID. You drop everything to see her for just few minutes. Teaching is high maintenance. She needs you to be there for her all day long. She doesn't need anything in 3 days, she needs it in 5 minutes. When she has a problem, everything else in your life gets put on hold.
She may be high maintenance, but she's not a gold digger. She'll take one hand knit scarf over 5 diamond rings. She prefers a homemade meal and a late evening stroll to a fancy dinner and a night on the town any night of the week. When you try to be conservative with teaching, when you start taking her for granted, you end up sleeping by yourself. She likes risks.
She's a roller coaster. She has you singing Love you Madly one day, and It ain't me Babe the next. She's a rose that will prick you the second you think you have her in your grasp. With teaching, there's no silver lining; no fairy tale ending. You bust your hump for her all day long, and then lay awake at night wondering about her. If she likes you, resistance is futile. You can try to get out, but she'll just suck you back in, somehow. She's like a Catch-22 squared.
But she always keeps you on your toes. She makes you feel alive. She turns your logarithmic curve of self-discovery exponential. And she takes you on a great vacation every summer. And most of all, when you look back on the time you spent with her, you might question every move you made, but you regret none. If you've ever felt trapped by the monotony of a risk-free relationship, you love the passion and excitement she brings to the table. Yup, I'll take teaching over my old corporate gig even on her worst days.
She may be high maintenance, but she's not a gold digger. She'll take one hand knit scarf over 5 diamond rings. She prefers a homemade meal and a late evening stroll to a fancy dinner and a night on the town any night of the week. When you try to be conservative with teaching, when you start taking her for granted, you end up sleeping by yourself. She likes risks.
She's a roller coaster. She has you singing Love you Madly one day, and It ain't me Babe the next. She's a rose that will prick you the second you think you have her in your grasp. With teaching, there's no silver lining; no fairy tale ending. You bust your hump for her all day long, and then lay awake at night wondering about her. If she likes you, resistance is futile. You can try to get out, but she'll just suck you back in, somehow. She's like a Catch-22 squared.
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