The document outlines ways that two math specialists at Bellwood Elementary School in Chesterfield County, Virginia have incorporated physical activity into math lessons to help increase student engagement and learning, such as using hula hoops and jump ropes for place value and fraction activities, designing math-focused fitness stations, and adding movement to vocabulary instruction. It also provides statistics on childhood obesity and math pass rates to establish the need for new approaches to math education.
1. Shape Up and Flex Your Number Skills Presented by Summer Lannan and Sandy Wilson Title 1 Math Specialists, Bellwood Elementary
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3. The National School Board Association reports that childhood obesity has nearly quadrupled among 6-11 year olds and tripled among 12-19 year olds over the past 4 decades.
4. 88% of Chesterfield County students have passed their math SOL tests for 2008-2009 school year. However, the Bellwood Elementary passing rate is 83%. State standards require us to accomplish 100% by 2014.
5. According to action based learning, movement helps to increase brain activity.
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7. Analyzing DataList what we do at Bellwood. 1 hour math model Calendar math Small groups Specialists plan with grade level teams Math Night, Muffins 4 Math at Bellwood and Food Lion Family Math Night Recess/Lunch Remediation Study Island www.brainybetty.com 4
8. What ELSE Can We Do? www.brainybetty.com 5 Action Based Learning www.actionbasedlearning.com Brain science strongly supports the link of movement to learning.
10. Incorporate Math and PE2008 Doug Hesser was already beginning to incorporate math into PE by having students skip count while jump roping, adding while throwing, and multiplying while playing basketball We decided to work together and collaborate more math and PE activitiesin our SOL grade levels. www.brainybetty.com 7
12. Implementing Movement into the Mathematics Class Hula Hoop Activities Fitness Stations with dice Geometry Simon Says Super Inch Number Line Patterning with movement Recess Remediation with math
14. Any Volunteers!Directions:1. You will be getting into teams.2. The first person in each team will run/walk fast to the hula hoops and make a match, go back to your line. 3. Next person goes until all participants have a match.4. Go over matches with the class.
16. Now It Is Your Turn? Each person will be split into teams. Those teams will need to relay to the hula hoops and try to find one card from the first hula hoop that has the same product/quotient as a card from the other hula hoop.
18. Mathematics in Action StationsStudents were asked to rotate in small groups to 4 stations, and were timed for 1 minute for 3 different attempts. They recorded their data on recording sheets. This raw data was then used to create a graph and calculate mean, median, mode, and range later in the classroom as an extension activity. The mathematic skills that students put into practice through this activity were: Recording data, graphing, calculating mean, median, mode, and range. “Math Fitness Fun Day” was an example of using mathematics for a real life purpose.
21. The Presidential Physical Fitness Award Miss Strang decided to take math stations to a whole new level and create fitness folders using the Presidential Physical Fitness criteria used in middle school. Students created goals and each month we have one fitness Friday in which our 5th graders participate in physical fitness math stations.
23. SMS Focus for this year!VOCABULARY This year we needed to incorporate more vocabulary instruction into mathematics. Our students were missing SOL questions, due to lack of vocabulary knowledge. SO. . . . What did we do!
24. Vocabulary Sorts using Movements! We were already doing word sorts in word study for language arts. We decided to take this premises and incorporate this into math but add more movement. Students are given a word or a definition, they must move around the room to find their partner. They are timed to see how long it takes. We do this each day to see if we can improve our time.