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Mathacognitive

Rated 4.63 out of 5, based on 19 reviews
42 Followers
Holyoke, Massachusetts, United States
About the store
My students left school as teenagers, before that they mostly went to schools that struggled and where they struggled. They’re back as adults, and balancing work, kids, family, life and school. They’re determined (and awesome, in my humble opinion) but they’re not necessarily convinced they can learn math. My job is to convince them otherwise (and then help them learn enough math to get a high school credential). We blend math with learning about learning, and try to build structures that will help every student become a confident, successful math learner.
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Preview of Probability Activities: Task Cards/Card Sort, Worksheets 7.SP.C.7a 7.SP.C.5

Probability Activities: Task Cards/Card Sort, Worksheets 7.SP.C.7a 7.SP.C.5

Created by
Mathacognitive
Probability activities designed with flexibility in mind. Kit includes task cards, probability cards to sort and order, number lines, two different worksheets with answer key. Mix and match these elements to suit your class. Teach the probability skills your students need: comparing, bench-marking, calculating ratios, decimals and/or percents with simple probability cards. All probabilities are based on single event theoretical probability using common scenarios (spinners, coin-flips,
Preview of Probability Activities: Task Cards/Card Sort, Worksheets 7.SP.C.7a 7.SP.C.5

Probability Activities: Task Cards/Card Sort, Worksheets 7.SP.C.7a 7.SP.C.5

Created by
Mathacognitive
Probability activities are designed with flexibility in mind. Kit includes task cards, probability cards to sort and order, number lines, two different worksheets with answer key. Mix and match these elements to suit your class. Teach the probability skills your students need: comparing, bench-marking, calculating ratios, decimals and/or percents with simple probability cards. All probabilities are based on single event theoretical probability using common scenarios (spinners, coin-flips, c
Preview of Homework Habit Builder: Check In | Reflection | Math w. Sticky Note Graphs

Homework Habit Builder: Check In | Reflection | Math w. Sticky Note Graphs

Created by
Mathacognitive
Are your students studying at home? How frequently? Do you know? Do they? Use the power of the humble sticky note, and a few good questions to gather answers, reflect on progress and nudge all students towards more regular homework/independent studying. About: Gather quick and anonymous data about homework habitsUse social norming to encourage students to improve their homeworkReflect on progress and set goalsPractice math skills with personally relevant dataMath optional; adapt reflection to
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About the store

Experience

My students left school as teenagers, before that they mostly went to schools that struggled and where they struggled. They’re back as adults, and balancing work, kids, family, life and school. They’re determined (and awesome, in my humble opinion) but they’re not necessarily convinced they can learn math. My job is to convince them otherwise (and then help them learn enough math to get a high school credential). We blend math with learning about learning, and try to build structures that will help every student become a confident, successful math learner.

Teaching style

I believe that we all need to learn how to learn, and that we can do this without taking (always precious!) time away from content. My lessons combine math learning, with learning about learning, study skills, metacognition, and neuroscience. I don't believe in one-size-fits-all, so I give you options to customize my materials to your students.

My own education history

I was that girl. Smart, good in school, and somewhere around sine waves and that teacher I didn’t like but had two years in a row, I decided I wasn’t a math person. I was a social sciences person, I was going to save the world, and I didn’t see how calculus was going to help with that. Years later, a volunteer gig in a GED class showed me there was joy to be found in teaching adults and the intellectual and interpersonal challenge of convincing them that they were math people. Or at least, capable math learners. One career change later, I teach math, but really I think about brains and learning, about anxiety, efficacy and metacognition. In short, about the human side of math class

Additional biographical information

I blog about teaching, learning and math at mathacognitive.com. Connect with me there, on twitter (mathacognitive) or subscribe to receive email updates: http://eepurl.com/gQ9I45