I've blogged several times this year about the brand new common core course I am teaching this year, which replaces the Algebra 1 class I've flipped the last 2 school years. The content is completely different from before, so I am starting from scratch and haven't figured out how to integrate flipped learning strategies.
Well, this week I decided to finally delve in, since I had a little extra time over Thanksgiving Break to do more prep.
The "one question" that a lot of us flippers always refer
to is
"What's the best use of the face to face time you have with your
students?" I have known since day 1 of this year that it WASN'T being
up front delivering instruction to all of my students at once, but with
the brand new curriculum and content I'd never taught before for this
year, I didn't know how to change that at first. I
wanted to find a better way to support my students, to help my students, and to differentiate for my students. I was just stuck. I knew this would be a
challenge at the beginning of the year, but didn't know what a solution would be. I tried some stuff a few weeks ago with flipping the "quiz review" (
pre/
post), and it went well so I got to thinking of how this might just work for this new course.
Flipped Learning, according to the Flipped Learning Network webpage (www.flippedlearning.org), is defined as:
What is Flipped Learning? Flipped Learning occurs when direct instruction is moved from the group teaching space to the individual learning environment.
I love this definition, because it takes away the misconception of "class time" vs "home time" and distinguishes into group vs. individual learning space.
For the students I have this year, I
don't want to send them home with a video. I just don't think it would work that well with this group. However, I have gotten sick, tired, frustrated, annoyed, and many other adjectives with trying to give direct instruction to the whole class at once (in the "group learning space"). I simply don't feel like I am meeting the needs of my students, I am struggling to differentiate and support the students who are all at different levels. I have been trying to figure out a way to implement flipped learning principles in a different way than I do with my Honors Math Analysis students, because I don't think that method would work best with these students.
So why not have the students watch the videos IN CLASS but still in their "individual" learning space??
For this new unit, I made short 2-5 minute videos for each portion of the lesson I would have done direct instruction for. This doesn't cover everything, as there are some group activities, exploratory activities, or practice activities I want them doing collaboratively or individually. But every day has at least some portion of instruction.
Luckily, I do have some devices in my classroom. I have 13 iPod touches, 2 desktops, and 2 laptops available for student use. I have 2-3 students in each class with their own 3G/4G phones. So, students are either able to work individually or with just one other person with a device. They are all assigned an iPod number so I can keep good track of them and the students have a sense of ownership during their class period of their device they are using.
To make it a little more fun, students get the video links by scanning in a QR code from our class blog. That takes them to a ShowMe video (I started using ShowMe because the videos show up on mobile devices... Educreations videos don't show up on iPods!! :/ Major bummer...).
You can see the video links
here. (and yes, Grayson is playing in the background of several videos and my students called me out on that during class today :))
The whole class period students are working at their own pace and able to pause the video whenever they need. In addition, I AM THERE to help these struggling students at the exact point they need help. I am able to answer questions
just in time and students don't get off task and distracted because of comments or questions other students are making to get attention on themselves (something that happens very often with these students)
For this week, I have grouped the students homogenously, so I have a few tables of "top" kids that don't need much help and a few tables of struggling students who now can't just depend on copying their neighbor and can actually get more focused help from me during class. I've given the students the plan for the week
here and I've told the students that they may not ever have to do math "homework" again depending on how they work in class.
So, what did I see on DAY ONE of this new method?
-Two students who have very low F's and have hardly done anything all year and are just major distractions actually working and asking questions.
-My top students working collaboratively and focused, and able to finish far ahead of the rest of the class and move on
-My students with special needs (3 in one class, 7 in the other) focusing more than I've seen them focus all year because there weren't the huge distractions of all the students in the class
-Me being able to interact with basically every student in the class (this year I'm lucky with class sizes of 35 and 27 for this course)
-Me being able to ask questions and probe for understanding from small groups of students
I am very hopeful to see how this goes. I have what I call "iPod activities" (I haven't even mentioned the word 'flipped' to them) planned for all this week and will do them this weekend for next week if all goes well. All I know is this is the first day in as long as I can remember this school year I have left 2nd and 6th period feeling good, feeling like my students learned something, feeling like my students were actively engaged in their learning 90% + of the period. And that felt really good.