Superteach's Special Ed Spot: Math

Showing posts with label Math. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Math. Show all posts

TEACHING STUDENTS WITH DYSCALCULIA


TIPS FOR TEACHING STUDENTS WITH DYSCALCULIA

What is dyscalculia? 
Dyscalculia is a math learning disability. It is beyond just not being good at math.
It is a severe disability understanding performing math concepts. A student with Dyscalculia has a difficult time understanding concepts such as place value, quantity, number lines and carrying and borrowing.
How do we help them learn math?

Here are a few ideas we will talk about in this series of posts. 

  1. Use of mnemonics to augment memory.
  2. Create positive success from wherever the student is functioning.
  3. Use concrete materials whenever possible.
  4. Use aids such as learning peers, prompting cards, graph paper, and colored pencils.
  5. Draw pictures whenever possible of concepts being taught.
Today, we let's look at Mnemonics.
We have all used mnemonics at one time or another. Whether it was for our students or for ourselves, we do it to augment our memory on the topic we are having difficulty with.
In math, there is a multitude of mnemonics.


What are Mnemonics?

Mnemonics can be a simple phrase, a rhyme, a set of words, or even a set of pictures to help us remember something. It could even be a short story. What works for your student may be a well know mnemonic or one you create yourself. 

Here is how  Mnemonics help?

Memorizing math facts or steps to a math problem such as multiplication facts or 2 and 3 digit multiplication problems can be made easier by giving it a mnemonic. 

Here is how they can be implemented?

Create or use already made mnemonics. Tell the students what the mnemonic can help them remember.  Go through the mnemonic slowly at first to demonstrate how they can get the information they need.
Practice the mnemonic repeated until the student is familiar with it and can practice it independently.

Examples of mnemonics


COUNTING
One, two, buckle my shoe.
Three, four, shut the door.
Five, six, pick up sticks.
Seven, eight, lay them straight.
Nine, ten, begin again.

MULTIPLICATION FACTS
 6 and 8 went out to skate.
They didn't come back until they were 48

In karate, you do lots of kicks.
6 X 6 = 36

SOLVING WORD PROBLEMS

Study the problem.
Organize the facts.
Line up the plan.
Verify the plan
Examine the answer


There are many available online or see what you can create on your own. Start with what interests your students. If they are interested in cars...try making up rhymes that incorporate those interests.

Thanks for being here. Join me next time for ideas about creating positive success in working with students with dyscalculia.


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ZOOMING Through Math

Ever try to rev up up excitement for math just to have some groans come back at you? I was that kid when I was in school. Just didn't get math! Don't know why - just didn't; especially in elementary.
I used that dislike for math ever day when teaching. What can I do to get my kids psyched about math? How can I reinforce the skills they need without the attitudes?  Well, here are a few ideas you may want to try !
My kids LOVE games! If I can engage them in a game - I swear they don't even think they are learning!
For those kids needing practice in multiplication
ZOOMTUBA
Zoomtuba has 2 great math games  for division and multiplication you may want to check out.
ASTEROID DEFENSE Multiplication  lets kids answer multiplication questions and shoot down asteroids.

ASTEROID DEFENSE
DIVIDE and CONQUER Monsters! lets kids answer division problems then prevent the monsters from filling the house.
DIVIDE AND CONQUER!


COOLMATH
Cool Math has many games at all different levels. There are way too many to list or even share. This one is for basic addition. Move the laser shooter left and right and press the space bar to shoot at the ship with the equation that matches the number on the laser.

ALIEN ADDITION

ADAPTEDMIND
This site has a multitude of grade levels and almost unlimited skill levels. You pick where you want to work and the site uses the students answers to adjust the level of the skill as they progress.


ADAPTED MIND

There are so many great sites and games out there to get our kids practicing their math skills. There's no limit to what we can do. Let's share our resources!
What do you use to get your kiddos practicing math?
Leave a comment below and I'll include it in a post update.

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ITs a Leaping Big SALE!










It's a LEAP DAY sale!!  20% off everything in my store!

https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Superteach56



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HAPPY NEW YEAR 2016


Happy New Year's Eve everyone! 
I wanted to take a moment and wish you and yours  a HAPPY NEW YEAR!!
Have FUN, BE SAFE!
Thank you for a great 2015!  Superteach is looking forward to many great things in 2016. I appreciate you being supportive and following along as we look at ways to teach kids with special needs. 


Before you go out celebrating- take a quick look at a new product that just got put up at the Superteach's TPT store. Lets start the new year off with a 1/2 price sale on new winter items in my store. The item below is one. Starting at 12PM EST 12/31/15 my new items will be half off. That means you could get the item below for $1.50.

Do you ever have that student or couple of students that really have a hard time learning to count? They are getting older every year but you need something new to reteach the numbers or just to give extra practice in independent work time or center time. Well here is something that is easy to make and easy to use.


Its a counting practice book but it has some substance to it for use with those kids a little older still working on mastering counting. This book is a winter edition and is all about Penguins.
This is an interactive book that is great for practicing counting number from 0-20 PLUS its a WINTER edition so its all about penguins; Rockhopper penguins to be exact. Your students will reading about these great little penguins that jump out of the water and slide on their stomachs onto ice. They can read about the penguins and practice their counting all at the same time.

The kids read (or have read to them) the penguin fact, count the penguins, then find the number card that matches the number of  penguins on that page and attach it to the answer square.

Heres is a quick look  video.


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Apps in SPED

GOODNOTES

Has anyone  used the app GoodNotes in the classroom?
I know this is been on several blogs, but I thought it deserved another look because it can be such a versatile tool in the classroom.
 When I first read about it I downloaded the app and I now have several sets of worksheets in the app and have been using with my kids for a while now and thought I would share my experiences with you about it. Below you can see screenshots of my bookshelf in the app where I have added a few of my teaching worksheet sets.

When you initially open the app you view the  empty shelves of your bookshelf.  Select  the  + button and you open an entire world of possibilities. With GoodNotes, you can create your own notebook and take notes, import notes and worksheets into the product.



Selecting the + produces a blank sheet of paper.  You have choices of lined, unlined, grid paper as well as music paper. I find the line paper  particularly useful when having parent conferences or phone conferences to take notes with. You can use a stylus or just your finger, making it convenient when you get those impromptu phone calls from parents and don't have paper/pencil. The notes you take with this can then be printed or exported. When you export, you can email, save to places such as SkyDrive, Google Drive, Box , or  Dropbox.
My favorite thing to do with GoodNotes is to import worksheets for my students to complete on the iPad.  Select the + button once again and choose your preferred online storage option as your source and download PDF files and even PowerPoint files. I have had a few minor problems with the PowerPoint files. I think it depends on the size. Some of the PowerPoint files downloaded fine and then were converted to PDF by GoodNotes. The possibilities are endless as to what this app can do for you in the classroom.
One of the biggest advantages for me is using it is as an incentive for students to complete their work. Some of my students will complete anything when its on the iPad! What about YOURS?

This extremely versatile app lots of great features, but I am just going to highlight a  few of the most useful to me. Here are some of my favorites.
Shape Recognition
Turn on shape recognition, select the pen color and thickness you desire and you can circle important items on the screen. When you hand draw your circles, lines or boxes on your notes, it immediately changes them into proper shapes.
Text Boxes and Images
When creating or presenting a document, you can add text boxes and images to your document. I can make a worksheet of math problems and add clip art or photos to it, straight from the iPad camera or from an online storage location.
Lasso Tool
Move things around on your worksheet/ notes using the lasso tool.

 In the example of the Choice Board above, you will see several of the items circled, but prior to circling the grapes on the bottom row, I used the SHAPE tool and it immediately turned my hand drawn circle around the grapes to a formal circle.

In the example above I imported some task cards for number recognition. You can see where different colors of marker were used to select the answers for the task cards. A great opportunity for saving paper, awesome incentive for those kids that hate worksheets ....the possibilities are endless. This is counting activity is available in my TPT at  http://bit.ly/spedspot2


Try GoodNotes! Its extremely versatile!
There is a free version and a paid version.



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1-2-3 of Math in the Special Ed Classroom




I like teaching Reading to my kiddos, but I LOVE teaching Math!
I think its a favorite of mine because Math is more hands on.
So many parts of math are visual or can be made visual,  making it a little easier for kids to grasp it,

Today I want to share with you a few things that have worked for me  teaching math with my students.


ROTATION
There is a multitude of  levels in a special education classroom, its often difficult to work in whole group or even small groups so I form a rotation schedule for the math portion of my day. I like to work with kids in Math on an individual basis so I started using a rotation schedule.

 I usually designed the math class to operate on 15-20 minute intervals. Keeping the time segment to 20 minutes or less, makes it long enough to teach substantive skills yet short enough for young minds attentions issues.

1.
DIRECT INSTRUCTION
I work with each student daily. Part of my daily math schedule is a 1 on 1 time with each child. I do a skills assessment at the beginning of every year.  This gives me an idea of what skills they have retained over the summer, what skills they've gained and where we need to start this year.  For direct instruction, I primarily use materials I have made specifically for my students, but in addition to those materials, I also  have used Touch Math. If you aren't familiar with it, Touch Math is a supplemental program, that has been around for about 40 years. In my opinion working with Touch Math and its multi-sensory approach makes it perfect for kids in special education classrooms. The multi-sensory piece of the program is primarily a patttern of  dots and rings called Touchpoints.

One of the first things you teach in the program is how to use the Touchpoints™. There is a specific sequence to touching, saying and counting for each numeral. Once this is learned, the world of math is at the fingertips of many students that once had difficulty with it. In Touch Math, dots are touched and counted one time and a dot with a ring around are counted once for the dot and once for the ring around the dot. Addition is taught using the count-on strategy and subtraction is used with a counting backward method. They also teach multiplication as well as money. 
Be sure and check them out at Touch Math .

2. REVIEW & PRACTICE
First thing I do is set up a way for my kids to practice their skills on a daily basis.  Sometimes we  called them Bee Boxes, other years we call them Math Boxes or Task Boxes, but the purpose is the same. The students rotate through the boxes daily practices through short activities or "games" the skills they are already been taught but need to revisit to maintain mastery.  Each math box had a different skill or a repeated skill at a different level. Bee Boxes were operated so that no child did the same skill twice in a row in one week. The best way it was managed was when the skills were repeated for 2 days, on Wednesdays and Thursdays, a second set of skills was practiced then on  we had  a review day on Friday.


One of the schedules I used was this sea creature schedule. Each Math Box was a sea creature and the station sign (seen below, left ) was over the table or area where the Math Box was located. Here's an example of what my Math Stations might look like.
Station 1 was teacher instruction, 
Station 2 was putting numerals in order, 
Station 3 was counting items and labeling, 
Station 4 was Working with a teaching assistant, 
Station 5 was determining more/less of a group of items 
 Station 6 was putting numbers in order.


Each student had a set of schedule cards such as the ones (Right). The picture and the number on the schedule card told the students which station to go to and the order of the line of schedules told them which order to do them in. As you can see in the picture on the right, the centers are rotated by moving the top one down to the bottom. These schedules are available in my store all ready to print and laminate. Check them out here:
Visual Task Schedules
Some of the items I put in my task boxes are things such as task cards like the ones below. When used as task cards the 4 cards are cut out separately and laminated. Then the students can use wipe off markers or clothes pins to mark the correct answers. The picture below shows my task cards before I cut them apart. I took each page and put them on the iPad the classroom has. Then the students can write on the iPad with their fingers to circle the correct answers. This leads me to the last section of my Math class rotation.



3.
TECHNOLOGY
The 3rd section of my math class is devoted to practicing the math on the computer and/or iPad. I was very lucky to have 3 iPads and 4 computers in my classroom. So I utilized them everyday but using program such as ScootPad which is a website that provides personalized learning in both reading and math. The personalized portion, of course was of great importance since my kids were not working on grade level so I need to be able to manage exactly what they work on. ScootPad has a free version which works just fine and a paid version which is awesome.
Another good option for working on Math with technology is MobyMax. TouchMath also has software that goes along with their lessons.

Hope you have found some tidbit of new information that can help you in teaching Math n your class.

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Scoot Pad- A great resource on the web and as an APP


Another in a series of posts on a variety of apps to use in the classroom. Today's app is Scoot Pad.
I LOVE THIS program!!!  Scoot Pad is an individualized learning product that started on the web and grew into its app.
I love the web version but use the app extensively as well, so I'm including it here today in my apps post.
Scoot Pad has several different pricing plans, but I have used their free plan primarily.  Currently I am  using the premium plan right.  ScootPad has individualized plans for the students and advance student reports to view progress on skills and standards. These are also helpful because you can use them for parent conferences or portfolios. Be sure and take a look at what they have to offer in their plans by visiting them at http://www.scootpad.com.

 Scootpad is very  adaptable to the many students needs we have in classrooms.
1)    Students' levels can be selected independently in each subject so that you can put a 3rd grader
        on  the 1st grade level in reading and 3rd grade level in math.
2)   For students with reading difficulty, all students have to do is press the Listen button above the
      question and the program will read the material to  to the students.






 3) You can specify the number of questions for each concept as well as the mastery level the students must meet in order to pass the skill.
As a teacher, you can see how  your students are doing overall at one glance on the Classroom Activity tab.
You can let your students follow the Common Core path for concepts or you can completely customize their
learning path.
The picture above shows the Learning Paths tab where you can select the grade level and customize the skills each student works on.
 All of the skills, concepts and Learning Paths are correlated to Common Core. They even have a cute app you can install that will put the Common Core Concept Bank  on a pop out tab on your coputer.
Check out the web version of ScootPad but also check out the Ipad app. Some of my kids think they are playing instead of  working when they can do their ScootPad on the iPad.
I hope you enjoy ScootPad as much as we do.



Here's a freebie for you!  A set of basic sight word flash cards. Just cut apart and use.
These words are part of Dolch Sight Words as well as the PCI Reading Program Level 1 words.
http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Sight-Word-Flash-Card-FREEBIE-1061075




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