Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Trying to keep things fresh

Once upon a time, when I was a young, inexperienced teacher, the same-old-same-old was perfectly acceptable to me. Each day was much like the day before. The students learned and we moved forward at a reasonable pace and I was content.

Many grey hairs and many incarnations later, I am far from content. The same-old-same-old is boring. For both me and my students. It does not promote deep learning and it makes for less interesting teaching.

But, the world of AP Statistics sure does lend itself to routine. There is a wealth of material to cover and efficiency is necessary to get through all of it in time. So, many days in my classroom, I find one day feeling an awful lot like another and I see that glazed look in the students' eyes. As I wrote previously, the honeymoon is over and the students understand that they must grind.

But, that doesn't mean I have to give up. No, I won't do that. I am too hard-headed to give up and my expectations for myself would never allow it. Now that I have a better way to teach, I am not going to give it up. So, I constantly search for something new, something different.

As we have been going through the material, there do seem to be multiple processes that one ought to follow when answering certain kinds of AP exam free response questions. Want to compare two groups of a single quantitative variable? Don't forget your SOCS (shape, outliers, center, spread). Have a problem involving the Normal Model? There's a four-step process for that. Want to analyze a scatterplot? There are four characteristics to consider. Need to judge the quality of an experiment design? Be sure to consider the Three Principles.

Memorization is not something I like trying to teach. Yet, to be an efficient test-taker, there are advantages to having such processes down pat. To freshen up the class and at the same time help students remember these processes, I had them create posters. We will hang these posters in the class and they will serve as reminders of topics past. The students clearly enjoyed creating the posters. And I know that an enjoyable learning experience is one that is remembered. Memorization? Check.

Pictures of posters to follow...