mpsMOOC13 Observer July 1: Problem groups 1-3, and the course space

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This is news from participants in the open online course Problem Solving for the Young, the Very Young, and the Young at Heart.

DO NOW

These are our course tasks and due dates.

By July 3: Sign up.

  1. Log in to the question and answer hub Ask Moby Snoodles.
  2. Leave a comment with your answers to the four questions.
  3. Schedule a short video or voice conference.

By July 7: Plan the first three problem groups and share the plans.

http://ask.moebiusnoodles.com/questions/392/how-do-you-plan-to-adapt-problem-groups-1-2-and-3.html

Zome Bubble Modeling

Course space

Most course activities happen at the question and answer forum. Only participants who answered the sign-up questions can post there. That’s why the sign-up questions are in a separate place. It’s lovely to see all the different participants and their goals! Many people share interests, such as board games.

Elyse: I am a homeschool mom of five. I like reading, crafting and cooking. I like to play word games and solve crossword puzzles online and play board and card games with my children.

Adam: I am a mathematics professor at California State University Fullerton and I, with my wife, homeschool our three sons. I really enjoy playing board games (Carcassonne, Dominion, Pandemic, etc.), tennis, and talking about math. I read about the course on the blog, “Let’s Play Math!”. My personal blog is glsr.wordpress.com and my professional site is at bit.ly/adamglesser.

Marianna: I am a meditation teacher (before – owner of a shop for mothers, before – computer programmer). I’ve always loved math, and my husband and my son love it too. I like to solve puzzles, to play board games, to walk, swim and run, and to live in general. I am Russian and I live in Russia. My blog is http://marik_.livejournal.com and my web-site is http://omama.ru

Here is how to post questions to all participants.

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Seven books, #StreetMath, Dinosaur+Cat: Newsletter June 30, 2013

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I am Moby Snoodles, and this is my newsletter. I love to hear from you at moby@moebiusnoodles.com

Moby Snoodles

Books

A small team of dreamers is planning, talking, and writing a story of their math adventures. Several dozen supportive parents and math circle leaders get together for an open online course to modify the adventures for their kids. Everybody’s math creations, loving adaptations, and comments on the story crystallize in the next draft. The project is announced to the world in a crowd-funding campaign. Artist-mathematicians add illustrations, copy-editors do their magic, a team of volunteers comments on pre-prints – and you can enjoy the next young math book!

Where along this path are our book projects?

PlayingWithMathCover0630201

A sketch of the cover

Playing with Math, edited by Sue VanHattum, is an anthology of stories from math circles, free schools, and homeschooling families. We are preparing its crowd-funding campaign while finishing copy-editing and illustrations.

Problem Solving for the Young, the Very Young, and the Young At Heart by James Tanton, Maria Droujkova and Yelena McManaman is a collection of ten principles of solving mathematical problems. We are running the open online course for it, mpsMOOC13, this July.

Art of Inquiry by Julia Brodsky is a collection of math activities for developing insight, mental agility, and openness. We had it tested with a few math club leaders, and now we are getting ready for a bigger online course.

The sequel to The Cat in Numberland by Ivar Ekeland will be a story to read to young kids. Ivar will choose the Cat’s destination in the next few weeks; future readers are already helping!

Variables and More by Gordon Hamilton and Malke Rosenfeld is a collection of early algebra activities on variety, variations, and variables! SubQuan by Cooper Patterson and Rebecca Reiniger is about a new system for exploring powers, different bases, and the foundations of number systems. Binary Weights by Olga Radko is a carefully arranged sequence of problems for exploring the binary system. These book names are not final. These books are at the start of the journey, nurtured by the small teams.

 

Ask Moby Snoodles

Is 2.5 years too young for a math lesson?

ToddlerScavengerHunt

Binary Numbers Activities

Blogs and more

Check out the #StreetMath tag on Facebook for infinite hopscotch, double Dutch jump rope, and Chinlone. Add this tag to your posts when you find any street math!

 

Carollee spreads the word about our problem-solving course at the Focus on Math blog.

“Parents, if you are interested in some math fun that encourages some great learning, you will want to check out this site– Moebius Noodles: Math Adventures. It sounds like a great opportunity to me! What’s not to love about more math!!!”

 

CreatingCuriosityPhysicsLab

Nicole of Creating Curiosity blog shares a joyful algebra morning with the kids.

One morning, Delaney was making up silly math problems for me.

“What’s a dinosaur plus a cat?”
“A Dino-Cat!”

 “What is a gazillion jillion plus a million?”
“A Gazijillion Million”

I asked her, “What’s 2x plus 3x?” 
She cracked up at my ridiculousness, and told me it was 5x.

A few of my favorite math blogs are Let’s Play Math and Moebius Noodles. They both stress the importance of letting kids play with numbers and concepts. It is amazing how our brains work and put together concepts through playing with them, and how those same concepts become difficult to learn as an older student looking at a problem set. This 10 minute conversation of ours was a perfect example to me of how letting the girls do a little bit of silly problem solving can lead to the understanding of much bigger things, even at the ages of 4 1/2 and 2!

Sharing

You are welcome to share the contents of this newsletter online or in print. You can also remix and tweak anything as you wish, as long as you share your creations on the same terms. Please credit MoebiusNoodles.com

More formally, we distribute all Moebius Noodles content under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license: CC BY-NC-SA

CC BY-NC-SA

 

Talk to you again on July 15th!

Moby Snoodles, aka Dr. Maria Droujkova

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mpsMOOC13 Observer June 27: Sign up, course space, math dreams

This is news from participants in the open online course Problem Solving for the Young, the Very Young, and the Young at Heart.

Subscribe to receive the mpsMOOC13 Observer by email | Read past issues | Visit the course page.

Course tasks this week

By July 3: Sign up!

  1. Log in to the question and answer hub Ask Moby Snoodles.
  2. Leave a comment with your answers to the four questions.
  3. Schedule a short video or voice conference.

Course space

There is a question and answer hub for the course activities. Only people who already signed up for the course can post there, but everybody can read. Check out: “How do I post questions to all participants?

Our math dreams

“What are you doing to fuel my kid’s dreams?” – Seth Godin, Stop Stealing Dreams.

Math ed heroes in our course are doing A WHOLE LOT to fuel kids’ math dreams! We upload the recordings of pre-course conferences in groups of four.

mpsMOOC13_Banner_5

Videos 1-4: Nikki, Miranda, Carol, Ines

Video 5-8: Denise, Ehsan, Jesse and Josh, Suzanne

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Posted in Grow

mpsMOOC13 Observer June 24: Peer learning, video conference, mixed ages

This is news from participants in the open online course Problem Solving for the Young, the Very Young, and the Young at Heart.

Subscribe to receive the mpsMOOC13 Observer by email.

Visit the course page.

Peer learning: here comes everybody!

As of this newsletter forty-two adventurous families, homeschool groups, and math circles said they will work with us to adapt our ten math problems. This July, we will peek into one another’s park meetings, classes, and conversations around the kitchen table. Here comes everybody: veterans with forty years of teaching experience and twenty-month-old toddlers; lovers of Minecraft and supporters of hands-on learning; people from Canada and Saudi Arabia; families with one kid and families with six kids; widely published researchers and beginner citizen scientists.

From the sign-up page:

I’m a long-time homeschooler, and most of my kids are now grown. I like to read (ideal vacation: an enormous library, complete with a comfy chair by the fireplace), and I like to play around with math ideas — for instance, I think Tanton’s Math Without Words is great! – Denise, letsplaymath.net

I am a special education middle school math teacher. I am a self-proclaimed technology nerd and math geek. I love finding new ways to engage my students with technology. My students that I will be working with are the kids I have for summer school. They are special ed and they are going into 6th grade in the fall. – Caryn Trautz

I am a professor of mathematics education — I design, evaluate, and theorize learning activities. I enjoy thinking about thinking. Here’s my lab page. – Dor Abrahamson

I’m a homeschooler dad whose 3 daughters aren’t as interested in math as their dad is. I like to give my kids random math verbal puzzles. The oldest one is very fast at computation, the middle one is very good with concepts. The third one is excited. – Bilal the dad

I’ve had a lifelong interest in math and math education — ranging from majoring in mathematics at University, to teaching elementary school 39 years ago, to starting a local math camp for middle schoolers as a volunteer, three years ago. I enjoy researching and putting together hands-on lesson plans for the camp. The camp website is http://www.YoungMathWizards.com. – Andy Klee

mpsMOOC13_Banner4

Images by course participants Rodi Steinig, Denise Gaskins, David Wees, and Andy Klee

Video conference questions

One aspect of the course, the initial live conference, generated a lot of questions by email and at the knowledge hub. Here are some questions and answers.

  1. How do I prepare for the video conferences? – The general topic of the discussion is your dreams for mathematics and the kids. You can prepare by thinking about that topic.
  2. Is it going to be a one-to-one conversation, or will it involve other people too? – It will be one-on-one, but recorded for others to view later. I will ask permission to record before we begin. You can invite as many family or math circle members as you want!
  3. Is the video conference a prerequisite for taking the course? – The conference is a part of our sign-up process. It helps to prepare for the course tasks, and provides data for the citizen science study (namely, what people want for math and kids). It also establishes a chat channel with one of the organizers, so that it is easy for you keep asking questions later. Beyond this course, live communication opens up ways to collaborate and to learn that are not available otherwise.
  4. What if I don’t have a webcam, or my internet is slow? – In this case, we can talk in voice only.

Here is a video conference with Nikki Lineham, a fellow math geek:

Mixed ages? Any ages?

The description of the course says, “The course participants are families, math clubs, playgroups, and other small circles casually exploring adventurous mathematics with kids of any age.” The first research data is in: one of most frequent questions we get is, “Can my teen/four-year-old/grown-up significant other/toddler participate?” Yes!

Our authors Dr. James TantonDr. Maria Droujkova, and Yelena McManaman will help adapt the ten problems to all ages. Course participants will help adapt the ten problems to all ages. We will invite the kids to help adapt the ten problems to all ages. There will be a lot of adaptations! Then we will sort and organize them.

Here is a related question: can we adapt these materials for families with several kids, and for mixed-age math clubs? Can people of different ages be happy doing math together? Let us try! There are a lot of benefits to mixed-age learning. You can see a number of them in this diagram based on Free to Learn by Peter Gray.

Value_of_free_age_mixing

Friends and supporters of the course

We received several letters with similar requests:

  • Can I follow the research and development efforts without a math club or kids to run the activities?
  • Can I just peek at what you do?

Yes, this is now possible! People can subscribe to receive the mpsMOOC13 Observer by email to follow our adventures. It won’t be the same as participating, but subscribers will receive some highlights from the course.

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Posted in Grow