Ideas and Activities for the classroom
Random (and not-so-random) Groups
You
will need as many index cards as you have students. (When I made
my set, I made it with 35 cards, well more than I'd need that year, but
more than I thought I'd ever need.) Start with two cards. In
the upper left corner of both cards, make the symbol (I used a +).
Take two more cards, this time putting a different symbol in the
upper left corner of both cards (I used a -). (So now you have two
cards with + and two cards with -.) Continue making pairs of cards
until your pile is exhausted. (I color coded mine, so that all my
pairs were in red ink, my trios were in blue, quads in purple, etc.)
Shuffle
the pile very well. (The ultimate goal is to have each card be unique
from every other in the pile.)
Take three cards and make a symbol in the upper right hand corner. Take three more and make a different symbol. Continue until all are used.
Move to the lower left, and do four cards at a time. Then the lower right, and use five cards at a time. The center of the front and back can also be used. I found it helpful to make a key as to which corner is which sized group. (I also made a note to myself about how I handled "left overs." For example, when I did the quads, since my set has 35 cards, I noted which symbol will make a group of five.)
Laminate
for durability!!!
½
+
|
½
-
|
¼
-
|
¼
/
|
¾
*
|
¾
÷
|
fractions
(pairs)
operations (pairs)
mathematicians (5's) symbols (3's) variables (4's) |
Use
Decide
upon a group size. Sort through the deck and select enough cards
for each student to have one. Be sure to pick cards all the cards
from a particular group. As an example, using the cards above, if
I had four students and want them in pairs, I might pick both ½
cards and both ¼ cards. Shuffle and distribute randomly. Announce
to the class which symbol to look at and match up with their groups.
*If there are students in your class who can not work together, hand cards
to students individually, keeping as random as possible, but be certain
that the warring kids end up in different groups.
Students
can hold on to their cards, but it's more fun to get a different card each
time. Students learn to work with all types of people!
This system allows students to quickly locate their journal by narrowing down the pile according to star color and then looking for their name. Since the books are stored spine-up in the crates, there is little movement needed.
The stars are also an efficient way for me to read journals. Instead of being overwhelmed with 120 journals at a time, I am able to take a cross section for each entry and give immediate feedback. For example: On Monday, I will read all the red stars in each of my five classes. I don't get to everyone that day, but I get a sample from each class and know if they understood the lesson. On Tuesday, I will read all the green stars, but will read two entries (one from Monday and one from Tuesday). In the long run, I am still reading all entries for each student, so it's the same amount of work. This just seems to be a more efficient way to manage "the pile."