SReevesTX wrote:
In math a lot of times I need them to take the information I have given them and work a practice problem. Especially at my grade level, they have to get in some application time. I built this into our scoreboard - my kids call it SFT (silent, foused, thinking).
Let's say I just taught the gesture and procedure for finding the mean of a set of data. So I taught the gesture, they taught each other, I taught them how to use the gesture, they teach each other.. and now I need them to practice. I don't need them to do 30 practice problems, I only need 1 or 2. I will set the timer for 2 minutes and say, "SFT in 10, 9, 8,..." while I am counting down, they go crazy talking to their neighbor, as soon as I say one, they hit the desk (one time) and get to work. No one can talk (not even me!) during this time, they devote all of their thoughts to these one or two problems. Its like "hands and eyes" for math practice...
If everyone is on task, when the timer goes off its a point for them. If even one person is off task its a point for me (amazingly, this has not happened yet).. I don't use this everyday, and when I do use it I make sure it is after I really hyped up the energy in the room, they need the couple of minutes to rest and cool down anyway.
I think the problem with math classes is sometimes we throw all this information at them and then tell them to practice for 20 minutes, while I gripe at everyone to get to work.. Whole Brain Teaching and using SFT has elinmiated that process for me.
That's a great routine. I'm curious, what do you do during that time? Envisioning it, I would be circulating the room, and would likely give a nudge to students that needed it, but with the no teacher talking rule, that wouldn't work...