Flipped Classroom – Fractions 2nd Grade
Section 1 – Details regarding learners,
learning outcomes, and assessment
In a regular lesson plan, this
activity will be planned 2nd or 3rd after students have
been introduced to the concept or as a follow-up activity after being taught
the material before. To understand this activity, let me briefly explain what would
precede it. If the concept has not been taught before, the students would have
been introduced to the concept of fractions through watching a video or two. I
would use Khan Academy which does a really great job explaining and reaching
students. I would also supplement the Khan Academy fractions video by
introducing an interactive video, either though YouTube or a program such as
Envision Math by Pearson, depending on what is available and which program the
school uses. This would give the students more visual aid as well has hands-on
experience before the next activity starts.
Now that I have explained what
preceded my planned activity, I can proceed to describe the activity that would
follow it for the purpose of this essay. As mentioned before, this is a lesson
over fractions and the activity is planned for 2nd grade students. The
students will be using a program called IXL Learning on desktop computers (https://www.ixl.com/math/grade-2). They will be working on 3 sections;
equal parts, identifying the fraction, and halves, thirds, and fourths. Each
section will last approximately 5 minutes. By the end of this activity,
students should be able to identify equal parts, halves, thirds, fourths, and
have a relatively good understanding of how fractions work, even if presented
with larger numbers. After each section, students will stop and record their
score that is located on the right side of the page by the timer. The students
will be provided with a score sheet prior to the start of this activity. This
will aid in assessment to give me an indication of their understanding of the
concept. I will also be monitoring the students as they work and making note of
their progress as they work. Furthermore, after all three sections have been
completed, the students will log onto our classroom discussion board and under
fractions, write which part they felt most confident about and which part they
had most difficulty with. This further aids in assessment and gives the teacher
a good indication of how to proceed in guided practice or following lessons
involving this subject, for example, what to focus on and how to group students
based on individual needs.
Section 2 – Planned events and procedures
timeline for activity
The following is a breakdown of this
activity into a timeline of planned procedures:
- · This activity follows activity 1 in which the students were introduced to fractions through a video by Khan Academy. They will be seated at individual desktop computers.
- · The students will open IXL Learning for 2nd grade which will already be saved on the desktop computers and should only take a couple of minutes.
- · The teacher will have the same website open on the Smart Board to direct the students to the fractions portion of the site. They will be working on W.1, W.2, and W.3. We will open W.1 at the same time and the teacher will leave the page open on the Smart Board to have a visual of the timer. *The teacher will be monitoring the students as they work and making notes of their progress when needed.
- · Students will have 5 minutes to work on W.1 (Equal parts). When the time is up, the teacher will inform the class to write down their score on the paper that is provided. When this is done, we will open W.2 (Halves, thirds, and fourths) together and the students will start on the next section. This should take about 6 minutes.
- · Students will work on W.2 (Halves, thirds, and fourths) while the teacher walks among them to monitor and make notes of their progress. After 5 minutes, they will stop and write down their score as before. This should take about 6 minutes.
- · Students will open W.3 (Identify the fraction) and work on this last section for another 5 minutes while the teacher walks among them to monitor and make notes of progress. After 5 minutes, they will record their score again. This should take about 6 minutes.
- · At this point the students will log onto the class discussion board and write under the fractions section, created by the teacher prior to class, which part they felt most confident about and which part they had most difficulty with. The teacher will go around collecting the score sheets while the students write. This should take about 5 minutes.
Section 3 – Reflection Part 1 – Pedagogical
Content
Strategies used to teach the content
of this lesson, particularly this activity, includes analogies, demonstrations,
illustrations, examples, drill-practice, and self-guided learning. The activity
in itself provides every single one of these strategies, with or without
teacher’s assistance. It provides analogies such as comparing fractions to
pizza slices. This strategy is effective because it helps to connect content
knowledge with the student’s every day life experiences. The Khan academy video
provides demonstrations, illustrations, and examples that is enhanced by further
explanation from the teacher. This strategy is effective because many students
are visual learners and providing them with demonstrations, illustration, and visual
examples will reach these students much more effectively than lecture alone.
This
activity also provides drill-practice and self-guided learning that are both
good strategies to use for mathematical concepts. These two strategies in
combination is effective because the more students are exposed to fractions in
all forms, the better they are able to recognize and calculate these concepts.
Enabling the students to work in a self-guided, self-paced learning environment
is effective because children learn at different rates and this ensures that
every student learns at a pace that is most effective to their individual
needs. Most students, especially youngers students, have this preconceived notion
that fractions are hard, but these strategies make learning fractions easy and
fun.
Section 3 (Continued) – Reflection Part 2 – Technological
Pedagogical
The technology used for this activity is an
Internet program called IXL Learning that is preceded by an instructional video
through Khan Academy. Since this is a flipped classroom lesson, the video
serves as an instructional strategy in which the students receive instruction
about the content of the lesson from an outside source that is both visual and
auditory. Following the instructional video, the students do independent work,
a drill-and-practice strategy, that is also done through the use of technology
(IXL.com). Through this program, the students are constantly exposed to all
three concepts covered in this lesson. Not only does it provide sufficient practice,
but it also provides them with an explanation when they get a question wrong
which, in turn, provides further instruction on the concept. The students are
also provided with a method to give the teacher feedback on how they felt about
each section – a survey of sorts that is immediately available to the teacher
in order to plan accordingly for the guided practice that would follow this
activity.
Some of the implications for the
classroom as well as the teacher’s instructional strategy that this technology provides
include repeated exposure to the content, an immediate progress report, and
immediate feedback to use in the guided practice. This allowed me to see right
away where my students needed the most help with and I could provide guided
practice based on individual needs without wasting time on parts of the content
material that my students already know.
Different classroom management
strategies I might need to consider prior to using this technology in my
activity are whether my students are computer literate enough to use the
program, rules to asking for assistance such as raising their hands, and what to
do when they run into technical difficulties.
Section 3 (Continued) – Reflection Part 3 – Technological
Pedagogical Content
The use of this technology enhances the
way the content is represented in my activity by providing demonstrations,
explanations, illustrations, and analogies of the concept taught. The content
of this program demonstrates and illustrates fractions in different forms, what
it looks like in picture form as well as written form. It uses analogies such
as food and shapes to teach the concept in a way that connects the concept to
students’ personal lives (food) and concepts they have learned before (shapes).
It also provides them with examples and explanations when they answer incorrectly
which gives my students immediate feedback and instruction on areas they
experience difficulty with. For these reasons, I think my selection and the
pedagogical use of this technology enhances the content of this lesson.
The
use of this technology offers my students practice, immediate feedback, and
immediate additional instruction that would otherwise not be possible in a
traditional classroom setting. It also provides me as the teacher with
immediate feedback in order to adapt guided practice right away to meet
individual needs before the lesson ends that would otherwise not be possible
until after assessment, usually after a lesson is taught, in a traditional
classroom setting.