Implementation
Data & Goal Setting
Facilitation
Assignments
Celebrations
Curriculum
ST Math Scheduling
ST Math Usage
ST Math Procedures
Create a schedule
This allows ST Math usage to be
At least two sign-ins per week
60 min per week (K-1)
90 min per week (2+)
| Day | ST Math Time | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Monday | 1:00 - 1:30 pm | Computer Cart |
| Wednesday | 9:30 - 10:00 am | Computer Cart |
| Thursday | 9:30-10:00 am | Computer Cart |
| Friday (optional) | optional center time | Computer Station in room |
| Group | Teacher | ST Math | Writing | Reading |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Monday & Wednesday | Tuesday & Thursday | Tuesday & Thursday | Monday & Wednesday |
| 2 | Tuesday & Thursday | Monday & Wednesday | Monday & Wednesday | Tuesday & Thursday |
| 3 | Monday & Wednesday | Tuesday & Thursday | Tuesday & Thursday | Monday & Wednesday |
| 4 | Tuesday & Thursday | Monday & Wednesday | Monday & Wednesday | Tuesday & Thursday |
Station Rotation Schedule
Whole Group Schedule
Provide access to math tools
Monitor students during ST Math time
Use the Problem Solving Process
Ask questions to facilitate thinking
Teach self-facilitation strategies
Ask questions to facilitate thinking
Teach self-facilitation strategies
Have students summarize their learning
Math Journal
Exit Ticket
Things to think about:
Research shows more ST Math time = more learning
Below are some recommended weekly goals.
| Grades | Minutes | Puzzles |
| Pre-K/TK | 30 | 20 |
| Gr. K-1 | 60 | 40 |
| Gr. 2-8 | 90 | 60 |
Time Spent on ST Math is Time Spent Problem Solving
Monitor Implementation with look-fors, strategies, and instructional resources.
Focus on three areas to support implementation
The metrics that are reported in ST Math include progress, quiz scores, number of sign-ins, minutes, and puzzles collected.
Data Trackers & Goal Setting
Productivity Data
Data Notebooks & Portfolios
Productivity graph shows weekly trends
See weekly puzzles and minutes for individual students
Sign-ins section displays the student’s daily usage data
Students can monitor their productivity
Individual & Class Tracker to log progress toward completing a year's worth of puzzles.
Track a variety of metrics
Each of the tracking documents has three purposes
Track and monitor data
Set and monitor appropriate goals
Promote mathematics discussion around student data
Set and track goals
Communicate accomplishments
Identify areas for improvement
Manage Time
Overcome challenges
As students complete the trackers, exit tickets & journals over time they can:
look for trends
identify areas they have improved in
Celebrate the metrics, but also the qualitative measure (perseverance, growth, etc.)
Examples of things to celebrate as a class, grade level, or school
Use postcards to
Receive postcards for every 10% progress made
Use for student-led conferences with parents
Helping Stuck Students
Problem Solving Process
Students should be. . .
What do you notice?
What do you wonder?
What question is the problem asking?
What is your prediction?
What strategy will you use to test it?
What happened when you tested your prediction?
How does this compare to what you thought would happen?
What did you learn?
How will you use what you learned?
How does what you learned support your understanding of [the concept]?
What would happen if______?
How would you apply this concept to [this] situation?
Use the guides to engage students in math conversations focused on number sense in whole group and small group settings.
Use math journals or exit tickets to help students explain what they are learning
Make Data from District/School Benchmark Assessments Actionable
Focus: Actionable ways to integrate multiple data sources.
Look For: Content for which students need
to build foundational skills
additional practice
to have their thinking stretched
Preview Content
Focus: Content students have historically struggled with and/or content around a difficult math concept.
Look For: Related objectives (to build a stronger foundation) to support student understanding.
As a grade 5 teacher, you might assign this because:
The visual models give students multiple points of entry into the unlike denominator problems
Multiple fraction models with number lines help students conceptually understand
Read the objective description
Grade 5
Review Content
Focus: Identify content previously taught during class instruction for which students have struggled.
Look For: Recommended and related objectives to support student learning.
As a grade 3 teacher, you might assign this to students who:
Understand the “place value as a procedure”
Struggle with the conceptual relationship between each place
Read the objective description
Grade 3
Extend Content
Focus: Help students make connections between and among math concepts.
Look For: Objectives with related content that supports and stretches student thinking around specific topics.
As a grade 1 teacher, you might assign this to:
Further, explore addition and subtraction problem structures
Engage students in multi-step problems
Represent situations with equations
Read the objective description
Grade 1