Showing posts with label Boston Partners in Education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boston Partners in Education. Show all posts

Friday, July 9, 2010

Until next year!

Hello friends! It's been quite a while since I last posted on this blog. I really apologize for not having a better and more timely conclusion, but this is my temporary break from this blog. It's the summer so not much tutoring has been going on. I have had a really amazing time writing for it and I hope just one person got something out of it.


I am wrapping up my year of service with the Massachusetts Promise Fellowship, Boston Partners in Education, and AmeriCorps. Next year I will be taking on another Mass. Promise Fellowship position at Tutoring Plus in Cambridge. I will be working on a different project to individually support students and help manage an afterschool program in the Cambridge Public Schools. I'd really like to thank Boston Partners in Education for making my first year amazing. I wouldn't be continuing on with AmeriCorps again if I hadn't gotten so much support and learned as much as I have learned.

Don't forget math is still everywhere, I'll keep an eye out for you all :)


I am hoping to return to Boston Partners to volunteer again with Math Rules!, in which case, I'll be updating this blog again. Thank you for visiting, thank you for commenting, thank you for reading along.

Until then, Math Rules!





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Monday, April 19, 2010

MAM Day 19: Marathon Monday

In honor of the 2010 Boston Marathon, today is a shortened blog post with marathon related math.

Celebrating the 114th Annual Boston Marathon, 2,500 years since the first marathons were run in Greece, and celebrating the oldest annual marathon, the Boston Marathon is kindof a big deal here in Boston.


Marathons are long distance foot races, usually with a distance of 26.2 miles or 42.195 kilometers. While marathons are technically races, most runners strive to finish and best their personal times rather than beat competitors. I bet it's incredibly hard to race 26 miles against someone.

Given a rough estimate of 26,000 runners participating in today's marathon, a total 681,200 miles will be run tomorrow by all the Boston Marathon participants, which is roughly 681,198 more miles than I'm willing to run, ever. If everyone were to do a relay around the Earth's equator (an approximate 24,901.55 miles), they would have run more than 27 times around the Earth. It's like a marathon of marathons!


My other math interest in the marathon is how many calories runners are using per mile, or for the entire marathon.
This calculator notes that if I were to be running 10 minute miles, I would burn 1,976 calories over the course of a marathon.
Rough calculations of calorie consumption that says I would be burning roughly 1,867 calories in a marathon run.
Finally this article explains why some runners hit a wall at the 22~23 mile mark.

Boston Partners in Education has a Marathon team that been training hard and fundraising for Boston Partners since November. I'll be cheering them on before and after the race! Good luck Boston Partners team!


Some of the Boston Partners Marathon Team


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Thursday, April 8, 2010

MAM Day 8: Time Part II

Today is Boston Partners in Education's big Gala, so this is the downtime I've got to blog before the storm.

I was planning on discussing time zones, the passing of time beyond 24 hours, and how it still relates to math today. This was before I found this website that has lots of information and pretty pictures and animations. I'll include links from various websites because they explain things much better than I do.

I just found another website that documents the history of calendars. It's the first slideshow with information on calendar systems, just click on the pictures to continue through the rest of the history. Documenting time and the rotation of Earth around the sun has been around in many different civilizations. Mathematicians, early scientists and astronomers were able to figure out the best approximation of the Earth's rotation around the sun which is why our current calendars are based around the solar cycle. There are also calendars that are based around the lunar cycle. The Earth's rotation around the sun also causes seasonal differences.

Time zones are necessary because the entire world can't have the same time. If it is 10:30 AM here in Boston, it shouldn't be 10:30 AM in Europe also. The sun's position in relation to a geographic location is how time zones were formed. This website explains time zones pretty well, and this website has large cities and their respective time. You can use this link to convert time. From my blog's statistics, there has been one visitor from Mozambique. With a few clicks I found out that Mozambique is 6 hours ahead of Boston's time, which means that as of right now, it's almost 4:45 pm in Mozambique. I hope they check in again!


One of the things I wanted to discover through today's post was how fast we are traveling around the sun. This website helped answer my question - our rotation on Earth alone is approximately 1000 miles per hour at the equator, and our rotation on Earth around the Sun is approximately 67,000 miles per hour.

The website says we can calculate a more precise estimation of how fast we are moving around earth's axis by multiplying the cosine of Boston's latitude by the speed of rotation at the equator (1000 mph) to get our speed. Why do we have to do this? A person standing on the equator is traveling a different path around the Sun because of the tilt of the Earth.


Don't worry! I did all the math and came up with ~738.95 miles per hour. So in 24 hours, everyone in Boston has traveled ~17734.8 miles around space at over 700 miles per hour! And you didn't even have to go anywhere!

I'm not an astrophysicist so I'm sure my calculations are off. I didn't take into account that because we're rotating around Earth's axis and also around the Sun, the distance we're actually traveling is probably more, but that doesn't matter because I did some math today and I'm fairly satisfied with what I came up with :D Finally, as if my math nerdiness has no bounds, I really appreciated this online calculator.

Some cool space links. I'm always amazed at how cool space is.
Space missions diagram
Rotation of the planets in audio form
NASA's archive of awesome pictures

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Also one of my Fellows at Science Club for Girls sent me this link on the positive effects of mentoring on the mentors! Mentoring leads to "measurable benefits for the volunteers, who showed improved physical activity and health compared with adults of similar age and demographics."

I've found that mentoring makes me happier, I look forward to certain days and the knowledge I will get to see my students. I laugh a lot during tutoring sessions, I get to play games and act like a student again. To top it off, after I started volunteering in the Boston area, I found a job - this job! Volunteering may not pay much (haha), but the benefits are the best!


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Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Compounded mentoring moments

I guess the school year has gotten into that slump where there isn't anything drastically new to report from my volunteer/tutor sessions, so today I'll be talking about how I've developed mentor relationships that start from "mentoring moments" as our Executive Director calls them.

This came up for a number of reasons. Yesterday I went to an info session about my AmeriCorps program, the Massachusetts Promise Fellowship, a service program that partners with Northeastern University and focuses on serving youth across the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. The Fellow projects range from developing after-school programs, providing educational support, developing youth leadership and work-related skills, training youth workers, to free college financial aid guidance, and other youth related projects.

One of my fellow Fellows asked the question, "After our year of service, how do we let go of our youth?" I almost started crying right then and there because I thought about the youth I had grown to love and care for; having to say goodbye would kill me. It's interesting because there are certain students that I would not (and could not) say goodbye to, while there have been other individuals in my life who did not evoke the same upswell of emotions and tears as these students. Some of these kids I've known for a little over a year, and others I've only met this year. But as a collective, I've really come to enjoy working with and seeing these different groups of kids weekly.

For the new students I've only met this year, it was tough to start off a year not knowing what to expect and knowing very little about their situations that led them to our tutoring partnerships. But as time goes on, we've built relationships slowly from week to week. At first the students were wary of me being in the classroom at all, but I notice a little excitement when I come for tutoring. The students jump out of their seats and say hi to me. The other students I don't work with look towards our group questioningly, and in some cases, they come right over and ask to work with us.

I'm pretty sure it's the consistency that really helps tutoring and mentoring relationships. Sometimes it's a matter of personality matching as well, but for me, I've had good relationships with the students I'm working with. The kids (myself included) really look foward to working together every week on our scheduled day. There was a point where I had to switch my schedule around, and the kids questioned me "Don't you come on X day?" I've also gotten to a place where the students work so well that we have extra time to chat and get to know each other beyond the math, or their schoolwork.

The "mentoring moments" were originally used in the context of the Big Cheese Reads (BCR) program at Boston Partners in Education. The BCR program asks for community, government, corporate, and public figures to come into a middle school classroom and read an inspirational and student relevant short story or excerpt. Afterwards, the Big Cheese Readers talk about their experiences growing up, getting work experience, and how they got to where they are now. The BCReaders also field questions from students taht range from "How do you get an internship?" to "What's your favorite TV show?" The Big Cheese Reads program is a mentoring moment where students are exposed to a life they may not get to glimpse into, and hopefully learn and grow from it.

I've taken the phrase to apply to my weekly meetings with my different students. There are weeks where we don't have a chance to talk about subjects other than math. And there are weeks where the students don't really feel like talking at all. On some level, I don't really feel like a true mentor who guides young people through difficult lifestages and turning points. Sometimes I feel more like just an academic tutor, however, there are those moments when I feel like I've really made a difference, or that I've expanded their world a little bit just by talking frankly about something. I notice these passing moments when it's significant to me, but I wouldn't be surprised if my students have many more of these significant moments when they learn something about me, the world, or themselves.

And to be honest, I don't have enough time to get to know these young people enough. I always want more! Last year, I was fortunate to go to MathSTARS twice a week, but this year I only have time for once a week. If things were up to me, I would go all four days a week. Every week, I only manage to speak one-on-one with a handful of the kids, but it's the little things and the short conversations that add up to make me so darn emotional!

Sometimes I think, "Did I really help these kids today with their work?" but sometimes it doesn't matter so much. It matters that I was there when they were expecting me. At the meeting yesterday, one of my fellow Fellows said that she got an email from a youth she had worked with years before and she didn't realize how much of an impact she had made until she got the email. In the now, it's hard to gauge how much your presence is making a difference, but in the long run, I hope these kids will remember me and our time together. I know I'll look back fondly on this year of service, and the students I worked with.


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Thursday, February 18, 2010

Group work pt II

So how does a Math Rules! volunteer manage a small group effectively? I found an article online that is pretty dense in content, and doesn't even address group work in schools. I still thought that many of the main ideas apply to working with a small group of elementary school students. The Personal Functions section is especially nice to note. The Managing conflict, Stopping conflict escalation, and Disruptive Behaviors sections are important for volunteers who have been having a grand ol' time trying to manage their small groups.


This article called Promoting Problem-Solving Skills in Elementary Mathematics is also quite useful for managing and provides best approaches to math group work. I have seen the teachers I work with use the Problem of the Day and Whole Group Learning techniques as the group lesson for the students and also for me to guide the group work afterwards. My teacher would write a problem on a flip chart, ask the students to copy down the problem in their notebooks and then to solve it. Afterwards, she asks for volunteers to explain what they got and how they got there. Directly from the article, the big group lesson for the day allows students to:

o identify the parts in the question
o find the best problem-solving strategy and explain why it is the best
o describe two different ways a problem could have been solved
o share student-generated questions
o ask other students to solve the problem and justify their answers

These skills and approaches to teaching are also useful in small groups. The article outlines that students benefit from being in mixed-ability groups (to encourage less motivated/focused/confident students to work with and learn from the more motivated/focused/confident students) as well as similar ability groups. Hopefully, Math Rules! groups are more similar ability small groups. I've also mentioned before on this blog that even in "similar ability" groups there is a lot of variation in specific abilities.


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Group work pt I

Before coming to Boston Partners in Education and becoming a Math Rules! volunteer, I had never worked with and helped tutor a small group of students on math before. My personal experience with math in elementary school and higher was doing individual math homework and discussing problems in class. I rarely worked with another student on class problems except in fifth grade. I was given an "advanced" math book and told to work with my good friend on the advanced math. I somehow got ahead of her on the homework, and ended up working mostly by myself with the occasional group work when helping my friend.

That ends my experiences with math group work. In other subjects, I dreaded group work. Group projects usually meant I would end up doing a significant portion of the work while other groups members slack off and still get credit for the work I did. I would later learn that this is called social loafing and happens in all kinds of group work activities. I think the main problem with group work is that teachers don't manage the small groups well enough. It's one thing to put students in a small group, but another to make sure all groups and individuals are contributing equally.


Math Rules! provides more structure to small groups, with an academic mentor, the group isn't supposed to exhibit social loafing. The way that Math Rules! is set up builds off the Investigations curriculum that Boston Public Schools uses for elementary schools. I honestly didn't know what Investigations was until I went to Math Rules! training. Even then, it wasn't until I started volunteering in an actual classroom to understand how the curriculum works. Investigations is a different approach to math education with more focus on the multiple approaches and perspectives to a math problem. Showing and explaining your process is more important than the final answer itself. The Investigations curriculum also encourages and works best in small group situations, where students work together to come up with possible solutions for a problem.

Many studies have shown that small group work is ideal for students. Although I couldn't get the full article, this study summarizes that "pupils in the fifth grade produced superior answers on questions requiring original contributions" and that group work creates "classroom conditions that foster positive social interaction and productive intellectual activity." The article also notes that small groups allow students to develop "investigation and problem-solving [skills], with pupils cooperating in seeking and interpreting knowledge from a variety of sources." On top of it all, this study was done over 30 years ago. Other studies and many years of research have shown that group work is most beneficial for students in a variety of subjects and across age groups. "Group work also helps students practice essential social, problem solving and communication skills needed for success in the workplace." Students who never get a chance to work with other students face difficulties in the future jobs that more often than not require working in groups and teams.

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Monday, October 26, 2009

Math Rules! Blog

First week of volunteering! I met with one of our first new volunteers JD today at one of the schools. Our volunteers will be starting all of this week and next week, I'm trying to meet with most of the new volunteers so they know where to go and who to contact.

I'm going to start volunteering on Wednesdays, I'm both excited and nervous. Being the new kid in class is tough. What if the kids don't like me? What if the teacher doesn't like me? What should I wear? I hope I don't forget all my math! I'm also going to three different schools and four different teachers, a whole day of math tutoring. I'm looking forward to being out of the office for a while. It's a shame I'm going to miss the Math Rules! training at Boston Partners though.

As Math Rules! Coordinator at Boston Partners in Education, this is part of my AmeriCorps and Massachusetts Promise Fellowship year of service. The blog is meant to be a resource for the Math Rules! volunteers, as a forum to document the Math Rules! volunteer experience. I hope other volunteers will find it useful, but we'll see.







More updates to come!
-MN