It all comes crashing down

Okay, it didn’t, and I’m not actually speaking in metaphors. But it was scary. My school has a photolab which sits right above my classroom. They did a huge art studio renovation this summer, and some really heavy, shiny new equipment was hauled up there.

During my multivariable calc class yesterday, we were having a jolly ol’ time learning about conic sections. (Turns out that these students never took precalculus, which is how they got to my class… but to understand oblate spheroids and hyperbolic paraboloids, they need some conic sections.) I heard a creaking coming from the ceiling. It was loud and sounded like something (or somebody!) was going to fall through.

We jumped. Okay, of the five of us in the room, I was the only one who jumped. But it freaked us all out. I had all my students move to the other side of the classroom, in case the ceiling did come crashing down on that side. We heard the sounds two more times.

A few classes later, I was teaching my Algebra II students, and told them of this strange occurrence. By this time, I had shifted each desk a yard away from the side of the room that the noise came from. I — in a somewhat playful histrionic tone — told them that the ceiling might crash and they need to brace themselves for that possibility.

They mocked. They were skeptical.

We heard shuffling around, and they were like “Mr. Shah, that isn’t a ceiling falling.” Their skepticism increased. I answered, “that’s not what I heard before.”

Five minutes later, and the timing couldn’t have been better, the same horrifying noise I heard before resounded. And a student, who had gotten up to check a review problem answer, literally jumped and there was probably a yelp. All the students were freaked out, and, let’s be honest, it was nice to be vindicated. They laughed (at me) first, but I got to laugh (at them) last.

Review Day

My least favorite days in the classroom are test days. I hate seeing students all jittery. I hate sitting around and doing nothing. I get anxious too. (A test for my students is a test of me!)

But what comes a close second in terms of badness is the day before a test. Students are freaked out, and prone to asking the most annoying question: “is this going to be on the test?” I always cringe.

The hardship comes from having a gaggle of students each wanting to cover different topics. Each with their own individual questions, many of which are nuanced.

Today, I actually had a great time doing my reviews. I think all my students got something out of it. I considered doing a game, I considered having presentations, I considered just going through problems. Instead, I did the most simple thing: handed out a set of 10 problems. [1]

My instructions were simple. Do NOT work in order. Pick the problem that you are most scared of, that you don’t understand well, that you least want to see on the test. Then use today to learn how to do it. Look at your notes, ask your neighbors, ask me. Once you’ve mastered that, move to the next most difficult problem.

I wrote the complete solutions to each of the problems on index cards and placed them at the front of the room. When students wanted to check their answers, they just walked up. I circulated, and spent most of my time giving one-on-one help to students. Or telling students who wanted help to ask the person next to them.

And then I posted all the solutions (scanned on) online, for students to reference at home. (Most of them couldn’t finish all the problems in class.)

I didn’t catch anyone — in all three classes — off task. The students were earnestly engaged. And that made me feel awesome. My kids rock.

[1] My favorite question from my calculus review was a concept question: “Explain in words (and if you want, using a diagram), why \log_2(-4) doesn’t make any sense mathematically.”

Remembering Things

So I have started asking my students — Algebra II and Calculus — how they remember things. If they have mnemonics, or if they have funny methods, or what? I don’t know why I didn’t ask this before. It seems so obvious.

How they remember which graph is a sine graph and which is a cosine graph? How they remember certain formulas? How they remember know how to solve absolute value inequalities?

I’ve gotten some pretty interesting answers, things I wouldn’t have come up with on my own.

For example, when doing absolute value inequalities, you might have |x+1|<3. Well, you can actually rewrite that as x+1<3 AND x+1>-3. Similarly, if you have |x+1|>3, you can rewrite that as x+1>3 OR x+1<-3.

How do you know which is an AND statement, and which is an OR statement. Well, one student (who probably got it from a tutor, or another student), said: “You can remember that because the absolute value is less thAND a number, or the absolute value is greatOR than a number.” Love it!

So when you’re doing something particularly new and challenging, remember that students come up with seemingly inscrutible methods all the time. It helps to ask them what they’re thinking. Not only to see if they’re on track, but also because their thoughts might be super valuable to others.

I’m back

I’m back from my wedding. It was great. One of my favorite moments — well, one of many — was when I got to sit on the porch with my friend T., who taught fourth grade for five years and has just transitioned into a pseudo-administrator position (he’s in charge of staff placements for elementary teachers in this very large school district).

We’ve never talked about teaching since I became a teacher.

It was great talking to him-as-teacher. I dig him-as-teacher. Two things struck with me, which made me realize that we shared a lot of the same values. He said:

“When you give a test and your students do badly, it’s your fault.” In blogs in the educational community, that seems to be an unstated undercurrent to many of the bloggers’s philosophies. There’s a lot to disagree with in a blanket statement like that (e.g. what if you aren’t given the tools, if your curriculum is impractical, etc.). But the sentiment — of accountability, of not immediately jumping to blame the students — is valuable.

“When I was interviewing,” T. said, “I was asked ‘what’s your two-week plan?’ in terms of what was going on in my classroom, and I laughed.” He laughed because he couldn’t fathom knowing what was going to be covered on Thursday if he hadn’t taught on Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday. He didn’t mean that he was unprepared or directionless; instead, that he doesn’t go off of rote lesson plans that are concerned with teaching material, instead of flexible lesson plans centered around student learning.

(I laughed at that point, because I was like: “T., you’d be so proud of me. I make each of my lesson plans the night before too! Who would have thought that anyone else would find that a virtue?!”)

We disagreed here and there (we had a variation of this conversation/debate).

But overall, it was nice to see my high school friend as a teacher friend.

Taking off…

Tomorrow I’m taking off to go to a wedding of a close high school friend. It’s a nice thought that some of the students I teach will be friends years down the road, like my friend who is getting married and I are. Years down the road. Okay, yeah, I know, I’m not that old, and I’m sounding positively ancient. But anyway, it’s a nice thought.

Just for a little walk down memory lane, I broke out the old yearbook. There are a lot of people who I barely remember, a ton of people whose names seem utterly foreign to me, and just a few names which I remember well. Partly it’s the hand of time trying to whitewash over my high school memories. However, I also moved to my high school at the beginning of my sophomore year; I didn’t grow up with these people. My histories with them don’t go back to childhood.

Here are two random entries:

Sam, my dear… It’s been an amazing year, and an… interesting… high school career. We are officially cast members of the longest-running Samuel Beckett production in history. You will always be the Godot tree to me. I love Mr. Parent and his countless journeys deep into the Absurd. That English class was the best. Hmm, what else? Oh yeah… WHAM! It was so much fun WHAM-ing it up the past couple of years. Jew power! We are the best there is, the best there was, and the best there ever will be. I wish you the best of luck at MIT and I know you’ll do well. I’m sure I’ll hear about you when you win a Nobel Prize or something. I really hope we can keep in touch next year. Sam, you are an extremely talented person and I’m sure you’ll succeed in whatever you decide to do. Have a great summer and have a great time next year. Talk to ya later.

Dear Sam-Bam, someday we will change the world, either together or separately. Everyone will know our names because you will invent the formula for world peace and I will be there to document it. I’ll take artsy fartsy pictures of your experience, and I will write poems about your equations. All you have to do is be a genius. Man! I gave you the easy job… But seriously, Sammy. You are one cool cat, and even if you still miss Illinois, I’m so so glad you moved here. Of course I don’t want to get mushy in your yearbook because this isn’t goodbye. We’re going to be friends for a long time. In fact, you’re not going to be able to get rid of me… ha ha! No siree bob, I’m going to show up just when you least expect it. When you’re a world renowned math professor. I’ll enroll in your class and surprise you! (Of course, we might have to work out a “payment plan” so that I can pass) (kidding!). I’m glad that your’e going to MIT rather than Harvard Smarvard. Those people are just stuck up. And I’m not just saying that because they rejected me. (No, I’m really not, because I never applied. I should’ve though. They might have taken me on as a social experiment.) Well, so far its taken me 40+ minutes to write this, so it’s about time to wrap up. Let me leave you with these two thoughts: 1. I love you! 2. “If you’re going to do it, overdo it. That’s how you know you’re alive. Go ahead, take a coma-nap baby; take a Puddle Dive” – ani. You know I had to end with ani.

My high school experience was in no way standard — my group of friends did not easily fit into a single stereotype. We were… unique. We saw ourselves as… unique. Maybe that “we’re so different” attitude is our stereotype, I don’t know. We thought we were just so great. We started an underground zine, and secretly put posters up around the school telling everyone about it’s imminent arrival. We would drag couches and TVs outside of people’s houses and watch movies in nature. We would drive 45 minutes just to have tea at this hip tea lounge because it was a place no one else knew about. Annually, we would all skip school on the same day to go to a giant rummage sale. (Okay, you got me, I had my mother call me in sick.) We would go to the local truck stop (hey, we were in Jersey after all) and drink coffee and order fries and hang out at midnight or one or two in the morning.

We were also “good” kids. We did lots of community service. Lots. We quizzed each other for American History exams during lunch. We liked talking to (some of our) teachers. We were kids that — barring certain classes here or there — actually liked school. Most of us had jobs (me: restaurant and supermarket). Most of us didn’t drink until late in the game. Most of us didn’t do drugs.

Maybe secretly we did want to be normal. But we were an eclectic group, and I think we identified as that.

But because of that “I’m so uncategorizable and unique” attitude I copped in high school, I thought “Our yearbook won’t reflect my high school experience at all.” And so I gave each of my friends a page and told them to fill it up with whatever they wanted. Quotes, messages, doodles, pictures, photographs, whatever. Then I made color copies made of each of the pages, bound them, and handed them out. My group of friends had our own yearbook, one that actually reflected who we were in high school and what we did in high school.

On my page, I put a whole bunch of memories strung together (“And the four-boy-trampoline-party in the rain? And my daily doses of “so sorry sams” and people going for the gummy and then making up?… Try not to forget the wrestling matches on the lawn, in my house, at Eva’s house, etc… And then there was the Skynard Concert and Dennis’s Fourth of July Mishap with THE DIP….“). I had a Richard Feynman quotation (“I was born not knowing and have only had a little time to change that here or there“). I had a quotation from My So-Called Life (I won’t embarrass myself by telling you which one). I had a pretentious math formula that I probably copied from my beaten CRC book of tables and formulas. I also stated that Counting Crows was “the best band in the entire world.”

High school feels like forever ago. And yet, my high school friend getting married? That same friend who let us watch Real World in her basement? The same one with whom I tried to get ice cream from the McDonalds drive through by walking through, after playing ultimate frisbee? The same one who I ate lunch with, sitting in those weird-colored plastic seats in the lunchroom?

PS. Do I think of any of this when I’m at my high school, teaching? Do I see any of my old self in my students? Do I remember the friendships that get forged, the drama that breaks out — daily!, the heightened emotional response to everything? Honestly, the answer is no. Maybe it’s because my high school was so different than my current high school. Probably it’s because I just have such a bad memory that I remember almost nothing. But for the most part — minus the “when I was in high school, I never would have…” moments — I don’t associate my life as a teacher with anything about my life as a student. At least not consciously. Fascinating, now that I think about it.

Locked out

I wish this were a metaphor, or something deep, but it’s not. It’s just cute.

Last week, one of my multivariable calc students was late to class. No excuse, he just forgot to leave the break period on time. He was a good 5 minutes late, so me and the other students closed and locked the door, and when we heard him knocking, we starting talking — really loudly — about all this candy we had that we were eating, and throwing around calculus terms. It didn’t make sense, what we were saying. It was just us having a little fun.

After 30 seconds of this, we let him in, and I was like: “Oh, guys, we’re so silly. We should have moved the whiteboard (it’s on wheels in this classroom) in front of the door.”

Of course, Monday comes about, and I open the door to my classroom, and what do I see and hear? I see a whiteboard covering the entrance, and I hear my students — who have all arrived early to do this — talking loudly about candy.

It warmed the cockles of my heart. (Not that I know what a cockle is, nor whether my heart has them or not. But still. You get the point.) [1]

[1] Okay, I had to look this up. This is what I found.

Nail in the coffin, dead in the water, …

Whatever phrase you want to use to mourn the loss of my start-of-the-year ambition, use it.

I had what I thought were two really good ideas that I wanted to head up in my school this year.

  1. An academic journal, where students could submit research papers they are proud of, for consideration for publication.
  2. A professional development group that focused on making a bridge between the math and science curricula in the upper school (high school). So, for example, the math department should teach logarithms before the chemistry students learn about pH. It is especially important that we do this now, since the math curricula in the upper school is being completely redrawn and this is the time we can shift things around easily. [1]

Both were shot down. [2]

What’s the most sad part about this? An invidious seed has been planted in the back of my head. Each time I get an idea of something I want to take on to help make my great school an even better school, to help improve student learning, to get students excited about learning, to get teachers excited about what they’re doing, about anything, I know I’m going to think about these two ideas that never materialized and think twice about pursuing it.

My more optimistic, excitable self back tomorrow. For the next couple hours, I’m going to be in mourning.

[1] In my school, we are required to join a professional development group which meets half a dozen times a year. These groups are led by faculty and span topics like “Space and Pedagogy” to “The Brain” to “Diversity” to “Critical Friends Group” (don’t ask what that is). Historically these groups have been cross divisional — so we’d have lower school teachers and upper school teachers in the same group — and cross departmental.

[2] The first was shot down because there are teachers who want to encourage students to submit their good research papers to other journals, and having our own journal would get in the way of this.

The second was shot down because — even though there was enough interest among math and science teachers, and both math and science department heads were excited enough by it that they wanted to join — the other potential leader of this group and I wanted to restrict the people in it to math and science teachers in the high school. For obvious reasons. It requires a bit of a long-winded explanation about the culture at my school why this would be frowned upon. But I think it boils down to this: if the professional development committee were to approve this, it would be setting a precedent it is hesitant to set.

Without going on a “oh gosh he’s complaining again” riff, I’ll just say that I find the reasons against both rather specious. But I don’t want to rock any boats, make any waves. I’m going to let them die in peace.