Context: I am doing my student teaching in a first grade classroom that uses the Excel Math program. With this program, lessons are semi-scripted, pre-planned lessons, that follow the North Carolina Standard Course of Study.
Impact: Through using the Excel Math program, I was able to meet the standards set forth in the first grade curriculum for math in North Carolina. The Excel program comes with a booklet that lays out the standards that are being met by each of the individual sheets.
Alignment: - Illustrate, explain, and demonstrate prenumeration, numeration, fractions, decimals, rational numbers, integers, ratio, proportion, and percentages, and - Apply four basic operations (addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division) with symbols and variables to solve problems and to model, explain, and develop computational algorithms. Indicator 3: Teachers have knowledge of patterns, relationships, functions, symbols and models. Teachers: Through the use of Excel sheets, almost every part of this indicator are met. Students are writing addition sentences from word problems, and have to create word problems from number sentences. This shows that they are able to form and describe relationships with number sentences. They are also requred to create and extend patterns, recognize pattern units, and name patterns. Standard 9: Elementary teachers understand and use the processes of problem solving, reasoning and proof, communication, connection, and representation as the foundation for the teaching and learning of mathematics. One of the lessons completed by my students (Excel 84) focused on developing number sense, and required students to tell different ways to represent a number. For example, I would write a number on the board, and if the number was 12, then students would have to say "twelve tally marks" or "Six plus six equals twelve". They could not say "Six add more is six" but were required to use the correct mathematical language to represent their ideas. Indicator 4: Teachers develop instruction in making connections that enables all students to: Every morning at calendar time, my students are helping me keep a count of the days we have been in school. This is done through using straws to represent the various place values. Once we have ten straws, we make a bundle and move it to the tens place, and so on. One of the lessons (Excel 86) taught through the Excel program is focusing on place value, and counting by tens. My students had no problem with it, because they were able to take the information they had gleaned from calendar time to use and understand base ten blocks. They also began to use base ten blocks to represent numbers. We play a game where I write a number on the board and they come up with various ways to represent it, be it tally marks, the number word, or so on. Now, they are using base ten blocks to represent the numbers as well. Indicator 5: Teachers develop instruction in representation that enables all students to: Excel 85 focuses on solving word problems using addition. During this lesson, my students were learning how to read word problems and write addition sentences to go along with the problem. Going from the word problem to the addition sentence is not very difficult for most students, and just requires them to follow a step by step procedure. However, for this lesson, we did the lesson, and then altered it a bit. I would write a number sentence on the board, and my students worked in groups to write a word problem to go with the addition sentence. This activity focused on the same math strands, but required students to think about math differently.
NCDPI Standards -
Standard 2: Elementary teachers have a broad knowledge and understanding of the major concepts in mathematics.
Indicator 1: Teachers have knowledge of number sense, numeration, and numerical operation.
Every Excel sheet focuses on one of the four basic operational skills. In first grade, the focus falls primarily on addition and subtraction. Every sheet includes addition and subtraction, and the majority of the lessons themself deal with various ways to do addition or subtraction problems, including doubles facts, base ten blocks, and word problems.
Indicator 3: Teachers develop instruction in communication that enable all students to: