

desertcart.com: Modifying Your Thinking Classroom for Different Settings: A Supplement to Building Thinking Classrooms in Mathematics (Corwin Mathematics Series): 9781071857847: Liljedahl, Peter: Books Review: Yes! - Wish i would have purchased sooner! Great info and ideas! Review: Transformed my wife’s classroom - My wife bought this book because she felt it was something she would like to try in her 6th grade math and science. I was skeptical at first. I have seen her buy many books on teaching, and she always learns something she can apply. But she still struggled with getting her students to re-learn how to learn. It seems like the first couple months is wasted just trying to get study habits established. The concepts in this book have been transformational. Between this book, 11 large whiteboards, light boards, markers, my labor, etc., it was not a super cheap project, but the results are amazing. Her students are engaged, excited, and above all “thinking”! I love her coming home so excited and happy that her students are learning and excelling. I get to listen to more stories about her students accomplishment, and less stories about struggles.
| Best Sellers Rank | #72,045 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #107 in Math Teaching Materials #361 in Education (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (220) |
| Dimensions | 7 x 0.28 x 10 inches |
| Edition | 1st |
| ISBN-10 | 1071857843 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1071857847 |
| Item Weight | 11.2 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Part of series | Corwin Mathematics |
| Print length | 120 pages |
| Publication date | September 15, 2021 |
| Publisher | Corwin |
A**R
Yes!
Wish i would have purchased sooner! Great info and ideas!
M**Y
Transformed my wife’s classroom
My wife bought this book because she felt it was something she would like to try in her 6th grade math and science. I was skeptical at first. I have seen her buy many books on teaching, and she always learns something she can apply. But she still struggled with getting her students to re-learn how to learn. It seems like the first couple months is wasted just trying to get study habits established. The concepts in this book have been transformational. Between this book, 11 large whiteboards, light boards, markers, my labor, etc., it was not a super cheap project, but the results are amazing. Her students are engaged, excited, and above all “thinking”! I love her coming home so excited and happy that her students are learning and excelling. I get to listen to more stories about her students accomplishment, and less stories about struggles.
A**Y
Must read
This book off of great strategies for helping and special situations. Getting students to think is the most important part of education.
A**R
Good book
Good information. My district did a book-study with this.
A**R
Just ok
I was thinking this book was going to give me info about different settings within the classroom, but it’s all about virtual settings, homeschool settings, etc. So if you’re a classroom teacher, I wouldn’t suggest getting this. Just stick with Building a Thinking Classroom.
A**M
Not as insightful as the main edition.
I teach, solely, virtual school for 8th grade. I found 2 chapters in the book to apply to my own asynchronous and synchronous classrooms (students have curriculum in both arenas). However, these chapters are not really as dense as the original book. Clearly, this is more of an add-on to what has been established, Liljedahl goes so much to say that in the introduction. However, I finished reading and wanting MORE. MORE something to go on, more ideas...just more. I have been trying (I'd say about at about 50%) to maintain many of the practices in the original book and apply them digitally, but it proves quite difficult in many situations. As an illustrative example: being virtual allows me to have visibly random groupings for my students, as well as boards where students who are in groups can work collaboratively as they would in a brick-and-mortar setting. However, Liljedahl really doesn't talk about class sizes much here. Maybe, Liljedahl assumes that the class size stays at about 35ish or under as you would see in a brick-and-mortar setting? Regardless, many of my classes have ~50 students in attendance. Even if I place 5 students in breakout rooms (keeping it random each day), I still have to circulate through 10 breakout rooms during the synchronous class period. Needless to say, it is a lot to manage virtually. Keeping track of the "knowledgefeed" and updating it (spoiler alert: it is mentioned in this edition of BTC), managing student behavior in breakout rooms, monitoring the main room in case students get kicked out of class or come late, making sure students are getting the correct links working for their "collaborative space," etc. Virtual school has a lot of drawbacks - particularly when students do not all have the same access to broadband internet service. Not to say that the content in this book isn't helpful, I am not as inspired as I was after reading (and re-reading) the first "Building Thinking Classrooms" edition. I recognize that this edition was brought on by educators and students learning through our new "normal;" education has changed. So, we as educators, also must modify our teaching habits. I was just hoping Liljedahl had something more meaningful or insightful to offer here...something that I had not already been trying on my own when coming up with adaptations of the 14 practices of BTC.
S**7
New condition and arrived quickly
C**K
These practises are outstanding for having a thinking classroom as a second version to the original.
A**R
Great book!
K**W
Great and useful ideas for teaching math questions in different formats
C**R
A fantastic addition to Liljedahl’s “Creating Thinking Classrooms!” It provides smart adaptations especially in these times when physical distance is necessary as much as possible.
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