Little Bill Clinton

A school year in the life of a new American

Part 7

Math ins and outs: Ann Griffith works on multiples of 3 with third-grader Emani Brown.

(Mary Wiltenburg)

Photos (1 of 1)

Third-grade math: a teacher’s calculus

Reconciling diverse languages, experiences, and the playfulness common to all 9-year-olds, Ann Griffith’s job is to get her students to the right answers.

By Mary Wiltenburg | Correspondent / February 9, 2009 edition

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Third grade teacher Ann Griffith talks about the excitement of that moment when the light switch goes on in a student's thought.


Decatur, Ga.

Some of her kids can multiply dozens; some are still adding on their fingers. Some, by Georgia standards, are failing third grade math. But today, whatever Ann Griffith’s students know about division, they’re fired up about it.

A dozen 8-to-10-year-olds sit cross-legged on the carpet of her trailer classroom, around their small, feisty teacher and the large rectangular white board on which she’s written:

Rule:
x3
in | out
__| 15

“Who can tell me?” Ms. Griffith asks.

A girl with wheels in her sneakers shoots a hand into the air. A curly haired boy looks lost. To one side, a kid whose contraband calculator Griffith confiscated a moment ago is looking around for fresh mischief. And from the vicinity of Griffith’s right foot, someone is squeaking.

“Ooh!” says Erin Harris, “Ooh, ooh!”

Since school began in August, Erin, a dedicated writer and artist, has been fearful of math. This winter morning, there are pushier students on the floor with their hands up, and kids likelier to get the problem right. There are hungry kids, distractable kids, kids whose families are suffering in this economy; 67 percent of students at the International Community School Erin attends receive free or reduced-price lunches. Half of the 400 students at the public charter school outside Atlanta were born overseas; many came to the US as refugees and are struggling to master English. Erin’s not.

She’s just sitting on the carpet, hand in the air, unaware in her excitement that her torso and arm now form a 60-degree angle with the floor, bent by the force of an answer she’s sure she knows.

Griffith has a split second to calculate all of this and decide – in light of nearly two decades’ experience teaching in schools across the globe and four months getting to know these 12 students – whose name to call. It’s a problem with countless variables and no perfect solution. At this moment, Griffith reckons, Erin is the one in this third-grade math class who most needs to be right.

“Erin is bursting,” she says.

“Five!” says Erin triumphantly.

“That’s right,” Griffith says, filling in the answer on the board. “Now, how did you figure that out?”

“I knew it.” Erin can’t articulate what classmates leap to explain: She could have gotten the answer counting up by fives, or dividing three into fifteen. She’s not there yet.

But today, for the first time, Erin knows her threes. And it feels marvelous.

“You just knew it,” says Griffith solemnly, “Isn’t that cool?”

“Yeah,” says classmate Ross Wills, who mastered his times tables this fall, “she knows them by heart.”

It’s a pause, a breath in the lesson, to acknowledge Erin’s breakthrough. But Griffith can’t stop there. Because gears are turning in 10 other heads, and now Mateo Tewari, the curly haired kid who looked so lost a moment ago, has his hand in the air and wants to know: What if you had 4 plus 4 plus 4 plus 4? Would that be multiplying?

How do you teach third-grade math? Most of us, who learned it ourselves, assume we know. But a public school classroom today, especially at a school like ICS, is one of the most diverse places you can go in modern America. Nationally, the No Child Left Behind act has transformed the way students, teachers, and schools are evaluated. Former President George Bush signed the act into law in 2002 with the words: “I can’t think of any better way to say to teachers, ‘We trust you.’ ” Many teachers say it feels like anything but – and that’s having an impact on their teaching. The rules have changed.

Last spring, ICS – the community-focused, kid-driven haven of a charter school where Griffith teaches and Bill Clinton Hadam studies – failed to meet its test score requirements under No Child Left Behind. Now ICS, like many schools across the country, is struggling with what that means – and with the limits of standardized tests to describe what’s going on in their classrooms.

This week, our series will look, in three stories, at how a veteran teacher handles a single day’s math class, leaving no child behind while holding none back; what “failure” can mean under “No Child”; and how hard it is to gauge academic progress in English learners.

• • •

Griffith is a warm, irreverent Welsh woman with short gray hair, an obvious affection for her students, and no time for official nonsense. For 17 years, 10 of them full-time, she’s taught third and fourth graders and middle schoolers in international schools in Sri Lanka, the UK, India, and Bangladesh.

Her classroom is a 19-foot by 23-foot box in a prefab building behind the church where ICS rents space. Most of the decorations were made by her students. Over the white board hangs the class rule, colored in by all its students: “RESPECT.”

Growing up in Welsh public schools, Griffith says, “I didn’t like math. I didn’t enjoy it.” She wasn’t encouraged to analyze why numbers behaved the way they did. Now, her main goal in math is to get students asking, “Why?”

They’re doing that this morning, until a scab on one boy’s foot begins to bleed. Griffith quickly sends him off with her teaching assistant to find a bandage. But 22 eyes follow him toward the door and excited chatter ensues as kids go up on their knees, ready to break ranks. Chaos threatens.

Griffith barely raises her voice. “If you want to think about that, just look at the color of this marker,” she says, brandishing her dry-erase pen and sticking out her tongue.

“Aah!” screams Ross, “It’s blood-red!”

With that, they’re back to times four.

• • •

Griffith’s students are all over the map: from early reading to chapter books, from finger-adding to decimals. This is a pivotal year for all of them. By April, they must master place value, multiplication, division, and fractions; have a strong foothold in geometry; and prove these things on a Georgia standardized test – or spend next year in remedial math. If kids don’t reach a certain level of math and reading proficiency by the end of third grade, educators say, they’re likely to spend the rest of their educational life playing catch-up.

For some of Griffith’s kids, this is a real threat. Students came to her speaking English, Somali, Bosnian, French, Kurdish, and Farsi as their first languages. Their home lives, and stages of emotional, social, and intellectual development, couldn’t be more different.

Griffith, ICS, and Georgia deal with the disparity in student progress in two major ways. First, at 11 each morning, Griffith loses seven students, most with limited English, to a remedial math class across the hall. These kids, like Bill Clinton Hadam in the class next door, failed last year’s state tests: Sakinah in her pale blue head scarf, Hassan in his orange hat, and Mita with her irrepressible grin.

Second, Griffith does what she’s doing now. Surprised by how engaged the remaining kids are, she alters her lesson plan to let them spend a little more time at the board. There, they help design problems they’ll solve back at their seats, armed with dry-erase markers and squirt bottles, in a thrillingly naughty exercise they call: “writing on our desks.”

As Griffith makes a new box for “divided by four,” someone suggests putting a 2 in the In column.

“You can’t do that!” says Ross worriedly. Griffith asks why not. Four is bigger than two, he says, and you need to divide a number by something smaller than it.

While most of their classmates are focused on solving the problems, Ross and a few others are thinking about the parameters for creating them. It’s an example of what educators call differentiated instruction: engaging students on multiple levels with the same material.

“It’s actually very subtle,” Griffith says. “It’s little seeds that you’re throwing out, and those that can see them pick them up.”

It’s clear that Griffith’s kids are picking them up at their own pace. In the course of the morning, Erin, Mateo, and Ross all have small but significant breakthroughs. Whether these will translate to the tests this spring, though, is an open question.

Last year, half of ICS’s 56 third graders and nearly 70 percent of its fourth graders failed the state math exam; as a consequence, their school failed, under No Child Left Behind.

Wednesday: How the strides Bill Clinton Hadam and his school make can still be called ‘failure’ by official measures.

Comments

1. lkristy | 02.09.09

This is so wonderful. Although I was a student that made good grades in school, I was never taught to think. Only as an adult have I figured this out and really know that I can learn anything once I know how to think. Could we have a class in elementary school, Thinking 101?

2. Donald | 02.10.09

Another Clinton liberal teacher whose students will never be able to advance or live in the real world. God bless America and protect her from liberal teachers!

3. Elizabeth Tang | 02.11.09

I taught third grade for ten years. The children are very fortunate to have a teacher who helps them understand math. She must still believe in teaching multiplication tables since both Erin and Ross “know them by heart.” Sadly, many teachers do not stress memory work.

Look at the confidence that has given Erin! Math has been difficult for her, but this will reduce her fear factor. Now she will only have to concentrate on the process for doing fractions, multiplication, & division. One special technique I practiced with the children was the “Mad Minute.” My twist was to prove to the children that the students who had memorized their times tables were able to score higher than the ones permitted to use calculators for this exercise. It was fun and a real learning experience. The 4th grade teachers marveled at how well prepared my students were and I think this practice played a large part.

4. Royce | 02.14.09

I applied to ICS some years ago as a teacher, but did not get a position because I had not taught abroad. I have great respect for the job they are doing, in the face of such enormous challenges. Sadly, much of the failure of our American educational system can be attributed to the social mis-education that takes place before a child starts school. I’m speaking of a sense of values — understanding right from wrong.

When I was in high school — back in the days when Latin was required!!! — Mrs. Lucy Bright, an exceptional English teacher, would pull your ear lobe if you let a dangling participle slip by. I tried that on my little sixth grader at an Atlanta inner-city school, and he pulled a knife on me. Times have changed. But I think that young pupils from other countries are not so inclined.

5. Ann Griffith | 02.22.09

Thank you Elizabeth for your suggestion. We actually play a game called “Beat the Calculator” - and yes, it works every time!!

Donald, what is a “Clinton liberal teacher”?

6. Houdini | 02.22.09

Dear Ms.Wiltenburg,

Thank you!
I enjoy your reports on ICS.

7. Anissa | 02.26.09

Ann, you are the best! Thanks for taking the time to care about your craft-teaching. We need more teachers like you and others at ICS. “I an artist”, Erin often reminds and everything else in life is boring. I am overjoyed to hear about Erin’s excitement in math! Wow! With the help of ICS, I believe she is on her way to becoming a life long learner!

8. Tom Maupin | 03.01.09

Different cultures and backgrounds can sometimes lead to amazing interpretations beyond our wildest dreams. What looked good on the drawing board sometimes looks much different on the model. Keep up the good work!

9. tina | 03.17.09

My daughters attend a french/american school and are taught both the ‘french’ and ‘american’ math. The most important skill they take away is that one is not better than another, but that they learn they can solve one problem in different ways. I think problem solving is the skill the kids should take away from math and there is nothing better than working on problems in a variety of ways. To help my 3rd grade reader learn her multiplication tables, I printed out a bunch of different worksheets that I found on the web and had her do them once or twice a week.

The other is working on her math word problems, which are a little tricky some times, but having worksheets and practicing online with interactive questions helps her become more familiar with them and less intimidated. She also learns to recognize question patterns which is also great critical skill development.

Here are the links - to the multiplication worksheets
http://livebinders.com/play/play?id=920
and the math word problem worksheets for 3rd graders
http://livebinders.com/play/play?id=1619

10. Ann Griffith | 03.19.09

Thank you Tina for sharing those websites.

Problem solving is a very important skill, and one that we need to work on with children every day in normal situations e.g. “What time is it now? If we work on this for 20 mins what time will it be then?”

11. Elena Taylor-Garcia | 04.10.09

Ann, Are you using Everyday Math (U. of Chicago) at ICS?

12. Barry | 04.12.09

Ann,

Thank you for being willing: to hold students accountable for thinking their way through their problems, for not handing them answers no matter what, and doing both with compassion.
From this vignette it appears you have mastered the balance between LOTS and HOTS (Lower Order Thinking Skills and Higher Order Thinking Skills). Your students benefit and isn’t it great to be there when the light bulb goes on for them?

13. Ann | 04.13.09

Elena,
We are using Everyday Math at ICS.

14. Bernard | 06.13.09

Now retired,your article brought back a flood of wonderful memories of the years when I taught maths to 10 to 12 year old children.
When I was teaching ratio/scale/rounding off/ and area, etc., one fun project they enjoyed all doing was designing their own house floor plans to a designated scale (I used preprinted paper with 1cm squares on it so that 1cm represented 1 metre - every child could grasp that)and then building card 3D models. Then we brought in junk mail which showed special offers on floor coverings such as carpets and tiles, etc. When they had worked out the area of each room, they chose their appropriate coverings,eg, soft vinyl for the kitchen, ceramic tiles for bathrooms, expensive carpet for the public rooms, etc., and worked out costings for each room, then totals. Questions were pòsed at each stage - How much would they save if they did some of the work themselves? What would a professional charge (I integrated all main syllabus subjects so that each project incorporated as much inter-subject action as I could think of . . .)for the same job? This entailed methods of how to make a correct phone call. It was enormous fun and by the end of only six months, many of them were comfortably managing Year 10 and Year 11 work - much to the stunned astonishment of the school administrative staff!
Kids can do anything - just give them the opportunity!
One important prerequisite - they must first discover how to eat an elephant! - One bite at a time . . . Once they grasp that concept, there is no stopping them!
Good Luck, you are doing a fantastic job!

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