My third grade students made this banner as a gift for our
school. It’s the culmination of a year’s work. We started at the end of 2nd
grade when we planted a dye garden of indigo, zinnias, and marigolds. Last fall we harvested the flowers and
indigo leaves, created dye baths, and then dyed white wool roving: the blues
are indigo, the yellows and browns are marigolds, and the pinks are zinnias.
Finally, each child, using “treasures from nature” wove his or her own unique,
circular peace flag. Many flags
created one whole gift.
I share this project with you because it is symbolic of a
healthy and diverse class. Every student liked and disliked aspects of this
project: some dug in the dirt with zest, others “oohed and ahhed” as the yellow
colored indigo bath turned the wool blue once it hit the air, others enjoyed
planning their designs and weaving, and still others loved writing and drawing
about the experience. Noticing who connected with which aspect of the project
is my research about how students learn.
This pedagogy, that addresses students’ head, heart, hands, requires an artistic approach to education. By this
I mean that lessons must be planned to meet the specific needs of individual
students, as well as the whole class. Indeed, for success, teachers must know
their students well. Lesson plans must be enlivened and cannot be dictated by
the state. Teachers must have autonomy in the classroom.
Let’s look at number patterns and geometry. All students
must memorize their multiplication and division tables. Children memorize math
facts quickly and joyfully when they get to move, feel, and finally, solve
them. Engaging the whole body, or “getting the math facts into their bones” is
an effective tool for memorization.
Teach students to march, clap, sing, and skip the tables. Tell math
stories with rich visual imagery to help students calculate problems in their
heads. Lastly, have them sit down and solve problems with pencil and paper.
Every day, my students experience math through movement,
they solve problems in their heads, and they write out the math problems with
pencil and paper. Even in 2nd and 3rd grade we connect
math patterns to geometry. Once they’ve memorized, for example, the 4s table, I
gather 10 students into a circle and have everyone hold onto a long piece of
string. If every fourth child
holds the string, a pentagram is formed. When every second child holds the
string, a pentagon is formed. Notice the geometry in number patterns! Later in
the week, I ask students to draw what they experienced with their whole
bodies. They inscribe a pentagram,
in a pentagon, in a circle, first freehand, without tools. We revisit this
exercise in 6th grade geometry, and striving for precision, students
construct the forms using a compass and ruler.
How can fractions be taught more concretely and
artistically? When introducing fractions in 4th grade, it’s
imperative to start with the whole number and see what happens when we divide.
I might ask my students to stand as one whole class of 25 and then tell them to
divide into 5 equal parts, reminding them that fractions are division problems.
A tasty way to demonstrate a whole divided into parts is by baking and eating
pizzas and pies. 16 slices in the whole, 8 eaten, ½ left.
So I’ve given two small, detailed examples, to highlight one
big idea. Engaging the thinking head, the feeling heart, and the working hands
into all aspects of the curriculum allows the full human being to learn.
Students who have spent the first 8 years of their education actively engaged
in heartfelt thinking move on to high school, college, and the world ready to
work compassionately and thoughtfully for the greater good.
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