EZ Writes – A Great Way to Incorporate Thinking about Mathematics into Your Math Class

by Bill Lombard on 1 January, 2009

Here’s a wonderful method that will enable your students to write (and THINK!) about the mathematics they are learning. Ask them to write a short explanation of the main concept/skill covered in class that day and the results will be that they understand it better and will remember it longer!

Students can use a single piece of binder paper per week. The teacher will collect these EZ Writes once a week and grade them as an assignment. The students are asked to reread their weekly entries and select the one they feel is their best, and then place a STAR by that entry; this is the one that the teacher reads first and most carefully. Comments/corrections/suggestions can be made by the teacher and then the EZ Writes are returned to the student. These are saved by the student and become a source of study material and also a source of important concepts. Since these are written by the student, they are in the student’s own language and therefore communicate the information well.

To receive all new posts – subscribe via email or RSS Web Feed.

Mr. L’s cursive signature

Related posts:

  1. Combo Class Crushes California Competition
  2. George Polya, Master Problem Solver – a Model for All Math Teachers
  3. Martin Gardner – For Decades, Puzzling People With Mathematics

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

MrTeach 3 January, 2009 at 9:29 am

I like this a lot. However, I’d also add in a place where students could illustrate the concept as well. Students do benefit from putting the math in words, but if they can illustrate the concept, a teacher could then help them talk through it.

blombard 3 January, 2009 at 9:48 am

Hi MrTeach,
You’re exactly right. Many times I will ask students to create illustrations for an idea we’re talking about. Graphs, of course, are an obvious example, but also pictures of the Distributive Law, F.O.I.L. for factoring, geometric diagrams are a few others.
-Mr. L

Leave a Comment

Previous post: From Tsuruda to Sicherman – 30 of the Best Math Problems Ever

Next post: How One’s ‘Number Sense’ Helps With Mathematics – Article Reprint