Consider beginning the year by asking, "How do you feel about math?"
The standards carry across all grade levels and the domains progress over several areas. There are typically 2-4 focal points at each grade level.
Under "Unpacking Standards," click on "Math," and then select your grade level.
Take a look at:
*Critical Areas
*What students will be able to do
*Example Questions
Mathematical Practice posters have already been created by the Jordan School District in West Jordan, UT and you can grab your own HERE
Mathematical Practice 1: Make sense of problems & persevere in solving them.
Example K-1 poster:Click on the image to get to the Teaching Channel. From here, you can view the video again and download your own copy of "Choose 3 Ways" under Supporting Materials.
Sample Activity Cards can be found HERE. Scroll down to "Math Practice Activities"
This is an activity card for 2nd grade.
Mathematical Practice 2: Reason abstractly and quantitatively.
Sample grade 2-3 poster:This is an activity card for 3rd grade.
Notice that it's no longer about solving the problem. We are going beyond answer-seeking!
Mathematical Practice 3: Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others.
Sample grade 4-5 poster:Writing across the curriculum!
This is an activity card for 5th grade.
Mathematical Practice 4: Model with mathematics.
Example K-1 poster:Use real-world problems. Check out Dan Meyer's Three-Act Task Cards:
Dueling Discounts
Mathematical Practice 5: Use appropriate tools strategically.
Example 3rd grade poster:This is an activity card for 3rd grade.
Mathematical Practice 6: Attend to precision.
Example K-1 poster:This activity card is for Kindergarten.
Have students create something new from the information they have practiced with.
Mathematical Practice 7: Look for and make use of structure.
Example 4-5 poster:This is an activity card for 5th grade.
Mathematical Practice 8: Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning.
Example 4-5 poster:This is an activity card for 4th grade.
Math Progressions
Spend some time reading through the math progressions posted by The University of Arizona HERE.Check out the DESIGNATED MODELS.