Tuesday, October 2, 2007
A time for Scribes
Mr. Kuropatwa introduced me to the world of Scribe Posts. It is an essential part of the Grade 8 Math Classroom. You will be expected to write one scribe post every 30 classes or about 4 a year. That doesn't sound like to much does it.
A Scribe post is
The assignment is simply to post a brief summary of what happened in class each day. A different student is responsible for the daily scribe post and they end their post by choosing the next scribe. The first scribe is a volunteer. The teacher's daily involvement is limited to updating a post called The Scribe List which is at the top of the links list in the sidebar of the class's blog.
To complete a scribe post the student must
Write a brief summary of what we learned in class today. Include enough detail so that someone who was away sick, or missed class for any other reason, can catch up on what they missed. Over the course of the semester, the scribe posts will grow into the textbook for the course; written by students for students. Remember that as each of you write your scribe posts. Ask yourself: "Is this good enough for our textbook? Would a graphic or other example(s) help illustrate what we learned?" And remember, you have a global audience, impress them.
Here are examples of good scribe posts Pythagoras Scribe One Day In Math Algebra Masterpiece
Here are some scribe posts that have made The Scribe Post Hall of Fame.
When you are done your scribe post choose another student to be the scribe and label your post scribepost.
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2 comments:
the pattern is easy. the fractions is decreasing by one half and the answer is divided by two
My brother was a student of Daren Kurpatowa so i kinda know how to make a scribe and whats it all about
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