Site icon THOM GIBSON

Week 17 : Student Feedback For The Semester

So last week wasn’t as in-depth of a reflection; I had made two vlogs and posted them up.  Definitely a reflection of the week (and much more engaging- it’s more fun to re-watch a video than to re-read a blog), but I hadn’t gone into the details of the week of what had worked and what hadn’t.  This week was mid-terms, got some feedback from students about the semester, and I got some gifts from students; probably the best haul to date 🙂

Mid-Terms

Student’s didn’t do as awesomely as I had hoped.  I still had quite a few A’s but a lot of students hovered between A’s and C’s, not many B’s.  I anticipated a bit of a struggle with some of the addition/subtraction of rational numbers since that was the last thing we did, but I was surprised by some of the other problems students were running into.  Struggles with identifying which numbers sets a number could fall into, scientific notation, and a basic integer word problem (temperature changes from 81 to -9, what’s the change in temperature- so many students put 72 degrees)

I then thought “man, I’m spending all these time to do these in-depth discussion based / inquiry driven lessons hoping that students will have a more meaningful experience with the math and a deeper understanding of the concept…but is that happening?”  Was it just poor test taking?  Was it poor questions?  Did we not spiral back to earlier concepts enough?

It was pretty disheartening.  It’s hard to fix a problem if you’re not exactly sure what’s going wrong.  Should I do a bit more direct instruction?  Should I cut off classroom discussions sooner if they’re taking too much time?  Should I assign more / less / different homework?  I don’t know.  Teaching like this is challenging.

I made an optional anonymous survey for students to fill out about the class.  I haven’t read the answer yet.  I’ll go do that now.


I’ll share what the students wrote:

What would you say is the most meaningful aspects of our class?

What is one thing you would change about our class?

What was the biggest challenge for you this semester?

What was the most engaging aspect for you this semester?

What would you keep the same / change about the classroom economy?


Well I know you can’t please everybody but it’s good to see patterns.  I plan on giving them more time to do their math reflection journals next semester.  I also think I’ll drop the self and peer assessment.  I found many students do a self-assessment and talk about what they could improve but then not making those improvements when given an opportunity.  I’ll encourage them to continue to do them on their own if it’s helpful to them.

I think I should be more conscientious of time during discussions.  It’s OK to cut a good discussion off after 45 min, and it’s DEFINITELY OK to cut a snore-fest discussion off.  I need to ask better, meatier questions.The plan for the break is to get a little bit ahead on the work we’ll do when we get back.

I want my class to be meaningful, I want there to be deep learning, I want everything we do to have a purpose, and I want to a better teacher in June than I am today.


My students got me some really great stuff for Christmas.


I plan on putting up a video of the last day of Robotics where students had their bots battle.  It was the most fun I’ve had at school in a while 🙂 I plan on vlogging this Christmas break as well!

Exit mobile version