 Oftentimes we have a private think time before we share our visual models and map. Chris Opitz is a master teacher at Bowman Elementary School in Anchorage, Alaska. He views math as a social activity and believes taking time to impart the social skills required for cooperative learning can lead to calmer classrooms and more rigorous studies. Why is private think time important before we have our discussions? Sadie, what are you thinking? This fifth grade math class was recorded during the first month of the school year. At the beginning of the year, we established a set of working environments, but I provided four categories. I provided speaking, listening, thinking, and behavior. And that's really social-emotional learning. And then we did an exercise where the kids thought about and kind of imagined a great classroom, like the best place where they could possibly be learning. And what would that look like in each of those categories? And so we took all of those ideas and we developed what's called our working agreement. And then kids look at that consistently and set goals from that, and then they rate themselves. Today I did a great job and they provide an explanation and evidence of their rating in terms of those goals. Also we do a lot of discussion, and that's another area. Kids did the same thing. They worked together and thought of what a great discussion is. It wasn't kids raising their hands. It was kids bouncing ideas off each other. I personally believe when kids have some say in making those rules and those routines and those working agreements, they're going to own them more. So I'm going to give you your first model. We're probably going to go around and do a fish pull where we stand around the outside and we're going to watch and really think about what a good discussion looks like, how we talk and how we listen and how we ask questions. All of those good things that you guys do very, very well. So here's your first model. Please honor the private think time. Can I read it with you? Mike has eight dollars. Kelly has twice as much as Mike. I don't know if that word twice as much means. Hey Riley, could you and Laura work together as a team on this one? Would that be okay with you? Sure. Okay. So Mike has eight dollars. Is this Mike? Okay. In any classroom, anywhere you go, you're going to have an incredibly broad range of kids. Socially, academically, all across the spectrum. And so how does a single person as a teacher, as a manager, teach 20 to 30 kids in a single classroom when that ability ranges so wide? I personally believe that the social skills and more importantly the students building social skills to help them work together, to talk about math, to explain their thinking, to offer help when another student is struggling. And just as importantly for that child to be able to accept help, that's a really difficult part of that equation. All of those skills are part of the social arena that we're working in. Without them, I don't know how you could teach a classroom with such a broad range of abilities. I want to make this mine. Kids' ideas matter. Thank you for sharing your idea when we pay attention to their ideas. Not necessarily saying that's a good idea or that's a bad idea, but we say thank you for your idea. They're more willing to share it. They probably care a little bit more. It probably feels a little bit safer to share that idea. Because no matter what I say or try to push, unless the kids own it, it's not going to matter. I took your ideas about discussions, what makes a really great discussion. And I wrote them on the board for today. And so when we go to Fishbowl, we're going to choose a team like we do. We're going to go around and we're going to make these observations. And your job as an audience is to listen very closely to see if every voice is heard at that table. I want you to listen for thoughtful questions and look for this evidence. You ready? Remember, give them space. Give them space. And if you're in front, what can you do to let everybody see? Audits, our voices are off. We're just going to look for evidence of a really great discussion and then we're going to talk about that afterwards. I began using the Fishbowl, adding kids, really closely observe other kids in discussion, identifying particular types of language, ways to ask questions, how to use manners when disagreeing, how to choose, it simply is how to choose who speaks first. I'll start. In a fifth and sixth grade class, we wouldn't expect that, but boy, they can derail a classroom instantly if they don't have those basic skills. Once that foundation is built, then the academics can be so much more thoughtful, so much more intense, and that's what we're shooting for. So Mike started with eight, Kelly had twice as much as Mike, and Joe had half as much as Kelly. Every 18-year-old out there has probably said at some point, turn to your neighbor and talk about this idea. Look at your teammates and talk about this idea. Actually, why did you do those shapes there? Because I'm like a bull. And really watch. If they are talking about the topic that you've asked them to talk about, if they're actually listening to each other and using that language and those social skills, then all of a sudden you have an environment where 30 kids are all learning at the same time. And how much is three even if she did just half a cake? That's four. Is that right? I don't know time. It's not gonna happen at the beginning of the year, but in my opinion, the efficiencies that you'll gain later by far outweigh the time you spend at the beginning teaching those basics. Kelly, I was standing behind you and I kept hearing a lot of questions coming your way. How did that make you feel? I don't know. Sometimes when people ask me a lot of questions fast in a row, I get kind of nervous. You know what I mean? And I came to my thoughts. I kind of lose my own thinking. Does that happen to anybody else? Somebody says, hey Riley, hey Riley, what's the answer? But you know what I mean? Yeah. Yeah, and you get a little nervous, but that's all right. That's part of our learning. And so I want you to feel comfortable with that. That's okay to feel that way. Right now we're gonna have, the observers are gonna discuss a little bit and make some comments, but what are some things that you noticed? I kind of have a comment, but I think next time, Braden, because maybe you should spread it out, because when you first have like the red right there and then the green right there, it kind of looked like it was just 32. Well, I was thinking of it from like a side view, to like a wall. Seeing you provide a matter of problem, many students can find the answer very quickly. But can they explain the process that was happening in their mind? Can they explain it to somebody that doesn't understand it? You take a really gifted kid, for example, and you have them try to explain a multiplication problem, a very basic one. They know the answer like that. And try to have them explain it to somebody that it doesn't come so quickly to. It's an amazing activity to watch, to see them think through the process, oh well I know that three times four is three groups of four, or four groups of three, and here's how I see it and here's what it looks like visually, and that's how I get to this answer. It's an entirely different skill to be in tune with your own thinking. And so in order to do that in a classroom, those social skills need to be in place. Okay for closing today, you're going to go to your math journals, by spending some time developing these routines and helping kids learn social and emotional skills where they can manage themselves and their interaction with others. The classroom will be a better place to be and the academics will also have the opportunity to be more rigorous and thoughtful. And I've seen it work in my classroom and I believe it can work in other classrooms.