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Simply Acute Ideas


Last year our school broke ground on a brand new building.  The construction crew "finished" to the point that staff could be on site in early August.  However, I had a baby in early August.  This meant that I was starting maternity leave without being able to set up my classroom.  I had wonderful coworkers who set up and unpacked my boxes to the point that everything was in cabinets and the room could function for the sub.  I returned to school six weeks into the school year and had a lot of catching up to do.  My room slowly transformed into an inviting classroom.  I have rearranged my desks almost monthly trying to find the perfect balance.  I have moved supplies around the room in an attempt to find "permanent" homes for everything.  Here are the results!


Area 1: I have an ultimate math challenge posted with challenge problems for grades 6th, 7th, and 8th grade.  You can get it and directions on how to set it up here.  My students always start class with bellwork problems that spiral review all concepts.  While students are working on their bellwork I am walking around checking homework, checking in with students, and taking attendance.  If students finish the problems assigned for the day they are to start on the challenge problems.  The winner of the challenge wins a pizza party for their friends.  I have had eighty students participate this year and am happy I will get to celebrate the winner next week.

Area 2: Just last week I finished my new number line.  It is printed on papers to go with my theme for next year.  I am going to incorporate cacti and eliminate the reddish pink color you will see in the next couple photos.  I absolutely love this number line for numerous reasons.  The main reason however is how many middle school concepts are included in the number line.  Most number lines only have positive and negative numbers and/or place values.  This number line includes fractions, mixed numbers, and irrational numbers.  You can find the number line here.

Photo from my Instagram stories.
Area 3: I store all of my copies for the week on these file holders.  I have labels attached to clothes pins (not pictured) that have the labels M, Tu, W, Th, and F.  This helps me keep my sanity through out the week.  I also keep my attendance, papers to pass back, and small group intervention notes in this little command center.

Area 4:  I teach 5 classes and 3 preps.  I also teach middle school students.  Have you ever seen a middle school students book bag?  Our school does not have lockers and these book bags EAT everything.  To help keep my students organized I use interactive notebooks.  If I give them a paper in class they are expected to glue it in their notebooks.  This has saved the need to print off copy after copy for students who lost an assignment. Now, I still have the occasional student who will lose something, but nowhere near as many as last year.  I print a table of contents for each new unit for my students on Astrobright paper.  This section of my board will hold a copy of every piece of paper they should have in their notebook under this unit.  Students will constantly check this area to make sure they are keeping their notebooks organized.  It has been a life saver this year and saves me having to keep an interactive notebook myself for all three preps.  You can find my classroom resources and unit table of contents here. 

Area 5: I use this kidney table for small group instruction.  I have not perfected this area of my teaching enough to share any wisdom with you.  If you have any math small group blogs that you could recommend I would greatly appreciate it!  One thing I am proud of is how visual my math instruction is, especially during small group and when I introduce a new concept.  I cannot wait to share some of those strategies with you in the future.



Area 6: I moved my teacher desk from the back of the room to the front of the room last month.  I wanted to make my smart board easy for all students to see, because this the the area where we take the majority of our notes.  It is also home to my favorite sign, persevere.  The area behind my desk is boring and plain.  We are not allowed to hang things on the wall with exception to command hooks.  I am sure this area will get a command hook make over this summer.


Area 7:  We have these huge beautiful windows in our classroom.  I use this area as a bulletin board or area for early finishers/concepts we are reviewing.  I currently have a surface area and volume scavenger hunt posted that Math with Meaning created.  The quote is my favorite quote and was created by The Therapeutic Teacher. I linked Megan's scavenger hunt, but cannot find The Therapeutic Teacher's link to share.

Area 8: This is my favorite corner in my entire classroom.  I have seven anchor charts displaying the current concepts we are learning in all three of my preps.  I create all of my anchor charts on the computer, project, trace, and enjoy.  I do this so that I can create a guided note sheet for my students.  A lot of my students will treat these guided notes similar to doodle notes, which I encourage.  During class I finish the anchor charts with the important details right along side my students.  That is the most important part of the entire anchor chart!  Why?  Students are now invested in these anchor charts and utilize them.  I leave them up all year, until testing.  Students will often go back to this corner and look at previous concepts when they are working on either they early finisher spiral activities at the end of class or the spiral bellwork at the start of class.  This area fills my heart with so much joy.  My goal is to add these charts to my store when I am satisfied with them.  You can find the probability anchor chart here.




Area 9:  I post everything on the back wall that students need to know.  I have a giant agenda/homework board that lets students know what we will be doing or what they missed while they are out.  The green paper is a QR code that students can fill out when they do not complete an assignment.  This is a new concept that I am trying out.  I will post more on this idea if it is successful.  I also have loaner pencils.  The sign (freebie) was created by To the Square Inch can be found here.

Area 10: I like to change my classroom management system to keep it exciting and fresh for the kids.  I used the house system for three-fourths of the year and switched to homework club for the final quarter.  I really liked this balance and will probably do this again next year.  I was pleasantly surprised how wonderfully the house system worked.  It was RCA inspired.  Miss 5th created editable shields that can be found here.

Area 11: The future home to my math word wall.  One item I never got around to hanging/organizing this year was my word wall.  This will be one of the first things I hang next year.  Math vocabulary is important for fostering young mathematicians.

Until next time,


7:47 PM 1 comments

There are a couple concepts that I am a firm believer of using in my classroom.  I believe that all of my children can be good at math and math can AND should be fun.  I use growth mindset, guided notes, guided release, and the concrete, pictorial, abstract lesson format in my classroom. (I'll post more about this format later.)  I tell students that the difference between a professional and an amateur is that, "an amateur practices until they get it right;  professionals practice until they can't get it wrong."  An amateur is also satisfied with correctly solving a problem, while a professional wants to know why.  (That's a classroom philosophy I'll get into in another post.)  I have high expectations and am a firm believer in homework.
My students get homework 3-4 nights a week.  They have two options.  They can work hard in class or they can work hard at home.  The harder they work in the class, the less problems they take home.  Not because homework is a punishment, but just because we accomplish more during our time together.


April and May are hard months.  Students start to smell summer and freedom, while teachers are making a final push before state testing. I wanted to motivate and reward students to make the push with me.  Homework club was my solution. I saw homework club posted on pinterest and a free homework club set up here.  I wanted to utilize this concept in the middle school setting.   I teach five classes of 20-28 students.  All of my students have a class number.  I created a poster with every students' number on a post-it, on the poster.  I have my classes on the poster in order by class period.



If I assign a homework assignment Monday night students are expected to have the assignment at the start of class on Tuesday.  If they forget their homework they are removed from homework club.  They have the opportunity to be put back into homework club if they complete their homework and show me first thing on Wednesday.  However they do not get to participate in any homework club rewards offered on Tuesday.

Rewards can be anything.  At the start of the club rewards in my classroom consisted of a chance to win candy.  I use different probability games, that required the students to use math, have fun, and have the opportunity to win candy.  I explained sticky ball in my instagram stories that can be found here.  Click the classroom games icon to see the game explained.  Other probability games I use are cards (pick the student you predict will draw a face card), basketball (pick the student you predict will make the shot), marbles (pick the student you predict will draw a certain color marble), and using dice or a spinner.  All of these probability games require the students to first find the compound probability of winning and correctly picking the student who will complete the task in question.  I have anywhere from 3-5 students participate in the actual game.  I choose these students at random.  Comment below if you have any questions about my probability games.

Some of my bigger rewards will be homework passes, popcorn, crazy socks (students were uniforms to my school), no shoes, chewing gum (gum is not allowed in my class), bring a snack to class (no food is allowed in my class), listening to music during computer work, math games during independent practice, etc.  I am excited for my students to use my new horse racing game in the future.

This game can be found  here. This game can be used with flash cards, task cards, or practice problems.  Happy teaching!


1:20 PM No comments
I'm taking a leap and entering the blogging world. I tried blogging in college, but didn't have anything to blog about. Sure, my family read my blog, but they were sorta obligated. In the same way your mom is obligated to like you. Fast forward a couple years through student teaching, substitute teaching, the struggles of the first year of teaching. 


 Now I am a second year math teacher. I'm hardly a veteran, but people are actually coming to me for advice. New colleagues don't believe me when I tell them I am a"new teacher." Why should you spend your precious evening hours reading my spiel. While,  I am a mom of two kids, navigating her way through the education world. I teach middle school math to 6,7,and 8th grade students. I get bored easily in class, so I am constantly looking to mix up the classroom, present material in new ways, and involve the parents. Some lessons look great on paper, but fall flat. Others rock the socks off my students and parents and leave them literally asking for more.

I'll share my lessons and experiences with y'all.  Some will be ugly, but effective and others will get polished and posted to my teaching store, Simply Acute Ideas.  My ideas are not always original.  If someone else shares an amazing idea I will be sure to point you in their direction.  I am a teacher that loves to collaborate.  Join me on Instagram, were I post daily about teaching life.   I'd love to learn something from you and hope that you learn something from me.


4:30 PM 1 comments
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Hi, I'm Kimberly. I am an anchor chart loving, organization obsessed middle school math teacher in the Charlotte area. I absolutely love creating rigorous and engaging math lessons that make a difference in students' learning. I can't wait to share them with you.

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