John Stevens is a teacher and baseball coach for Chaffey Joint Union High School District in Southern California who has been hanging around the teaching scene since 2006. He has served as the go-to guy for trying new, crazy, and often untested ideas to see how well they will work.
He is the co-author of The Classroom Chef, a book designed to help teachers take risks in their classrooms and encourage them to prepare a lesson like a fine meal. He is also the author of Table Talk Math, a book focused on bringing more math conversations to the tables of teachers and families around the world. John blogs at fishing4tech.com. Follow him @jstevens009 or email him at stevens009@gmail.com
Just learned about your site. IT IS AWESOME. More elementary leveled ones please =)
I’m nearly 4 years late, but hopefully you’re happy with the elementary additions, among other things!
Love the concept behind this! Gets students in discussion and debate over which one is better. I would like to see some elementary scenarios created as well. I have to pick and choose right now for my students. Thank you!
Again, I’m almost 4 years late on this, but you should now see a cleaner way to access elementary prompts. Let me know what you think!
Hey great post. I hope it’s alright that I shared this on my
Twitter, if not, no worries just tell me and I’ll remove it.
Either way keep up the great work.
Absolutely! Please do share the link. I love when folks get a chance to engage in them.
I am totally in LOVE with this site!!!! My students are going to love these!!! YOU ROCK !!! Thank you so very much for sharing!
I do have a request. Following each image and question, you have posted ways to share. Would it be possible to add google classroom to this list? With your permission, I would like to be able to post them as my daily warm-up straight into google classroom. I am sure you are busy and I can share them with students other ways…. just a thought. Thank you for your consideration.
I will look into the ability to share directly to classroom. For now, feel free to copy and paste the link to give students access. Thank you for the feedback.
Just happened upon your site. I love how your technique brings debate and discussion into thr classroom.
Thank you, Melissa!
great work, making math fun!
appreciate you sharing this will all of us
Thank you, Steve. I appreciate it.