#MTBoS Presentation at PCMI

I had the chance to give a 10 minute presentation on the MathTwitterBlogoSphere at the Park City Mathematics Institute this week. I had a lot of fun preparing it, and I think I hooked a few people in. Here’s what I did, and please feel free to steal any of these ideas for any similar presentation in the future.

First, my slides are here. They don’t make a ton of sense without my voice attached — they’re mostly pictures that I used to illustrate cool stuff in the MTBoS, and some I moved through quickly while others I talked over for a minute.

There’s a pretty solid crew of people already involved in varying degrees here — including a ton of people who read Dan Meyer, many more familiar with Fawn Nguyen and other “big names”, and a lot more people who read lots of blogs (lurkers?) than the few of us who are active tweeting and blogging. I had two goals with the presentation — first, to give folks a taste of the awesomeness in the MathTwitterBlogoSphere, and also to hopefully make it seem manageable to get them started exploring it. I began by saying that the community isn’t organized, no one is in charge, everything is free, and it’s really just some math teachers and math education people who like other math people and want to talk and get better together. I offered five reasons why I think the community can help folks at PCMI, and any math teacher anywhere.

Reason #1: Resources
There is so much stuff. I talked about Geoff Krall’s problem-based curriculum maps, Robert Kaplinsky’s lessons, Visual Patterns, Which One Doesn’t Belong, and the existence of virtual filing cabinets across math bloggers. I went fast — my goal was just to say, “Hey, look, something cool! Something else cool! And something else! And this is just the tip of the iceberg!” I think this did a good job of sharing what exists, but a bad job of making it seem not overwhelming.

Reason #2: Ideas
If you want a chance to push your thinking about math teaching, start reading math blogs. I mentioned Michael Pershan’s series on feedback, Fawn’s deconstructing a lesson activity, Dan’s most recent work on aspirin, headaches, and math, as well as a shoutout to PCMI participant Wendy Menard.

Reason #3: To Reflect
I just tried to tell my story here. Someone at PCMI says something smart, I go think about it and write stuff on my blog, and that process internalizes the learning for me. I go home after a good lesson, or more often after a bad lesson, and write it down, and it makes me better next time.

Reason #4: To Bounce Ideas Off of Humans
This is where I talked about Twitter, and where I think I left the most out. I’m not super active on Twitter — I’m an unabashed introvert, and I’m not always up for more human interaction at the end of the day. But I talked about asking random questions and getting a ton of awesome feedback, tweeting at #MTBoS and getting a ton of incredibly generous help, especially from folks who have sorted through awesome lesson ideas so you don’t have to, and the wealth of math chats around that are a great place to get started.

Reason #5: The Community
This is where I get a bit sentimental. Math folks on the internet are so incredibly kind, and generous, and give without any expectation of getting anything back, and it’s a pretty cool group to be a part of. I dropped in Global Math and Shadow Con here as two more examples of what the community does, and mostly sapped about how I love math teachers and want PCMIers to be my friends forever. Or something.

I wrapped up by trying to make the point that there is a ton of stuff out there, and folks should feel no obligation to do everything — but that, especially over the summer, it is worth the effort a dozen times over to check out what exists and what might be useful. I challenged folks to, before the school year starts, explore the MTBoS, see what they liked, and consider how it might help them teach a little bit better this year.

So that probably sounds really overwhelming. I closed with two resources — the Explore MTBoS page and a MTBoS starter kit I put together over here. I asked folks to pick one, poke around, and see what the MTBoS has to offer.

Reflecting
I still get nervous speaking in front of a group of adults. I gotta get better at that. Overall I was happy with the presentation, and a number of folks have followed up asking to learn more. There was definitely a significant group present who already know everything, and a significant group that is happy with where they are, but I’m hoping it made a difference for a good chunk of the rest.

I struggled with a few points. I hope folks realized that I was just showing them the tip of the iceberg — I forgot to make that point a few times, and I think it’s a critical one. I also came up a bit short on emphasizing that it’s ok to just read blogs and look for ideas and look for ideas and not tweet or blog or anything — I mentioned it at the end, but I think that’s a huge point that needs making. I also didn’t have the websites written on something up front — I am going to steal 40 seconds of time at the start of the day tomorrow to plug the links again so folks know where to go. But overall, it was a ton of fun presenting, and I really love sharing the MTBoS love with folks and getting more great teachers sharing their ideas online.

3 thoughts on “#MTBoS Presentation at PCMI

  1. fawnpnguyen

    Awesome job representing us there, Dylan. Thank you so much for the multiple shout-outs too. I’m the best thief of them all. Go #MTBoS! One of these years I have to make it to PCMI. Always hear and see great things coming from there, including the beautiful surroundings. Looking forward to seeing you next week at #TMC15, Dylan!

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