A highlight of February in these parts is Math in Action. Our local, 1 day math fest. Having been at the U for 20 years now, part of it is just great reunion, with our former students coming back to present and knock 'em dead. The last two years have felt stepped up, though, with a keynote from Christopher Danielson in 2016 and Tracy Zager, the math teacher I want to be, this year.After taking a year off presenting last year, first ever, this year I was back at it to talk Math and Art with Heather Minnebo, the art teacher at a local charter that does arts integration. I've consulted with her, she's helped me a ton and we get to work together sometimes, too. (Like mobiles or shadow sculptures.) The focus this session was a terrific freedom quilt project Heather did with first graders. Links and resources here.
Next up for me was Malke Rosenfeld's Math in Your Feet session. Though I've been in several sessions with her before, I always learn something new about body scale mathematics. She ran a tight 1 hour session using Math in Your Feet as an intro to what she means by body scale math. One of my takeaways this time was how she made it clear how the math and dance vocabulary was a tool for problem solving. I often think about vocabulary in terms of precision, so the tool idea is something I have to think about more. Read the book! Join the FaceBook group!
On to Tracy's keynote. She was sharing about three concrete ways to work towards relational understanding. (From one of her top 5 articles, and one of mine, too.)

- Make room for relational thinking.
- Overgeneralzations are attempted connections.
- Multiple models and representations are your friends.
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