Classification

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Snack sorting! It’s an interesting way to involve students in classifying and, while sitting together to eat, there is time to talk about why certain groupings were chosen. Children might sort by shape, create an ABAB pattern, and count the number of each snack shape.

Classification is the theme for the March 2009 issue of Science and Children

I was especially interested in the performance standard scale for the process of classification developed by a group of first-grade teachers in the Coast Metro school districts of British Columbia, Canada (see “Classifying Classification”, pgs. 25-29). The scale details the skills and behavior that may be seen in first graders as they classify and answer these questions:

How are these the same? How are they different? Is there another way you can sort theses into groups? Where would you place this new item in your system? Explain.

The teachers put classification skills on a continuum from Matching, to Sorting, to Categorizing, to Interpreting, “to help them describe how students move through different levels of classification tasks.”

I’m eager to apply this model to the next classification task I introduce in my teaching, and improve the sequence of classifying tasks we work on next year.

Peggy

Related posts:

  1. Classification
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  5. Displaying children’s science learning
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3 Comments

  1. Patty Hedden
    Posted March 6, 2009 at 3:50 pm | Permalink

    Thanks for the great ideas. I will definitely be reading the article mentioned in the above blog. I to would like to see the different types of classification techniques that were used.

  2. Tasha
    Posted March 10, 2009 at 3:49 pm | Permalink

    These are great Ideas I actually wanted to implement more math into my preschool classroom but I wanted it to be something the kids showed interest in. This seems like something they would love.

  3. Peggy
    Posted March 12, 2009 at 3:51 pm | Permalink

    I look forward to reading your additional comments about how classification activities work in your classrooms! Pasta (dry) shape sorting is another inexpensive matching activity that we just introduced in the 4′s room. Not as much fun as actually eating the items but the children like to discuss their favorite shapes. And when they become bored with it we’ll use the pasta in art projects. There was enough pasta in each box (we used 6 different shapes) that we divided the total amount among three classrooms.

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