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老師的狀態(tài)特別影響小孩子。
暮氣沉沉的老師,
絕難帶出活力四射的學(xué)生。
三里屯校區(qū)的孩子,
活潑、大方,有想象力,
老師們也是全天“滿血”!
——比如,Rosa老師!
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張玥媛( Rosa Zhang )
* 家鄉(xiāng)上海,美國的賓夕法尼亞州讀高中;
* 本科在華盛頓大學(xué)完成,純數(shù)學(xué)專業(yè);
* 研究生在哥倫比亞大學(xué)讀雙語雙文化教學(xué);
* 畢業(yè)后,在上海平和雙語國際部初中數(shù)學(xué);
* 后來隨家人搬來北京,加入啟明星三里屯校區(qū)小學(xué)部,教授英文數(shù)學(xué)。
Rosa老師是個(gè)能量的矛盾體:
典型的J人,有計(jì)劃,重邏輯,這點(diǎn)適合做數(shù)學(xué)老師,
雙魚座,浪漫,天馬行空,喜歡不一樣的體驗(yàn),這點(diǎn)適合和小孩子們?cè)谝黄穑?/strong>
結(jié)果,在她充滿能量的課堂上,你逃不過她細(xì)致又客觀的觀察,又會(huì)受到她不斷涌出的“新點(diǎn)子”的洗禮——
學(xué)數(shù)學(xué),手腳并用
Rosa的課堂上,數(shù)學(xué)不只用紙筆學(xué)習(xí),還能用身體體驗(yàn)。
這是她對(duì)具身認(rèn)知(Embodied Theory)理論的應(yīng)用——讓孩子們通過身體,利用五感來真切地體驗(yàn)和理解知識(shí)。
在學(xué)習(xí)“角”的課堂上,Rosa老師讓4年級(jí)的孩子們玩了個(gè)小游戲——
每人抽一張寫著不同“角”的卡片,然后用身體,比如胳膊的開合程度把這個(gè)角“比劃”出來,讓全班同學(xué)一起猜:是鈍角?銳角?還是周角?......
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Rosa老師“比劃”周角
一陣熱鬧和比劃之后,孩子們自己把“鈍角組”“銳角組”“直角組”都分了出來——
整個(gè)過程,“角”的知識(shí)由大腦到手腳,再回到大腦,烙在心里,想要忘掉都不行。
“數(shù)學(xué)焦慮”治好啦
有些學(xué)生有典型的“數(shù)學(xué)焦慮”。一上數(shù)學(xué)課就緊張,特別害怕犯錯(cuò)。
Rosa抓住學(xué)生能在游戲中放松的特點(diǎn),加入很多kahoot比賽,就是在屏幕上不斷冒出數(shù)學(xué)題,大家都來搶答,結(jié)果效果特別好!
孩子們的注意力都在屏幕上,沒人在乎是誰答錯(cuò)的,緊張的學(xué)生反倒慢慢放下了心里的防備,就算答錯(cuò)了也不會(huì)像以前那樣尷尬,重拾了對(duì)自己的信心。
我不認(rèn)為,一個(gè)孩子肯定就是數(shù)學(xué)沒有天賦的。數(shù)學(xué)能力里面有很多不同的分支:比如說公空間幾何能力,方向感,數(shù)論的能力,化實(shí)物為抽象的能力,快速的提取關(guān)鍵信息的能力......
其實(shí)數(shù)學(xué)學(xué)習(xí),最重要的是持續(xù)的動(dòng)力。老師要做的,就是捕捉一些點(diǎn),push孩子們?nèi)グl(fā)散,保持學(xué)習(xí)的動(dòng)力。”
——Rosa老師
數(shù)學(xué)不遠(yuǎn)!
孩子們開始認(rèn)識(shí)“大數(shù)”,但是大數(shù)到底有多大?
為了讓他們對(duì)“一百萬”這樣抽象的大數(shù)有直觀感受,
Rosa帶著學(xué)生登陸Zillow網(wǎng)站,
查看美國不同州的房屋價(jià)格。
“100萬美元在某些州能買下超大別墅,
可在洛杉磯可能只夠買一套兩居室。”
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Rosa解釋說:
“這個(gè)活動(dòng)不僅反映地區(qū)物價(jià)差異,
還涉及各州的稅率差別——
這些知識(shí)和現(xiàn)實(shí)生活聯(lián)系緊密,
甚至啟發(fā)學(xué)生思考文化的差異,
他們會(huì)理解得更快,也更有興趣。”
“學(xué)習(xí)英文數(shù)學(xué),對(duì)小學(xué)低年級(jí)孩子,我們關(guān)注孩子學(xué)習(xí)相應(yīng)的英文詞匯;對(duì)中高年級(jí)孩子,我們會(huì)注重設(shè)計(jì)體驗(yàn)式的活動(dòng),幫助他們?cè)谔骄恐欣斫鈹?shù)學(xué)概念。”
——Rosa老師
Rosa說,每個(gè)學(xué)年的教學(xué)活動(dòng),她都要重新設(shè)計(jì)、推翻、再創(chuàng)造。
所以,即便幾屆學(xué)生聚在一起聊天,
也很難說出那句話:
“Rosa老師也讓你們做過這個(gè)活動(dòng)嗎?”
需要強(qiáng)調(diào)的是,
這些活動(dòng)都緊貼學(xué)習(xí)的目標(biāo),
不是為了活動(dòng)而活動(dòng)。
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一個(gè)嘗新DNA不斷在動(dòng)的老師,
帶出的是一群對(duì)世界充滿好奇的學(xué)生;
一群這樣的老師和學(xué)生營造出的,
就是一個(gè)活力永動(dòng)、
充滿創(chuàng)造力的校園!
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A teacher’s energy deeply influences their students.
A weary teacher can hardly inspire lively, curious learners.
At Daystar Academy’s Sanlitun Campus, our students are vibrant, confident, and full of imagination— and their teachers match that energy, staying full of vitality all day long.
Ms. Rosa Zhang is one of them.
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Rosa Zhang
Back in high school, Ms. Rosa left her hometown of Shanghai to study in Pennsylvania, US.
She earned her bachelor’s degree in Pure Mathematics from the University of Washington and her master’s in Bilingual and Bicultural Education from Columbia University.
After graduation, she naturally stepped into international education, teaching middle school math at the bilingual department of Shanghai Pinghe School.
Few people from Shanghai choose to move north, but Ms. Rosa decided to follow her family to Beijing—and with that, she joined Daystar’s Sanlitun Campus, transitioning from teaching middle school to teaching elementary school.
Ms. Rosa teaches English Math. She’s a fascinating mix of energies.
She’s a typical “J-person”—organized and methodical, perfect for a math teacher—yet also a true Pisces at heart: romantic, creative, and always eager to explore new experiences, perfect for an elementary teacher.
“I just love trying different things while teaching!” She said.
Learning Math Through The Body
Learning math does not have to take place with pen and paper — it can also be experienced through the body.
In a recent fourth grade lesson on “angles”, Ms. Rosa invited students to play a fun guessing game.
Each student drew a card labeled with a type of angle, then used their body to show the angle—opening or closing the angle of their arms to “act out” that angle, while their classmates guessed: “Is it an obtuse angle? An acute angle? Or maybe a full angle?”
After a lively round of gesturing and guessing, the students grouped themselves into the “obtuse angle,” “acute angle,” and “right angle” teams.
This approach is an example of Embodied Cognition — the idea that we learn best by engaging our bodies and senses to truly experience and understand new concepts.
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Ms. Rosa demonstrates how to “act out” a full angle.
Easing “Math Anxiety”
Some students experience classic “math anxiety”: they freeze up in math class, avoid eye contact, and fear making mistakes.
Ms. Rosa helps them relax by introducing game-based learning.
In her class, she encourages students to use Kahoot!, a lively quiz game, where math questions pop up on screen and everyone races to answer.
The results have been excellent.
Students focused on the game instead of their fear of failure. Even those who were once anxious start to relax. When they made mistakes, it no longer felt embarrassing—
and gradually they regained confidence in themselves.
I would never say that a student has no talent for math because within math there are many different branches:
There’s spatial and geometric ability
sense of direction, number theory ability, the capacity to turn concrete ideas into abstract ones, the ability to extract key information quickly divergent thinking,
and the ability to draw inferences from one example to another...
Sustained motivation is what matters most for learning math. As teachers, our role is to notice those sparks, give them a gentle push to explore further, and help students keep that drive to learn alive.”
— Ms. Rosa
Making Concepts Come Alive
When teaching large numbers to her fourth graders, Ms. Rosa wanted them to feel what “one million” really means.
So she guided her students to explore real estate listings on the website Zillow.
“In some states, a million dollars can buy a huge mansion, but in Los Angeles, it might only get you a two-bedroom apartment.”
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As students browsed and compared listings, Ms. Rosa led them to discuss further, “This activity not only shows regional price differences, but also introduces tax variations between states – concepts that are closely connected to real life.
This way students grasp the ideas faster and stay more engaged.”
“When it comes to learning math in English, our focus differs by grade level. For younger elementary school students, we emphasize building their English math vocabulary.
For upper grades students, we design experiential activities that encourage them to explore and understand mathematical concepts through hands-on inquiry.”
— Ms. Rosa
For Ms. Rosa, “staying the same” is practically a forbidden concept.
Each school year, she redesigns and reimagines her lessons from scratch.
So even if students from different years compare experiences, they rarely say: “Oh, Ms. Rosa made us do that same activity too!”
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A teacher whose DNA is wired for innovation naturally inspires a classroom full of curious minds.
And when you gather a community of teachers and students like that—
you get a school community that is dynamic, create, and full of life.
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