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Common Core Geometry and a Long Day

So, besides the fun that eMATHinstruction gives me at night, I also have a day job. For those of you that didn’t already know, I am both a high school math teacher and the coordinator of the math department at Arlington High School. AHS is the 99th largest high school in the country, at roughly 3,600 students. Lots of students, lots of math classes, and lots and lots of tests.

Yesterday we gave the Common Core Geometry exam to around 600 students and today I and nine completely awesome Arlington teachers (and an administrator) graded from 7:30 until 4:00.

And we still didn’t get done. I know many of you know the feeling of a defeat like that. We did get most of it done, just not the Part IV’s. Although before I left I had a fun time grading a bunch of volume/density problems where I became convinced that students needed an entire year of work just plugging numbers into formulas.

I also happen to be the father of two children, Max and Evie. Besides making innumerable cameo appearances in word problems, they happen to be 7 and 10 and full of activities, including soccer, karate, ballet, gymnastics, and Shakespeare. So, after grading for 8 straight hours, I then negotiated their ever complex schedules.

We had pizza for dinner. I know many of the parents out there can appreciate that.

After they finished, worked on homework, and (finally) went to bed (I really do love them), I got down to work. I’ve been pounding away at the answer key for Common Core Algebra II for months now. It is tiresome and not especially creative work. But, it takes time.

And, tonight, I finished the first draft of the answer key for the first draft of the book. I’m exhausted, but happy it’s done. I’ll start working on a few side items next week before writing a few more lessons to address some topics I feel need to be included.

We have to celebrate the big and little triumphs these days. We have to find the energy and the humor to go on. Our jobs have become almost unbelievably more difficult in the last three years. There have been times this year when I literally didn’t think I could get up and go to work (4 hours of sleep a night don’t help). And, yet, the work we do is important. Never forget that.

So, to all you hard working teachers out there, all of you who spent countless hours today grading proofs and constructions, who repeatedly slapped their heads at circular reasoning, crazy terminology (opposite interior angles), and poor handwriting. I tip my hat to you. Sleep well tonight and get ready for tomorrow.

It all starts again.

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Thank you for using eMATHinstruction materials. In order to continue to provide high quality mathematics resources to you and your students we respectfully request that you do not post this or any of our files on any website. Doing so is a violation of copyright. Using these materials implies you agree to our terms and conditions and single user license agreement.

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