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Welcome to Thinking Maps®

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Presentation on theme: "Welcome to Thinking Maps®"— Presentation transcript:

1 Welcome to Thinking Maps®
PTA Meeting September 6, 2017 Monterey Hills Elementary

2 Tonights presentation:
Why Thinking Maps are so effective Review of all eight maps Examples of maps used for instruction Examples from MHS What a parent can do to promote use

3 visual way to organize thinking and learning in a concise way
Why Thinking Maps? visual way to organize thinking and learning in a concise way improve basics of reading, writing and math but also helps students problem solve and develop higher level thinking skills

4 Why Thinking Maps? lifelong thinking skills
students learn with greater retention thought processes are cross-curricular common language to discuss thinking

5 For defining in context
The Circle Map For defining in context 5 5

6 6 6

7 7 7

8 0 + 6 6 1 + 5 5 + 1 4 + 2 3 + 3 2 + 4 6 + 0 8 8

9 For describing things The Bubble Map 9 9

10

11

12 For comparing & contrasting
The Double Bubble Map 12 12

13 Lost shoe Magic Wand By Marisa Mei Ping and Cinderella The Silver Shoe
Mice Step daughter goose Step Daughter Younger Step Daughter Older Mean Step sisters Cinderella Mei Ping and The Silver Shoe Old lady Prince has party Fairy God Mother Lost shoe Magic Goose Feathers Magic Wand Prince Went house to house Married prince Shoe In hut By Marisa

14 14 14

15 For classifying things
The Tree Map For classifying things 15 15

16 16 16

17 17

18 For seeing parts of a whole
The Brace Map For seeing parts of a whole 18 18

19 19

20 We need to know how to convert % to decimals. We could use 10%.
We have to know that this is a two step problem. We need some prior knowledge about what a “tip” is. 20 20

21 For seeing events in sequence
The Flow Map 21

22 22 22

23 23 23

24 For understanding cause & effect
The Multi Flow Map

25 25 25

26 We watched a video.

27 27 27

28 For seeing analogies The Bridge Map 28 28

29 says its name in 29

30 MHS Examples

31 Circle Map

32 Bubble Map

33 Tree Map

34 Double Bubble Map

35 Bridge Map

36 What’s a parent to do? Discuss assignments, readings, or things that you see in context. Ask, your child if there is a particular thought process that could be used to help organize the new learning? Ask questions of your child using the vocabulary of the thought processes and associate it with the map. Use the maps with your children as they study.

37 What’s a parent to do? Use a circle map to generate a lot of ideas as students write in their journal. Use a tree map to take those ideas and group them to create chapters in their new book Use a bubble map when your child needs to see a positive point of view and needs to find descriptors for this view.

38 What’s a parent to do? Use a double-bubble to help your children see what they have in common when they have two points of view Use a flow map to organize your day Use multi-flow map to explain phenomenon Use a brace map to determine if a recipe is healthy

39


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