We’ve all been there: staring at a mountain of student work from Math Menu and wondering how on earth we are supposed to give meaningful feedback on all of it.
The hard truth? You can’t. When we try to give feedback on everything, we often end up giving quality feedback on nothing. Worse, students can become "correction dependent," losing the agency that Math Menu is supposed to build. To move from "paper pusher" to "skillful facilitator," we have to be intentional.
Don't try to do it all. Pick just one menu item per week to provide deep, high-quality feedback on. For everything else, look for patterns of understanding rather than errors. The goal is to use your student work as a tool to progress monitor their understanding - so selecting the key piece that helps inform your instruction is always the most beneficial use of your time.
Instead of looking for "right or wrong," look for the story the paper is telling you. Ask yourself:
Different tasks require different types of attention. Here is a sample to consider for your Menu feedback:
| Menu Item | Feedback Strategy |
| Windowpanes | Look for computation patterns. Use these to group students for tomorrow’s small group. |
| Problem Solvers | Focus on the process. Use ALN’s Work Sort Protocol to identify the strategies and models that are being used. |
| Journal Prompts | This is your 1:1 conversation opportunity with your student(s). Write back to honor their reasoning and mindset. Ask questions to go deeper into their understanding. |
| Games | Give feedback in real time. Observation and "just-in-time" questioning are your best tools here. Consider a closure question at the end of math class that addresses the content in the games that students engaged with. |
If you are going to take the time to review student work, consider…
Try this rhythm to manage your time effectively:
Becoming a skillful Math Menu facilitator is a marathon, not a sprint. It takes time for students to build stamina and for teachers to refine their feedback loop. Be patient with yourself.
To learn more about the strategies and tools discussed, explore any of the following: