Toronto Star

Math teacher busts a move

Gains school fans with rap video, part of her formula for fun learning

- SIMONE JOSEPH VAUGHAN CITIZEN

While rapping, Drorit Weiss dances, writes on a blackboard and sits on a desk.

She sings about dimensiona­l analysis, Pythagoras, reciprocal identities and other trigonomet­ry-related concepts while sporting sunglasses or a sideways hat.

“The brain is a math machine and it’s ruthless,” she sings in “Bust a Proof,” a spoof of the 1989 Young MC song “Bust a Move,” filmed in her portable classroom.

Weiss, 41, teaches senior mathematic­s and physics at Vaughan private school the Hill Academy.

She studied mathematic­s and computer science at the University of Waterloo, and graduated from York University with a computer science degree; she is working toward her master’s in math.

But she wasn’t always confident in her mathematic­al prowess.

In Weiss’s early years, there were times when she struggled with math.

She grew up in Richmond Hill and remembers coming home from elementary school crying one day because she was having so much trouble adding fractions. Her father quizzed her on the subject and then shamed her for not being able to add fractions, she said.

The fractions only came into focus when her mother stepped in.

“She explained it for hours. It clicked. I was so happy,” Weiss said.

After high school, Weiss wanted to take a creative route — she was accepted into the Ontario College of Art and Design, but her parents warned her there was no steady career in painting and encouraged her to pursue something else.

So, Weiss studied math and computer science. After graduating, she dove into software developmen­t (coding), technical writing and software training and support.

She ended up working in the industry for more than 10 years. She lived and worked in Silicon Valley, but eventually felt burned out.

The last full-time job she had in software was in 2008.

“I found it an old boys’ club,” she said. “I always felt I had to prove myself.”

She didn’t like the corporate environmen­t. She realized that the only time she was excited about her job was when she had to teach software to executives. “I loved it,” she said. So, she decided to go into teaching.

Weiss returned to Canada and ran an Academy for Math And Science in Richmond Hill’s Hillcrest Mall and Thornhill’s Promenade as a manager and tutor before going into teaching.

She had an inspiratio­nal teacher at teachers’ college — the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education — named Ron Lancaster.

“He’s so innovative. He made math fun. He’s my main inspiratio­n. Having his support, having him thinking I’m a good teacher, it empowered me,” she said.

Mario Zitella was a student in Weiss’s calculus and vectors class last year. He is in both her “Bust a Proof” video and one she is working on now, filmed at a rink with Weiss in full hockey gear.

Zitella says that Weiss is also famous at the Hill Academy for another tool — her video lessons. When students on a sports team miss days for a tournament, she uses another visual tool — a video lesson used to teach students while they are on the road.

Last year’s valedictor­ian, now a Harvard student, described Weiss as a “superwoman” and a “role model.”

Weiss finds this descriptio­n gratifying.

“This is the reason I wanted to go into teaching,” she said. “I wanted to inspire girls to go into computer science and physics.”

 ?? SUSIE KOCKERSCHE­IDT METROLAND ?? Drorit Weiss’s rap video is just one of her innovation­s for teaching at the Hill Academy.
SUSIE KOCKERSCHE­IDT METROLAND Drorit Weiss’s rap video is just one of her innovation­s for teaching at the Hill Academy.

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