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Math by the Numbers (1 of 3)

 


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Popeye was “strong to the finich” because he ate his spinach. Math is kind of like the spinach of school subjects -- most students do it because it’s good for them, not because it’s inherently enjoyable or meaningful. Out of school long enough to understand the challenges that lie ahead, parents know how many doors close when students are not successful in academic math classes. They want their kids to tough it out. However, teens are often more familiar with the frustration that results from poor understanding, disconnection from the content, and lack of skills mastery. Many just want to get out’.

Given many students' difficulty learning math and its importance in securing their futures, math class should be a natural place for trying new strategies, tools, and ideas to enhance learning. But math teachers are often the last in schools to try 21st century tools and strategies. Although math should be about problem-solving and communication, it can devolve into repetition and memorization of skills or solving of story problems that seem to students to have little to do with the real world. For them, what's learned in math class, stays in math class.

Math teachers all agree that more we get students doing math, the more math they'll learn. However, what secondary math teachers often don't realize is that many of these new technologies will give them ways to actually accomplish that -- by getting students talking about and doing more math. The value of Web 2.0 tools lies in their ability to help math teachers:

• ensure old skills gaps are filled and new skills are well understood and well learned,
• build math reading comprehension skills so that students are not baffled by the way language is used in math questions,
• engage students in communication and collaborative problem-solving so they have to ‘speak’ math,
• encourage higher order thinking skills by making intriguing connections between math and the world outside the math classroom,
• provide students practice using tools they will need for study and work after high school, and
• connect with other math teachers who are also trying these new approaches.

If we secondary math teachers can turn the part of the day students spend in our classes into a part of the day students look forward to, the time, effort, and deep thought that will be required of us to find, learn, and create compelling uses of Web 2.0 tools and resources will reward us with gold.

Math Candy: I thought this was very cool!
Why do math teachers prefer to 'paint by the numbers'? Any thoughts?

Comments (2)

Oct 18, 2009
Donna said...
As a parent of children who struggle with math word problems I appreciate you encouraging math teachers to teach the language of math. By doing so kids can discover math in their daily lives as it is all around them.
Oct 26, 2009
Sue Hellman said...
Thanks,, Donna. I know my struggling math students can perform a lot of skills in math but they have terrible trouble interpreting what some questions are asking them to do. Some people think way to improve this is to teach 'math reading' skills, but I think that only goes so far because there are so many different ways to ask students to do the same thing and the same language can have a different meaning in different contexts. When you teach them to 'language their math' -- explain what they're doing without referring to specific numbers -- they begin to acquire this new language. Then when they read problems, they search a lexicon they have internalised for meaningful cues and words. After all, we don't teach little children to read before they have acquired a huge amount of spoken language.

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