Wednesday, August 8, 2012

OVERVIEW

     

     We have taken several months to research and investigate so that we might discover the best approaches through research that will support math learning for second language learners. The main purpose of the research is to determine Esperanza's goals and find the strategies necessary to help all scholars achieve those goals.  Some of our initial thoughts are . . .

  • Do what it takes to serve second language learners
  • Find ways to make math culturally relevant
  • Make decisions based on research and philosophy, not programs
  •  Remember that one program is not sufficient to do the job
  • Effective teachers draw upon multiple strategies and understand good math pedagogy to make instructional decisions
  • The teacher is the determining factor in student achievement
  • Professional development and coaching are necessary to implement effective math instruction
      The following ideas will be organized on this page, unfortunately not in any particular order:
According to Michael Schmoker the most important decisions come to what we teach, how we teach, and the use of authentic literature.  He states that there is a greater need for focus (simplicity, clarity and priority) in education and that a dedication to these principles over time will create the school culture and climate that will create necessary change.  (Schmoker, chapter 1).

The hope is through the blog to create a simple and clear plan to bring about the highest achievement possible for all students at Esperanza and help us prioritize an appropriate timeline to watch this progression and make the best decisions.

The following topics must be considered to implement such a plan:

A     Teacher Education

B     Teacher Support

C     Staying tightly aligned to the core

D     Pre- / Post- Assessments

E.    Performance Tasks / Assessments

F.     Benchmark Assessments

G.     :Formative Assessments

H.     Student Self-Assessments

I.     Progress Monitoring

J.     Tight Alignment of Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment

K.     Daily Use of the 8 Mathematical Practice Standards

L.     Vertical / Horizontal Alignment of Curriculum (teacher to teacher, year to year, K-6th math concepts progressions.)

M.     The Upkeep of Basic Skills

N.     Tier I, II, III Plan

O.     Team / Individual Lesson / Unit Planning

P.      Instructional Decisions Based on Student Data

Q.     Complete Student Understanding (CPR: Conceptual, Procedural, Representational Understanding)

R.     PLC Cycles w/ Math

S.     Change in Pedagogy = Focus on Theory (the Why of math) and then the Application and Integration, Not just the Procedure of mathematics

T.     Other Dual Immersion Support

U.     Other Support for Children in Poverty

V.     Bridging to English / Vocabulary Support




Thursday, August 2, 2012

Literary References / Bibliography

The following is a list of great books that teach the principles to create the best environment for kids to participate in a totally radical math program.  Topics include everything from, What is the best way to assess a student? to How can I engage my kids in deeper mathematical discourse?  I have included them so that I might reference the authors in the blog entries without having to list them over and over again.

I could see the following list of books used in a plethora of amazing ways from book clubs for teachers to education / endorsement like classes.  I would hope that we could brainstorm on ways to get teachers at Esperanza to continue their education in the ways of mathematical pedagogy to personal mathematical study. I would hope that we would choose to adopt a few and begin a teacher education library as well.  So here goes.


Archer, Anita L.
Explicit Instruction: Effective and Efficient Teaching
c. 2011  The Guilford Press

ASCD
Educating Everybody's Children
c. 1995  Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development

Brinkman, Annette (Forlini, Gary & Williams, Ellen)
Class Acts: Every Teachers Guide to Activate Learning
c. 2010  Lavender Hill Press

Brinkman, Annette (Forlini, Gary & Williams, Ellen)
Help Teachers Engage Students: Action Tools for Administrators
c. 2009  Eye on Education, Inc.

Carr, John & amp; (Carroll, Catherine & Cremer, Sarah & Gale, Mardi & Langunoff, Rachel & Sexton, Ursula)
Making Mathematics Accessible to English Learners: A Guidebook for Teachers
c. 2009  WestEd

Chamot, Anna Uhl & O'Malley, J. Michael
The CALLA Handbook: Implementing the Cognative Academic Language Learning Approach
c. 1994  Addison-Wesley Publishing Company

Clarke, David
Constructive Assessment in Mathematics
c. 1997  Key Curriculum Press

Crawford, James
Bilingual Education: History, Politics, Theory & Practice
c. 1995  Crane Publishing Company

Danielson, Charlotte
Talk About Teaching
c. 2009  Corwin Press

Gonzales, Dr. Linda Northcutt
Sheltered Instruction Handbook
c. 1994  AM Graphics & Printing

Haberman, Dr. Martin
Star Teachers
c. 2004  The Haberman Education Foundation

Hattie, John
Visible Learning For Teachers
c. 2012  Routledge

Lemov, Doug
Teach Like a Champion
c. 2010  Josey-Bass

McNamara, Julie & Shaughnessy, Meghan M.
Beyond Puzzas & Pies
c. 2010  Scholastic, Inc.

Meyers. Mary
Teaching to Diversity: Teaching & Learning in the Multi-Ethnic Classroom
c. 1993  Irwin Publishing

Mokros, Jan (Russell, Susan Jo & Economopoulos, Karen)
Beyond Arithmetic: Changing Mathematics in the Elementary Classroom
c. 1995  Dale Seymour Publications

NCTM
Involving Families in Mathematics Education
c. 2000  National Council of Teachers of Mathematics

NCTM
Mathemativs Assessment: A Practical Handbook
c. 2003  The National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, Inc.

NCTM
5 Practices for Orchestrating Productive Mathematics Discussions
c. 2011  NCTM

NCTM
The Roles of Representation in Mathematics: 2001 Yearbook
c. 2001  NCTM

Schifter, Deborah (Bastable, Virginia & Russell, Susan Jo)
DMI Series: Number & Operations (Part 1): Building a System of Tens Casebook
c. 1999  Dale Seymour Publications


Schifter, Deborah (Bastable, Virginia & Russell, Susan Jo)
DMI Series: Number & Operations (Part 2): Making Meaning for Operations Casebook
c. 1999  Dale Seymour Publications



Schifter, Deborah (Bastable, Virginia & Russell, Susan Jo)
DMI Series: Geometry: Measuring Spaace in One, Two & Three Dimensions Casebook
c. 2002  Dale Seymour Publications



Schifter, Deborah (Bastable, Virginia & Russell, Susan Jo)
DMI Series: Geometry: Examining Features of Shape Casebook
c. 2002  Dale Seymour Publications



Schifter, Deborah (Bastable, Virginia & Russell, Susan Jo)
DMI Series: Algebra: Patterns, Functions & Change Casebook
c. 2008  Dale Seymour Publications


Schmoker, Mike
Focus
c. 2011  ASCD

Seeley, Cathy L.
Faster Isn't Smarter
c. 2009  Scholastic, Inc.

Sherman, Helene J. (Richardson, Lloyd L. & Yard, George J.)
Teaching Children Who Struggle with Mathematics
c. 2005  Pearson Education Inc.

Van de Walle, John A.
Elementary & Middle School Mathematics: Teaching Developmentally
c. 2010  Pearson Education, Inc

Various
Leader: Spring 2011
Published by Utah Association of Elementary School Principals


Friday, May 4, 2012

Algebra

Harvard Education Letter
Email Status

Introducing letters to represent quantities, as in these first-grade math problems, helps students prepare for algebra. (Source: Curriculum Research and Development Group, Univ. of Hawaii)
Volume 28, Number 3
May/June 2012

The Algebra Problem

How to elicit algebraic thinking in students before eighth grade

The Algebra Problem, continued


It’s Crazy Hair Day at Marshall Elementary School in Boston’s Dorchester neighborhood—which is perfect, because Tufts University researcher Bárbara Brizuela has brought a hat.

In the stovepipe style and made from oaktag paper, the hat is one foot tall. Brizuela then asks, “If I’m five and a half feet tall, how tall will I be with the hat on?” Second-grader Jasmine, smiley in a pink sweatsuit, answers, “Six and a half feet.” Rather than say, “Right!” Brizuela offers another question: “How do you know?”

Thus begins a math conversation that researchers like Brizuela believe may hold the key to tackling one of our biggest school bugaboos: algebra. As they talk, Jasmine uses words, bar graphs, and a table to describe how tall each person they discuss will be if they put on the hat. Jasmine creates a rule—“add one foot to the number you already had”—and applies it to an imaginary person 100 feet tall.

Brizuela even throws out a variable. “So, to show someone whose height I don’t know, I will use z feet,” she says, adding a z to Jasmine’s table. “What should I do now?” Jasmine pauses. “This is kind of hard,” she says. Brizuela, whose pilot study explores mathematical thinking among children in grades K–2, understands. “Would you like to use a different letter?” she asks, erasing the z and replacing it with a y. Jasmine smiles. She picks up her pencil and easily jots down the rule: y + 1 = z feet.

A Dreaded, Scary Subject

It may seem adorable that young children are stumped if asked to add 1 to z but not if asked to add 1 to y, but to Brizuela, director of the Mathematics, Science, Technology, and Engineering Education Program in Tuft’s education department, it reveals the reasoning capacity of young minds and the need to engage them in algebraic thinking long before it becomes a dreaded and scary subject.

To many, algebra is about the first or last three letters of the alphabet, and it provokes groaning, trash talk (think Forever 21’s “Allergic to Algebra” T-shirt), and heated debate. Should it be mandated? At what grade? Algebra’s status as a “gatekeeper course” has made it a touchstone on matters of access and equity. As a result, in many places it’s become a graduation requirement.

Back in the early 1980s, one-quarter of high school graduates never even took algebra, says Daniel Chazen, director of the Center for Mathematics Education at the University of Maryland. Today, educators are pushing students to take algebra even before high school. According to the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), the number of students taking Algebra I in eighth grade more than doubled between 1986 and 2011, from 16 to 34 percent. Strikingly, eighth-grade NAEP math test scores have edged up too, with 43 percent scoring advanced or proficient in 2011, compared with 27 percent in 1996.

But amid the good news is a troubling reality: Many kids are failing algebra. In California, where standards call for Algebra I in grade 8, a 2011 EdSource report shows that nearly one-third of those who took the course—or 80,000 students—scored “below basic” or “far below basic.” In districts across the country, failure rates for Algebra I vary but run as high as 40 or 50 percent, raising questions about how students are prepared—and how the subject is taught.

Starting Algebra Early

Why is algebra so hard? For many students, math experts say, it is a dramatic leap to go from the concrete world of computation-focused grade school math to the abstract world of algebra, which requires work with variables and changing quantitative relationships. It is not just the shock of seeing letters where numbers have been but also the type of thinking those letters represent.

“In arithmetic, you are dealing with explicit numbers,” says Hung-Hsi Wu, a professor emeritus of mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley. “Algebra says, ‘I have a number; I don’t know what it is, but three times it and subtract three is 15.’ You have a number floating out there, and you have to catch it. It is the thinking behind catching the number that baffles students.”

While some argue that children must be developmentally ready to learn algebra—around ages 11–13, when they can grasp abstract thought—Brizuela and others say it’s critical to introduce it earlier. “Kids need to develop some comfort with these tools,” she says. “Babies are exposed to written and spoken language, and after six years we expect them to become somewhat fluent with that. In math, we just drop it on them like a bomb.”

Brizuela’s research spans more than a dozen years and seeks to find out if explicitly teaching algebraic thinking, including a comfort with letter variables and the ability to express mathematical values in multiple forms (Jasmine’s words, table, and bar graph), might be helpful later on.

In a study to be published in October in Recherches en Didactique des Mathématiques, a French math education journal, Brizuela and her colleagues tracked 19 students in Boston Public Schools in grades 3, 4, and 5 who received weekly algebra lessons plus homework, as compared with a control group, and followed them through middle school. Results showed that those students outperformed their peers on algebra assessments given in grades 5, 7, and 8 and drawn from NAEP, Massachusetts state tests, and the Trends in International Mathe­matics and Science Study, or TIMMS.
Building Math Minds
Central to Brizuela’s work is a striking idea: Rather than pushing eighth-grade or high school algebra down to elementary school, she begins with what children already tend to do, such as generalizing. For example, when children hear the word “hundred,” they know to add two zeros. Brizuela uses that natural ability to lure children into thinking about quantitative relationships that then become algebraic rules. This exercises their natural mathematical reasoning, which is often pushed aside in favor of getting the “right” answer or learning to memorize or compute (see sidebar “Laying the Groundwork for Algebra”).
Close SidebarLaying the Groundwork for Algebra

Here are three things that teachers can do to encourage ­algebraic thinking, according to researchers:

Broaden your definition of the equal sign. Children should be trained to view an equal sign (=) as balancing an equation, not as a command to produce an answer, says Cathy L. Seeley, a senior fellow at the Charles A. Dana Center at the University of Texas at Austin. “If you help them be fluid with what the equal sign is, it starts helping children to grasp algebra.”
Introduce letters, carefully. Including letters in math problems early on can help children grow comfortable with seeing and working with them, but they can also be misleading. Some young children can correlate a letter with its order in the alphabet, like a (first) or z (last). Tufts University researcher Bárbara Brizuela does not use x as a variable because children view it as “crossing out.”
Talk about math. So much of grade school math is “what you do with paper,” but paper work is typically about computation and answers, not mathematical reasoning, says former math teacher Paul Goldenberg of the Educational Development Center in Waltham, Mass. Presenting problems orally and framing them as a continuation of earlier ideas, rather than a “frightening new language,” can help, he says.


Similarly, Barbara J. Dougherty, Richard G. Miller Chair of Mathematics Education at the University of Missouri, observes that first-graders naturally compare, often to be sure they have the same amount (of whatever is in question) as somebody else.

“In starting with children at six, rather than starting with numbers, we ask, ‘How do you know if you have more than somebody else or less?’” says Dougherty. She and her colleagues use measurement as a vehicle for discussing comparisons of, say, the height of a cereal box to the length of a pencil. Then, instead of writing down “the height of the cereal box” and “the length of the pencil,” she says, “we’ll say, ‘Let b represent the height of the cereal box and l be the length of the pencil.’ It sounds pretty simple, but it is actually pretty powerful.” Dougherty, who has been following a cohort of students at the University Laboratory School in Honolulu, Hawaii, since 2001, says that by the time the students reach high school, they consistently outperform peers in their understanding of algebraic concepts like variables and quantitative relationships.

In the Lab School, whose student population reflects the state’s socioeconomic and racial composition, first-grade teacher Maria DaSilva says that rather than presenting the students with, say, a number line right off, she lets the class puzzle through a problem—sometimes over the course of days—until they realize that having a number line will help them in their work (see sidebar “Algebra in First Grade?”).
Close SidebarAlgebra in First Grade?

At the University Laboratory School in Honolulu, Hawaii, first-graders solve algebraic problems disguised as real-life dilemmas. One such problem involves figuring out how much growth hormone a doctor must give a population of shrimp for them to reach a certain size, given that over time they need different amounts because previous doses have made them grow. When the doctor “gets confused” about how much growth hormone to give, the children must find a way to keep track.

Teacher Maria DaSilva has students measure out liquid “doses” to “feed” the growing shrimp by marking on masking tape placed along the side of a container. Later, she removes the tape and places it horizontally on a piece of paper to become a number line. This exercise gets students thinking about changing variables as opposed to fixed amounts and demonstrates that between whole units there exist partial units—or fractions—which experts say is absolutely critical to understanding and solving algebraic equations. A common reason students get tripped up in algebra is that they don’t understand what fractions really represent and how to manipulate them, experts say.


The Teaching Challenge

The drive to improve U.S. math performance among students has focused on two main worries: (1) Are students well enough prepared, and (2) are teachers prepared enough to teach math well?

William Schmidt, professor and codirector of the Education Policy Center at Michigan State University, says the new Common Core standards likely to be adopted by most states for 2013–2014, “capture the logic of mathematics,”—an upgrade from the seemingly unrelated lessons that have made learning math “like reading the phone book.”

But he wonders: Will teachers be able to teach it? In a 2010 study, Breaking the Cycle: An International Comparison of U.S. Mathematics Teacher Preparation, comparing U.S. primary and middle school teachers with peers in 16 countries, Schmidt and his colleagues found that American teachers had “weak training mathematically” and less math coursework than teachers in high-performing nations. “We have this new demanding curriculum in the middle grades and teachers who are ill prepared to teach it,” he warns.

Meanwhile, excitement over raised standards has been met with a worry: What about the kids who are struggling now? Math researchers, like James J. Lynn at the University of Illinois at Chicago, with colleagues in New York and Seattle, are in the third year of a four-year National Science Foundation–funded project to study 17,000 high school students who struggle with algebra. Their approach is to promote sense-making, which they say has been lacking in many students’ earlier algebra experiences.

Along with work aimed at bolstering students’ sense of how quantities relate—including filling deficits as they go rather than undertaking long periods of “re-teaching”—the project also seeks to change the mindset around algebra. Instead of viewing algebra as insurmountable, students learn that applying effort and wrestling with problems can grow brain connections and make them smarter and better at math. “We try to shape their attitudes of themselves as capable learners,” says Lynn. The program is showing some gain, with about half the students scoring “high ­mastery” after the course (most students scored “low mastery” prior to the course).

Given such difficulty, one has to wonder: Why even learn algebra?

According to Jon R. Star, associate professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, that’s like asking: “Why are they reading Wuthering Heights?” Star says the answer is that—like literature—algebra tells us something about human nature and understanding. Algebra, he says, “is our students’ first exposure to what mathematics is.” It offers students the sort of critical thinking about mathematical ideas that simply doesn’t come with the computation skills of early school math. Instead, he argues, we should simply point out that, when we get to algebra, “we are here to learn some mathematics.” Not computation. Not calculation. But real math.

Freelance education writer and author Laura Pappano is a frequent contributor to the
Harvard Education Letter.


It’s Crazy Hair Day at Marshall Elementary School in Boston’s Dorchester neighborhood—which is perfect, because Tufts University researcher Bárbara Brizuela has brought a hat.

In the stovepipe style and made from oaktag paper, the hat is one foot tall. Brizuela then asks, “If I’m five and a half feet tall, how tall will I be with the hat on?” Second-grader Jasmine, smiley in a pink sweatsuit, answers, “Six and a half feet.” Rather than say, “Right!” Brizuela offers another question: “How do you know?”

Thus begins a math conversation that researchers like Brizuela believe may hold the key to tackling one of our biggest school bugaboos: algebra. As they talk, Jasmine uses words, bar graphs, and a table to describe how tall each person they discuss will be if they put on the hat. Jasmine creates a rule—“add one foot to the number you already had”—and applies it to an imaginary person 100 feet tall.

Brizuela even throws out a variable. “So, to show someone whose height I don’t know, I will use z feet,” she says, adding a z to Jasmine’s table. “What should I do now?” Jasmine pauses. “This is kind of hard,” she says. Brizuela, whose pilot study explores mathematical thinking among children in grades K–2, understands. “Would you like to use a different letter?” she asks, erasing the z and replacing it with a y. Jasmine smiles. She picks up her pencil and easily jots down the rule: y + 1 = z feet.

A Dreaded, Scary Subject

It may seem adorable that young children are stumped if asked to add 1 to z but not if asked to add 1 to y, but to Brizuela, director of the Mathematics, Science, Technology, and Engineering Education Program in Tuft’s education department, it reveals the reasoning capacity of young minds and the need to engage them in algebraic thinking long before it becomes a dreaded and scary subject.

To many, algebra is about the first or last three letters of the alphabet, and it provokes groaning, trash talk (think Forever 21’s “Allergic to Algebra” T-shirt), and heated debate. Should it be mandated? At what grade? Algebra’s status as a “gatekeeper course” has made it a touchstone on matters of access and equity. As a result, in many places it’s become a graduation requirement.

Back in the early 1980s, one-quarter of high school graduates never even took algebra, says Daniel Chazen, director of the Center for Mathematics Education at the University of Maryland. Today, educators are pushing students to take algebra even before high school. According to the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), the number of students taking Algebra I in eighth grade more than doubled between 1986 and 2011, from 16 to 34 percent. Strikingly, eighth-grade NAEP math test scores have edged up too, with 43 percent scoring advanced or proficient in 2011, compared with 27 percent in 1996.

But amid the good news is a troubling reality: Many kids are failing algebra. In California, where standards call for Algebra I in grade 8, a 2011 EdSource report shows that nearly one-third of those who took the course—or 80,000 students—scored “below basic” or “far below basic.” In districts across the country, failure rates for Algebra I vary but run as high as 40 or 50 percent, raising questions about how students are prepared—and how the subject is taught.

Starting Algebra Early

Why is algebra so hard? For many students, math experts say, it is a dramatic leap to go from the concrete world of computation-focused grade school math to the abstract world of algebra, which requires work with variables and changing quantitative relationships. It is not just the shock of seeing letters where numbers have been but also the type of thinking those letters represent.

“In arithmetic, you are dealing with explicit numbers,” says Hung-Hsi Wu, a professor emeritus of mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley. “Algebra says, ‘I have a number; I don’t know what it is, but three times it and subtract three is 15.’ You have a number floating out there, and you have to catch it. It is the thinking behind catching the number that baffles students.”

While some argue that children must be developmentally ready to learn algebra—around ages 11–13, when they can grasp abstract thought—Brizuela and others say it’s critical to introduce it earlier. “Kids need to develop some comfort with these tools,” she says. “Babies are exposed to written and spoken language, and after six years we expect them to become somewhat fluent with that. In math, we just drop it on them like a bomb.”

Brizuela’s research spans more than a dozen years and seeks to find out if explicitly teaching algebraic thinking, including a comfort with letter variables and the ability to express mathematical values in multiple forms (Jasmine’s words, table, and bar graph), might be helpful later on.

In a study to be published in October in Recherches en Didactique des Mathématiques, a French math education journal, Brizuela and her colleagues tracked 19 students in Boston Public Schools in grades 3, 4, and 5 who received weekly algebra lessons plus homework, as compared with a control group, and followed them through middle school. Results showed that those students outperformed their peers on algebra assessments given in grades 5, 7, and 8 and drawn from NAEP, Massachusetts state tests, and the Trends in International Mathe­matics and Science Study, or TIMMS.
Building Math Minds
Central to Brizuela’s work is a striking idea: Rather than pushing eighth-grade or high school algebra down to elementary school, she begins with what children already tend to do, such as generalizing. For example, when children hear the word “hundred,” they know to add two zeros. Brizuela uses that natural ability to lure children into thinking about quantitative relationships that then become algebraic rules. This exercises their natural mathematical reasoning, which is often pushed aside in favor of getting the “right” answer or learning to memorize or compute (see sidebar “Laying the Groundwork for Algebra”).
Close SidebarLaying the Groundwork for Algebra

Here are three things that teachers can do to encourage ­algebraic thinking, according to researchers:

Broaden your definition of the equal sign. Children should be trained to view an equal sign (=) as balancing an equation, not as a command to produce an answer, says Cathy L. Seeley, a senior fellow at the Charles A. Dana Center at the University of Texas at Austin. “If you help them be fluid with what the equal sign is, it starts helping children to grasp algebra.”
Introduce letters, carefully. Including letters in math problems early on can help children grow comfortable with seeing and working with them, but they can also be misleading. Some young children can correlate a letter with its order in the alphabet, like a (first) or z (last). Tufts University researcher Bárbara Brizuela does not use x as a variable because children view it as “crossing out.”
Talk about math. So much of grade school math is “what you do with paper,” but paper work is typically about computation and answers, not mathematical reasoning, says former math teacher Paul Goldenberg of the Educational Development Center in Waltham, Mass. Presenting problems orally and framing them as a continuation of earlier ideas, rather than a “frightening new language,” can help, he says.


Similarly, Barbara J. Dougherty, Richard G. Miller Chair of Mathematics Education at the University of Missouri, observes that first-graders naturally compare, often to be sure they have the same amount (of whatever is in question) as somebody else.

“In starting with children at six, rather than starting with numbers, we ask, ‘How do you know if you have more than somebody else or less?’” says Dougherty. She and her colleagues use measurement as a vehicle for discussing comparisons of, say, the height of a cereal box to the length of a pencil. Then, instead of writing down “the height of the cereal box” and “the length of the pencil,” she says, “we’ll say, ‘Let b represent the height of the cereal box and l be the length of the pencil.’ It sounds pretty simple, but it is actually pretty powerful.” Dougherty, who has been following a cohort of students at the University Laboratory School in Honolulu, Hawaii, since 2001, says that by the time the students reach high school, they consistently outperform peers in their understanding of algebraic concepts like variables and quantitative relationships.

In the Lab School, whose student population reflects the state’s socioeconomic and racial composition, first-grade teacher Maria DaSilva says that rather than presenting the students with, say, a number line right off, she lets the class puzzle through a problem—sometimes over the course of days—until they realize that having a number line will help them in their work (see sidebar “Algebra in First Grade?”).
Close SidebarAlgebra in First Grade?

At the University Laboratory School in Honolulu, Hawaii, first-graders solve algebraic problems disguised as real-life dilemmas. One such problem involves figuring out how much growth hormone a doctor must give a population of shrimp for them to reach a certain size, given that over time they need different amounts because previous doses have made them grow. When the doctor “gets confused” about how much growth hormone to give, the children must find a way to keep track.

Teacher Maria DaSilva has students measure out liquid “doses” to “feed” the growing shrimp by marking on masking tape placed along the side of a container. Later, she removes the tape and places it horizontally on a piece of paper to become a number line. This exercise gets students thinking about changing variables as opposed to fixed amounts and demonstrates that between whole units there exist partial units—or fractions—which experts say is absolutely critical to understanding and solving algebraic equations. A common reason students get tripped up in algebra is that they don’t understand what fractions really represent and how to manipulate them, experts say.


The Teaching Challenge

The drive to improve U.S. math performance among students has focused on two main worries: (1) Are students well enough prepared, and (2) are teachers prepared enough to teach math well?

William Schmidt, professor and codirector of the Education Policy Center at Michigan State University, says the new Common Core standards likely to be adopted by most states for 2013–2014, “capture the logic of mathematics,”—an upgrade from the seemingly unrelated lessons that have made learning math “like reading the phone book.”

But he wonders: Will teachers be able to teach it? In a 2010 study, Breaking the Cycle: An International Comparison of U.S. Mathematics Teacher Preparation, comparing U.S. primary and middle school teachers with peers in 16 countries, Schmidt and his colleagues found that American teachers had “weak training mathematically” and less math coursework than teachers in high-performing nations. “We have this new demanding curriculum in the middle grades and teachers who are ill prepared to teach it,” he warns.

Meanwhile, excitement over raised standards has been met with a worry: What about the kids who are struggling now? Math researchers, like James J. Lynn at the University of Illinois at Chicago, with colleagues in New York and Seattle, are in the third year of a four-year National Science Foundation–funded project to study 17,000 high school students who struggle with algebra. Their approach is to promote sense-making, which they say has been lacking in many students’ earlier algebra experiences.

Along with work aimed at bolstering students’ sense of how quantities relate—including filling deficits as they go rather than undertaking long periods of “re-teaching”—the project also seeks to change the mindset around algebra. Instead of viewing algebra as insurmountable, students learn that applying effort and wrestling with problems can grow brain connections and make them smarter and better at math. “We try to shape their attitudes of themselves as capable learners,” says Lynn. The program is showing some gain, with about half the students scoring “high ­mastery” after the course (most students scored “low mastery” prior to the course).

Given such difficulty, one has to wonder: Why even learn algebra?

According to Jon R. Star, associate professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, that’s like asking: “Why are they reading Wuthering Heights?” Star says the answer is that—like literature—algebra tells us something about human nature and understanding. Algebra, he says, “is our students’ first exposure to what mathematics is.” It offers students the sort of critical thinking about mathematical ideas that simply doesn’t come with the computation skills of early school math. Instead, he argues, we should simply point out that, when we get to algebra, “we are here to learn some mathematics.” Not computation. Not calculation. But real math.

Freelance education writer and author Laura Pappano is a frequent contributor to the
Harvard Education Letter.

Great Books for Chess

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Problem of the Month

So, I have so many things to put on for us to consider as part of our math plan.  But I have been so on fire about these Problems of the Month that I want someone else to be hit by the sparks as well. 

This is a video where that shows how the Cambrian School District is growing and making innovative developments in leaps and bounds.  Here is information from their own website:

"This initiative grew out of the Noyce Foundation's Silicon Valley Mathematics Initiative. SVMI is based on high performance expectations, ongoing professional development, examining student work, and improved math instruction. The initiative includes a formative and summative performance assessment system, pedagogical content coaching, and leadership training and networks. Coaches in SVMI learn strategies of re-engagement with students around mathematics assessments, and demonstration lessons on re-engagement are featured here."

The PoM (Problem of the Month) program is just one aspect of their initiative to support teachers, students, parents, and the community. 

OK, to not be drab, boring, and drag on, with the famous words of Inugo Montoya let me 'splain. No, there is too much. Let me sum up.

The basic idea is that a school wide task is chosen with multiple entry and exit points.  It will focus on a specific problem solving strategy.  (Or a particular aspect of the Standards of Mathematical Practice from the Common Core State Standards.)  The task is begun when Kindergarten students and 1st grade students meet in teams and are asked to collaborate on the topic at hand.  They are of course prepared by the teachers to participate and engage in the task, given time to prepare and then present to the group.  Then the same group of 1st grade students become mentors and move to become partners with a group of 2nd graders.  They go through the problem solving cycle again where the only difference is that the 1st grade students teach the older kids what they learned from the Kindergarten kids.  Then they solve and present.  This process is done iteratively throughout the day until the 5th graders become mentors to the 6th grade students.  They teach them the collective knowledge of the day that has been accumulated from younger children though exploration and problem solving.  They then engage in the task at hand. 

Watch the video.  It is amazing.  The website has 30+ tasks prepared from all of the strands of mathematics.  The 11 minute video alone convinced me that this would be an excellent choice to support math learning at Esperanza Elementary.  Here's the website and the video.  Then for those that wish to see more can see my comments below or read the pdf documents that the district uses to gain support for the PoM's. 



THE RATIONALE BEHIND THE PROBLEM OF THE MONTH

  • In real life when you have a real problem you often do not know where to start.  This provides an opportunity for students to experience this real world push.
  • Kathy Seely, author of Faster Isn't Smarter and ex President of the UCTM (Utah Council of Teachers of Mathematics), explains that teachers should give students opportunities of "constructive struggling" where they give students engaging, yet challenging problems.
    • "One of the most important lessons we can learn from other countries is that sometimes mathematics is hard, and sometimes we have to struggle to figure things out, especially with problems that are complex.  When we introduce complexity in the problems we ask students to solve and challenge them beyond what they can do, we give them the opportunity to struggle a bit - an opportunity that many students never experience in mathematics from elementary school to high school."
  • Cambrige District affirms that challenging students with non-routine problems and modeling perseverance is the best way to create problem solvers and give students power in their mathematical thinking.
  • The tasks are designed with age level appropriate entry points where K and 1st grade can generally solve level A problems, 2nd - 4th grade can solve up to level B, 4th - 5th can solve up to level C, 5th and 6th level D, and 7th and 8th level D.  But teachers who engage in the process with the students are encouraged to never put a top level to their learning and encourage them to extend what they have discovered by offering them new levels and challenges.
  • This program demands support of administrators to support the process.  
  • The program informs and involves parents.
  • It supports learning through open ended tasks and encourages the development of the 8 Mathematical Practice Standards.
  •  It provides points of data through rubrics that support teachers in carefully monitoring the learning of their students.  The data can be used to inform teachers about their Tier I instruction as well as help them determine which students to assign to their Tier II groups.  It is great data to discuss at collaborative meetings in grade level teams or vertical teams.
  • It encourages a school and community wide focus on mathematics and problem solving.
  • It encourages vertical teaming and open discussions among staff about the process of mathematics, which models and strategies to highlight, how to tie the instruction to the core, and so on and so on.
  • It provides a window into the ways that individual students think about mathematics because the process is more important than the answer.
  • It is a great way to learn to orchestrate discussions in the classroom as taught by the NCTM (National Council for Teaching of Mathematics) where teachers carefully plan what to anticipate the work students will do, monitor and chart students' in real-time work on a task, and then purposefully select and sequence which ideas should be shared by students, and help students to make connections between differing approaches looking at the underlying mathematics.
I am sure that there are more.  But as you can tell I am totally excited about exploring this option.  Please watch the video and read more into the PoM's or look at the other resources that are available at the inside mathematics website.  Then leave your comments and feelings about what you find.  I hope you have fun!

Monday, April 23, 2012

Comon Core State Standards

http://www.corestandards.org/the-standards/mathematics

Best site to interact with the new common core standards.

Elementary Mathematics Common Core Crosswalks

Look for this document produced by the USOE to help teachers transition to the common core.  It is written from the vantage point of the old Utah Core, and adds interpretation and changes to help teachers be better prepared for the transition at hand:
  • Black – Similar to 2007 Utah Math Core
  • Green – New
  • Red – Moved to another grade
  • Blue – Concept is no longer in the elementary core

Math Plan Beginning

Welcome to the Esperanza Elementary Math Plan page.  This blog has a purpose to  . . .
  • share research with colleagues about the best practices for mathematics for language learners
  • document successful uses of these practices by classrooms, schools & districts
  • provide a dialogue where ideas many shared and discussed by Esperanza colleagues
As you read the research as it is added to the blog please add any successes from schools where you feel students are supported in meeting high standards in mathematics.