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Math Makes Sense Parent Night

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Page 1: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

Math Makes SenseParent Night

Page 2: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

Overview

What do you like/don’t like/unsure of?What is numeracy and what skills are

necessary?What does the research say?How is it different from rote math?What should it look like?Using strategies and reading and oral

thinkingQuestions?

Page 3: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

Numerate people... can use what they know to figure out what they don’t know can use reasoning and evidence to prove a point can explain what they are doing as they work with numbers, symbols,

and geometric objects know which processes to use to solve problems and can tell why can talk about their ideas and show their thinking

Page 4: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

Math: It Doesn’t Have To be a Four-Letter Word“Ask anyone what their least favourite subject was

in school and chances are they’ll tell you it was math. The anxiety around finding the one right answer and doing it quickly disenfranchised so many learners that people simply believed themselves incapable of understanding mathematics. Rigid teaching methods – a quick demo of the procedure of the day, followed by pages of practice – made math incomprehensible to most children, or at best boring and irrelevant…We are learning to re-imagine math classrooms as places where students of all abilities work together on the same problem: a rich task focused on a concept worth revisiting over time.”

- Carole Saundry, “Student Diversity” 2006

Page 5: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

What does the research say?

the shift is away from just memorizing facts and ‘rules’ to understanding the whole meaningchildren must create meaning themselvesClassroom instruction relates new materials to old by using oral and written activities

“All young Canadians must learn to think mathematically, and they must think mathematically to learn.”

Page 6: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

How is this approach different?

“The bottom line is that research has shown that things our brain does not understand are more likely to be forgotten. It is part of our makeup.”

-John Marshall, p. 362 Phi Delta Kappan

“When we simply learn the rules, they can be easily forgotten- or misused.”

– John Van de Walle

Now, create a story problem to go with your equation.

1¾ ÷ ½ = ?

Page 7: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

Fractions in the Math Makes Sense Classroom

Many children & adults can solve this using a ‘rule’ (invert & multiply) quickly – the intent of an algorithm

But most people can’t explain how or why it works.

We teach children the concept of division in fractions so they can apply it in a context:

Algorithms can be useful, but can also steer us away from simple solutions!

You have 1¾ meters of ribbon – how many ½ meter lengths can you get from it?

Page 8: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

“…rules…can be easily forgotten – or misused.”

“There’s an enormous difference between memorizing a few key facts and having an authentic grasp of the material…The emphasis on memorizing trivia, names, facts and formulas must stop. It’s poor use of precious educational time.” from Brain-Based Learning, p. 185 by Eric Jensen

Page 9: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

What does it look like?Two key strategies:

First, they operate out of the context that learners have to learn to create meaning for themselves in what they learn.

Second, this is done through problems, questions and projects that challenge the learners.

Once again, the genius of this process is that the presenter gets out of the way of the learner so that the learner can creates, from scratch, real meaning in the learning.”

- Eric Jensen, Brain-Based Learning, p. 196

InvestigateInvestigate

ConnectConnect

PracticePractice

Reflect & Reflect & ShareShare

Discuss Discuss the Ideasthe Ideas

Page 10: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

There’s more than one right way…..

“If we ask ‘What is 380 ÷15?’ there is only one right answer – 25 remainder 5, or 25.3333 – and one assumed right method. Some students will find the answer effortlessly and be ready for another question quickly, while some will struggle with the algorithm, perhaps arriving at the right answer even without fully understanding the question or the processes involved.

If we instead ask, ‘How can you show 380 divided into 15 groups? How many different ways can you find?’

What will you do with the remainder that makes sense?

“If disadvantaged student used

effective learning

strategies to the same extent as students from

more advantaged backgrounds do, the performance gap between the

two groups would be almost 20% narrower

– PISA Infocus

Page 11: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

1980’s

Approach to Mathematics

TeacherDirected

Lesson

Practise

Problem Solving

Application

1. Mathematics is associated with certainty

2. Knowing mathematics means being able to “get the right answer…

Common Beliefs:

QUICKLY!QUICKLY!

Page 12: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

TeacherDirected

Lesson

Practise Problem Solving

Application

Clarify - Refine - Practise - Apply

Teacher Facilitated

Sharing

Fundamental Beliefs:

1. Mathematics is about making sense

Sense-Making Approach

to Mathematics

2. Students must come to believethat they can

make sense of mathematics

Problem Solving

Scenario Activity &

Conversation

Page 13: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

Traditional Algorithms

It is not that the traditional algorithms cannot be taught with a strong conceptual basis…. The problem is that the traditional algorithms, especially for addition and subtraction, are not natural methods for students.

As a result, the explanations generally fall on deaf ears. Far too many students learn them as meaningless procedures, develop error patterns, and require an excessive amount of reteaching or remediation.

If you are going to teach them…Delay! The understanding that children gain from working with invented strategies will make it easier for you to teach the traditional methods.

- John Van de Walle, p. 162

Page 14: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

Benefits of Personal Strategies

Base-ten concepts are enhanced.Students make fewer errors.Less reteaching is required.Personal strategies provide the basis for

mental computation and estimation.

Page 15: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

Why write in Math?

When you add language to math concepts, you own them.

Students need to ‘read to know’ , ‘talk to explain’ and ‘write to communicate’ – not just in writing class!

“When reading and writing skills are used in a real world context such as science and math, they become meaningful to the student.”

Page 16: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

Why have discussions in Math?

So students can: organize and reflect on their own

mathematical thinking clarify and resolve

misconceptionspresent their ideas, feel valued

and feel safe to express themgain insight from other’s

perspectives.develop a mathematics

vocabulary

Page 17: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

What can you do?

Page 18: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

Math is Everywhere!- from Math For Families

Play games together like board games, card games or dice games. Talk about what makes the games fun/challenging

Talk about Math, encouraging your child to explain his/her thinking, sequence & count, compare, use logical thinking, describe the world.

Talk about Math as you show your child how you use math in your life, such as measuring for recipes, estimating amounts of paint or wallpaper, use the clock to plan, read schedules.

Page 19: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

More Math Everywhere!

Promote Math as Thinking, not Memorization: Some math needs to

become automatic, but right now your child needs time for thinking and reasoning.

Ask your child to explain how he/she figured things out: “How did you know that?” Value their thinking!

Keep in mind memorizing does not always mean understanding and that math is about making sense.

Model Positive Attitudes Towards Math: Have fun together while

doing math-related activities such as measuring ingredients, counting dishes for table setting, sorting laundry, building projects.

Model the old saying: “Try, try again!” – say, “Can you think of another way to put the shapes together?”

Spend time talking about your positive math experiences – kids are influenced by the attitudes of the adults around them!

Page 20: Math Makes Sense Parent Night. Overview What do you like/don’t like/unsure of? What is numeracy and what skills are necessary? What does the research

Math Websites for you & Your Child

Math games on the computer are most successful when played with a parent

present to talk about concepts and verbalize thinking.

www.kidsdomain.com/games/math2.htmlwww.eduplace.com/math/brainwww.Mathstories.comhttp://hzsd.ca/learningcenter/library/math

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