math practices
TRANSCRIPT
Best Practices in MathUsing the Habits of Mind and Interaction
Integrating effective math instruction
(think Common Core Mathematical
Practices) with district curriculum
(Engage New York).
The Big Picture
Where to begin? Locate your first unit of study
Found on the CIA: https://salkeiz-cia.orvsd.org/
Be sure to log in first username: lastname_firstname
password: the same as you use to log in for the district
Open your first unit of study under your grade’s “instruction” tab
Take time to look through the unit of study (curriculum map)
Focus on the “Big Ideas”
Engage New York All grades will use Engage New York (ENY).
As a PLC, you may decide to supplement with other
resources.
You should have:
Paper copy of each unit’s teacher’s guide/lessons
Electronic teacher’s guides are on U drive and also uploaded
on Digital Storefront.
Non-consumable workbooks (student Problem Sets), not to
be written in.
Engage New York Exit Tickets: you will need to order print or decide as a
PLC how you’d like to assess
Homework: Also, as a PLC, decide what you’d like to
do. Use the ENY homework as is? Modify? Use
something else?
Mid-module and end-of-module assessments: you will
need to look at these with your PLC, and order print
ENY and Student Mathematical Practices
All grades are required to implement the Student
Mathematical Practices.
Located on the CIA site: https://salkeiz-cia.orvsd.org/math
How can we be sure that they are a part of our
everyday math instruction/learning?
How can we get our students to understand these
practices and eventually start implementing them on
their own?
What is a way to teach these practices in a “student-
friendly” way?
Mathematical Productive
Thinking Routines
Explain your thinking/reasoning in a
variety of ways.
Explain why your
ideas/solutions/conjectures are always,
sometimes ,or never true.
Clarify, deepen, and expand thinking by
making conjectures based on the math
you know combined with relationships
noticed.
Mathematical Habits of Mind
CONNECTIONS
I notice and reason about connections within and across
mathematical representations, other math ideas, and
everyday life.
MATHEMATICAL REPRESENTATIONS
I create and reason from mathematical representations-
visual models, graphs, numbers, symbols and equations,
and situations.
REGULARITY, PATTERNS, STRUCTURE
I notice and reason about mathematical regularity in
repeated reasoning, patterns, and structure (meanings,
properties, definitions).
MISTAKES & STUCK POINTS
I explore mistakes and stuck points to start new lines of
reasoning and new math learning.
METACOGNITION & REFLECTION
I use metacognition and reflection. I think about my math
reasoning and disequilibrium– how my thinking is
changing and how my ideas compare to other
mathematicians’ ideas.
PERSEVERE & SEEK MORE
I welcome challenging math problems and ideas, and
after I figure something out, I explore new possibilities.
Mathematical Habits of Interaction
When I do math with other mathematicians, we:
Use PRIVATE REASONING TIME
Honor each other’s right to private reasoning time before
talking about our ideas.
EXPLAIN
Explain how we think and reason mathematically.
LISTEN TO UNDERSTAND
Listen to understand each other’s math reasoning about
problems, conjectures, justifications, and generalizations.
Ask GENUINE QUESTIONS
Use genuine questions to inquire about each other’s math
reasoning about problems, conjectures, justifications, and
generalizations.
Use MULTIPLE PATHWAYS
Explore multiple pathways by applying each other’s lines
of reasoning.
COMPARE LOGIC & IDEAS
Compare our math logic and ideas to figure out how they
are mathematically the same and different.
CRITIQUE & DEBATE
Critique and debate the math logic and truth in each
other’s reasoning.
Remember that MATH REASONING IS THE
AUTHORITY
Use math reasoning as the authority for deciding what is
correct and makes sense.
Question of the Day
Focus lesson around one main problem. This gives you
freedom to go “off script” from the teacher’s guide.
It would most likely come from your ENY lesson for the
day (modify if needed)
The problem would be one that is focused on your “big
idea.”
The problem would lend itself to integrating one or
more of the habits of mind and interaction.
Strategies and
Representations Do the math!
Plan ahead of time for what strategies and representations you’d like to feature (sketch out on your plans).
Think about what mistakes/stuck points may come up and how to approach that.
Write out “genuine questions” that you plan to ask.
Think about the habits of mind and interaction you’d like to focus on for the lesson.
Some of these habits will come naturally, especially after implementing them regularly.
Student Math-Talk Let’s try it…
Math Task Brock makes 21 jars of tomato sauce with the tomatoes
from his garden. He puts 7 jars in each box to sell at
the farmers’ market. How many boxes does Brock
need?
Step 1: Take private reasoning time to work through
this problem using mathematical representations.
Student Math Talk
Step 2: Student Math Talk
Strategy: Listen & Compare: Partner A
speaks while Partner B listens without
interrupting. When teacher announces
“Finish your thought and switch roles,”
Partner B speaks, including comparative
language (sentences frames would come in
handy with this one).
More Strategies
Strategy: Revoice & Compare:
As with the previous strategy, Partner A shares
while Partner B listens silently. Instead of
immediately switching roles, Partner B revoices
Partner A’s ideas without modifying them.
Partner A clarifies as needed. The partners
then switch roles and the process is repeated.
Strategic “Share” As students are working, teacher circulates. When s/he
sees a strategy or representation to highlight with the
group, the teacher places a sticky note near the
student.
The teacher then helps transition back to whole-group
time, and asks the students with sticky notes to share.
Often, the teacher uses these ideas to construct a
public record (anchor chart).
Creating “Public Records” Part of “doing the math” ahead of time is envisioning
how you want the public record (aka anchor chart) to
look.
Think about the representations you want students to
use. They should discover them on their own, but if
they don’t, how will you guide them without directly
feeding it to them?
Hint: “I once saw a student do it this way…”
More Application Solve the following the problem….and you can’t “invert
and multiply….”
12 ÷ ¼ =
Use Private Reasoning Time and create a
mathematical representation.
So…… How did that feel? Was it comfortable?
Welcome to…Productive Disequilibrium!
This is an example of using Mistakes and Stuck Points
to further learning. It’s a paradigm shift to view being
stuck as a positive part of learning. As teachers, we
need to remember to not jump in and give them the
answer to alleviate our own discomfort.
Planning a Lesson Use created template or some other method you
decide on as a PLC.
Walk through…
Final Thoughts This is a shift to student-centered mathematics
instruction. Think of yourself as the facilitator. Plan
ahead for what you want the students to understand
and what strategies you want them to discover. Have a
plan for facilitating these things if they don’t naturally
discover them. Ask genuine questions that will lead to
sense-making and generalizing.