Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Week 3 Math


The reading I found most beneficial was definitely the student interview jigsaw choice. Since we are interviewing our students this week, I took special note of how they went about it, and how they got the most out of the students’ answers.  Action research is defined as the process of asking a worthwhile research question, collecting credible evidence to answer the question, and using the evidence to guide further improvement in a school. At the elementary school, Jefferson, in Oregon, the teachers were having issues with problem solving in their math classrooms. They found it difficult to teach and noted that the children were having difficulties grasping the concept. This was because the teachers did not have any knowledge of the student’s individual mathematical learning and understanding. The classes were too large and each student was different. I fear for this because how am I supposed to find enough time in 1 day to incorporate each student’s learning strategy in 1 lesson plan, especially in a larger classroom. I know it will be a bit of a challenge, but in the article they found a solution when they interviewed each student on which mathematical style of learning best suited them, and making teachers more aware of what individual children knew and what tasks they could perform with their knowledge. With that information the teachers began to increase their focus on meeting the needs of the individual students. Teachers met each student’s level by identifying who was able to move on the next level, and who needed more time. The teachers created their own story problems that best included the student’s in the classroom. The problems were more meaningful to the students, and they had an easier time understanding it. The teachers also made the classroom more of a discussion rather than one lecture. This helped the students learn the many different ways of solving a problem when they shared with their peers how they solved it, and witnessed the different ways the other students found solutions. Working together helped the students regain their confidence in math, and it was more interesting to them once they started to see results. The one on one time with the teacher was very beneficial to the students because it is rare to get that special time with one student. The teachers received immediate and specific feedback from each student, making the teachers more aware of what they needed to incorporate in the lessons to better accommodate all students. In my future teaching class, I will definitely assess each student one on one to see which ways they learn best, and incorporate each learning method in my lesson, showing multiple ways to solve the problem, giving the student options to find which one they prefer and understand the most. I believe its also a good idea to know which students learn best in which ways so you can match them up in the same groups or even different groups, so they can learn other styles from each other. Depending on what your goal is for that lesson, knowing who your students are will help you in the long run. The students will get the most out of your lessons if you can direct it at each of their different styles at once. It’s a challenge, but as long as you know your students, it’s worth it!

2 comments:

  1. I also found the Chapin and Snook articles to be helpful since they talked about interviewing math students. I thought although it was time consuming, interviewing students individually really helped the teachers discover what learning styles best fit each students' needs. Additionally, I liked hoe the teachers came up with their own story problems, personalized to their classrooms so that their students would see them as meaningful story problems instead of disconnected math problems.
    In the CGI book, I also found several things to be interesting. It is essential that we as teachers realize children have many different ways of looking at addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division problems. Unlike adults, they do not see these types of problems as all alike. I learned it is very important for children to make up their own procedures for problem solving because this comes naturally to them. "In an environment that encourages children to use procedures that are meaningful to them, they will construct these strategies for themselves" (pg. 3). I totally agree with the authors when they say that children come to school with a great deal of informal knowledge of math that should be used as the basis for developing an understanding of math in school curriculum.

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  2. The Chapin and Snook articles were very helpful especially for this upcoming week. I thought it was great and beneficial how they talked about interviewing students about math. Like Lauren, I agree that it would be very time consuming to interview every student; however this is how you really learn about your students and their knowledge level. Interviews also give you that one on one time that many students crave and need. It allows for the teacher to have a better and more in depth relationship with students. During the interview students are able to tell the teacher what they are having problems on and have the misconceptions fixed if there is time for this to occur.

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