CHAPTER 6 Teaching Mathematics Equitably to All Children

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Presentation transcript:

CHAPTER 6 Teaching Mathematics Equitably to All Children Elementary and Middle School Mathematics Teaching Developmentally Ninth Edition Van de Walle, Karp and Bay-Williams Developed by E. Todd Brown /Professor Emeritus University of Louisville

Mathematics for ALL Students Addressing the needs of all means: Students who are identified as having a disability Students from different backgrounds Students who are English language learners Students who are mathematically gifted Students who are unmotivated or need to build resilience

Two paths for making a task accessible to all students Accommodation- response to the needs of the environment or learner i.e. Write directions in larger font Saying and printing the directions Modification- changes the task to make it more accessible to the student i.e. Break task into smaller components Scaffold to the original task

Response to Intervention (RTI) Each tier represents a level of intervention with corresponding monitoring of results. How would progress monitoring inform you of the level of student needs? Source: Scott, T., and Lane, H. (2001). Multi-Tiered Interventions in Academic and Social Contexts. Unpublished manuscript, University of Florida, Gainesville.

RTI in three phase lesson Before- state lesson purpose, introduce new vocabulary, clarifies concepts from prior knowledge (graphic organizer) During- displays directions in chart, poster or list, provide guiding questions in a chart After- facilitate a discussion to highlight and make explicit the concepts and skills, summarize and list the key concepts as they relate to each other

Research-proven strategies for Tier 2 and 3 Students Explicit strategy instruction Assess student to know what to target Model the strategy and self instructive prompts for student to use through the model Teacher–led explanations highlight critical connection building and meaning making Concrete, Semi-Concrete, Abstract (CSA) Sequence Concrete representations Semi- concrete- drawings or pictures Abstract- numbers and symbols

Research proven strategies for Tier 2 and 3 Students cont. Think-Alouds Teacher verbalizes the thinking process steps from student starting point Teacher identifies the reasoning by asking questions as they move through the process Peer-Assisted Learning Students learn best when placed in the role of apprentice Used “as-needed” versus explicit strategy model

Teaching and Assessing Students with Learning Disabilities Structure the environment Centralize attention- face student and remove competing stimuli Avoid confusion- word directions carefully and specifically Create smooth transitions Identify and Remove Potential Barriers Help students remember- memory aids Provide vocabulary and concept support Vary task size

Teaching and Assessing Students with Learning Disabilities cont. Provide clarity Repeat the timeframe- repeat reminders of time left Ask students to share their thinking- think-alouds or think-pair-share Emphasize connections- provide visual representations Adapt delivery mode- materials, images, and examples Support organization of written work-tools and templates

Teaching and Assessing Students with Learning Disabilities cont. Consider alternative assessments Propose alternative products- verbal response scribed by someone else or electronically Encourage self-monitoring and self-assessment Consider feedback charts- monitoring their growth Emphasize practice and summary Consolidate ideas- study guides for review Provide extra practice- carefully selected problems to use with manipulatives

Culturally & Ethnically Diverse Students Mental mathematics is highly valued in other countries. Explain the differences between the two processes. Think about these questions- Will you require students to show steps disregarding the way they learned? Will you ask students to elaborate on how they did it? Will you have students show other students their way?

Culturally Responsive Instruction Incorporate student identities Ensure shared power Honor use of native language Use content and language objectives Explicitly teach vocabulary Focus on important mathematics Make content relevant Are mathematics presented meaningful and connected to other content? What context can bring meaning?

Strategies for Mathematically Gifted Students Strategies to Avoid More of the same work Giving free time to earlier finishers Assigning gifted students to help struggling students Pull-out opportunities Independent enrichment on the computer Strategies to Incorporate Acceleration- curriculum compacting Enrichment- group investigations, solving real problems Sophistication-other numeral systems Novelty-explore topics outside the curriculum

Creating Gender-Friendly Mathematics Classrooms Equitable treatment of boys and girls- awareness Equally call on and ask higher-level questions to males and females. Provide opportunities for students to act out or model mathematical situations or concepts. Encourage all students to be active participants. Use collaboration. Attend to the context of problems. Ensure diverse characters in children’s literature used in mathematics instruction. Discuss STEM careers to increase students’ interest in these fields.

Reducing Resistance and Building Resilience Give students choices that capitalize on their unique strengths. Nurture traits of resilience. Make mathematics irresistible. Give students leadership in their own learning.