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Improving learning in mathematics PD4: Managing discussion.

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Presentation on theme: "Improving learning in mathematics PD4: Managing discussion."— Presentation transcript:

1 Improving learning in mathematics PD4: Managing discussion

2 Aims of the session This session is intended to help us to: experience discussion of mathematics; reflect on how discussion can be used to promote learning; explore the characteristics of purposeful discussion; explore the management skills that are needed to implement purposeful discussion.

3 A group activity Decide whether each statement on the cards you have been given is always, sometimes or never true. Stick your statement on a poster and write your explanation next to it. If you think a statement is ‘always true’ or ‘never true’, then explain how you can be sure. If you think a statement is ‘sometimes true’, describe all the cases when it is true and all the cases when it is false. Make up a statement that your learners could discuss in a similar way.

4 Always, sometimes or never true? Numbers with more digits are greater in value. The square of a number is greater than the number. When you cut a piece off a shape, you reduce its area and perimeter. A pentagon has fewer right angles than a rectangle. Quadrilaterals tessellate.

5 Always, sometimes or never true? If a right-angled triangle has integer sides, the incircle has integer radius. If you square a prime number, the answer is one more than a multiple of 24. If you add n consecutive numbers together, the result is divisible by n. If you double the lengths of the sides, you double the area. Continuous graphs are differentiable. If the sequence of terms tends to zero, the series converges.

6 Reflect on your discussion Who talked the most? Who spoke the least? What was their role in the group? Did everyone feel that all views were taken into account? Did anyone feel threatened? If so, why? How could this have been avoided? Did people tend to support their own views, or did anyone take up and improve someone else's suggestion? Has anyone learnt anything? If so, how did this happen?

7 Why is discussion rare in mathematics? Time pressures “ It’s a gallop to the main exam.” “ Learners will waste time in social chat.” Control “ What will other teachers think of the noise?” “ How can I possibly monitor what is going on?” Views of learners “ My learners cannot discuss.” “ My learners are too afraid of being seen to be wrong.” Views of mathematics “ In mathematics, answers are either right or wrong – there is nothing to discuss.” “ If they understand it there is nothing to discuss. If they don’t, they are in no position to discuss anything.” Views of learning “ Mathematics is a subject where you listen and practise.” “ Mathematics is a private activity.”

8 What kind of talk is most helpful? Cumulative talk Speakers build positively but uncritically on what each other has said. Repetitions, confirmations and elaborations. Disputational talk Disagreement and individual decision-making. Short exchanges, assertions and counter-assertions. Exploratory talk Speakers elaborate each other’s reasoning. Collaborative rather than competitive atmosphere. Reasoning is audible; knowledge is publicly accountable. Critical, constructive exchanges. Challenges are justified; alternative ideas are offered.

9 Example 1: Evaluating expressions

10 Example 2: Rail prices

11 Ground rules for learners Talk one at a time. Share ideas and listen to each other. Make sure people listen to you. Follow on. Challenge. Respect each other’s opinions. Enjoy mistakes. Share responsibility. Try to agree in the end.

12 Managing a discussion How might we help learners to discuss constructively? What is the teacher’s role during small group discussion? What is the purpose of a whole group discussion? What is the teacher’s role during a whole group discussion?

13 Teacher’s role in small group discussion Make the purpose of the task clear. Keep reinforcing the ‘ground rules’. Listen before intervening. Join in, don’t judge. Ask learners to describe, explain and interpret. Do not do the thinking for learners. Don’t be afraid of leaving discussions unresolved.

14 Purposes of whole group discussion Learners present and report on the work they have done. The teacher recognises ‘big ideas’ and gives them status and value. The learning is generalised and linked to other ideas and the wider context.

15 Teacher’s role in whole group discussion Mainly chair or facilitate. Direct the flow and give everyone a say. Do not interrupt or allow others to interrupt. Help learners to clarify their own ideas. Occasionally be a questioner or challenger. Introduce a new idea when the discussion is flagging. Follow up a point of view. Play devil’s advocate; ask provocative questions. Don’t be a judge who: assesses every response with ‘yes’, ‘good’ etc; sums up prematurely.

16 Planning a discussion session How should you: organise the furniture? introduce the task? introduce the ways of working on the task? allocate learners to groups? organise the rhythm of the session? conclude the session?


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