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Creating and Facilitating Mathematics Learning Communities Focusing on Students' Work

Creating and Facilitating Mathematics Learning Communities Focusing on Students' Work. Dona T. Apple Research and Mathematics Staff Development, Senior Consultant dapple11@comcast.net Wendy Pelletier Cleaves Mathematics Coordinator wendy.cleaves@umassmed.edu Sandra Mayrand Director

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Creating and Facilitating Mathematics Learning Communities Focusing on Students' Work

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  1. Creating and Facilitating Mathematics Learning Communities Focusing on Students' Work Dona T. Apple Research and Mathematics Staff Development, Senior Consultant dapple11@comcast.net Wendy Pelletier Cleaves Mathematics Coordinator wendy.cleaves@umassmed.edu Sandra Mayrand Director sandra.mayrand@umassmed.edu Regional Science Resource Center University of Massachusetts Medical School

  2. What is an MLC? • Content-specific Professional Learning Community • Authentic discussions about how children learn mathematics • Collegial discussions that deepen teachers’ knowledge of content and pedagogy

  3. Research Base and Resources • “Research on Teacher Preparation and Professional Development,” Grover Whitehurst • “Instructional Policy and Classroom Performance: Mathematics Reform in California,” David Cohen and Heather Hill • “Form and Substance in Mathematics and Science Professional Development,” Mary Kennedy • Designing PD for Teachers of Science and Mathematics, Loucks-Horsley, Love, Stiles, Mundry, Hewson • Learning by Doing: A Handbook for Professional Learning Communities at Work, Dufour, Dufour, Eaker, Many • The Fifth Discipline: The Art and Practice of the Learning Organization, Peter Senge

  4. Reasons for Examining Student Work • Give students a grade • Design or revise a task • Redirect instruction • Deepen understanding of how students think about mathematics • Deepen personal understanding of mathematics

  5. Goals of an MLC • Form a collaborative learning community that focuses on student learning • Understand new content in a deeper, more conceptual way • Closely examine student work and formative assessments in order to determine progress and instructional needs • Reflect on classroom practice, share strategies, discuss best practices, and expand professional expertise

  6. MLC Session Format • Mathematical background • Math metacognition • Looking at student work • Reflecting on learning • Feedback and wrap up

  7. Session 6: Math Metacognition 29 x 4=

  8. Session 6: LASW Problem • Read the problem and discuss what it is assessing: Haley swam 22 laps each day for 18 days. Then she swam 25 laps each day for 10 days. What was the total number of laps she swam over the 28 days? Problem source: MCAS 2006, Grade 4

  9. MLC Protocol for LASW • Read the problem and discuss what it is assessing • Solve the problem individually • Share your thinking with a partner • Discuss the mathematics of the problem as a whole group • Look at how students solved the same problem • Identify evidence of understanding by using guiding questions • Discuss evidence of student understanding as a whole group

  10. MLC Content

  11. Professional Learning: Purposeful and Transformative “Believing in students and the intentions of their effort is an essential part of examining student work.” -Kelemanik No matter how flawed, it will provide a lens into mathematical thinking and understanding that might otherwise remain invisible.

  12. Contact Information • MLC Facilitator Training for your school or district: Sandra Mayrand, Director Regional Science Resource Center University of Massachusetts Medical School (508) 856-5097 sandra.mayrand@umassmed.edu

  13. MLC Materials Online • To view and download session notes, mathematical tasks, student work samples, and guiding questions templates, visit: www.doe.mass.edu/omste/instructional.html

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