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CCSS mathematics

This article discusses the need for improvements in mathematics instruction, including the use of new technology and tests. It emphasizes the importance of focus and coherence in the curriculum and highlights the role of problem-solving in learning mathematics. The article also explores the concept of grain size and provides strategies for effective instruction. Additionally, it discusses the standards for mathematical practice and the development of expertise and character in students.

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CCSS mathematics

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  1. CCSS mathematics A System of Courses Phil Daro

  2. Phase-in • We are making long overdue improvements in mathematics instruction • AND • Shifting to a new technology • AND • New tests • Times like these need leaders who …..

  3. Evidence, not Politics • High performing countries like Japan • Research • Lessons learned

  4. Mile wide –inch deepcauses cures

  5. Mile wide –inch deep cause: too little time per conceptcure: more time per topic = less topics

  6. Two ways to get less topics • Delete topics • Coherence: A little deeper, mathematics is a lot more coherent • Coherence across concepts • Coherence in the progression across grades

  7. Silence speaks no explicit requirement in the Standards about simplifying fractions or putting fractions into lowest terms. instead a progression of concepts and skills building to fraction equivalence. putting a fraction into lowest terms is a special case of generating equivalent fractions.

  8. Why do students have to do math problems? • to get answers because Homeland Security needs them, pronto • I had to, why shouldn’t they? • so they will listen in class • to learn mathematics

  9. Why give students problems to solve? • To learn mathematics. • Answers are part of the process, they are not the product. • The product is the student’s mathematical knowledge and know-how. • The ‘correctness’ of answers is also part of the process. Yes, an important part.

  10. Three Responses to a Math Problem • Answer getting • Making sense of the problem situation • Making sense of the mathematics you can learn from working on the problem

  11. Answers are a black hole:hard to escape the pull • Answer getting short circuits mathematics, making mathematical sense • Very habituated in US teachers versus Japanese teachers • Devised methods for slowing down, postponing answer getting

  12. Answer getting vs. learning mathematics • USA: • How can I teach my kids to get the answer to this problem? Use mathematics they already know. Easy, reliable, works with bottom half, good for classroom management. • Japanese: • How can I use this problem to teach the mathematics of this unit?

  13. Butterflymethod

  14. Two major design principles, based on evidence: • Focus • Coherence

  15. The Importance of Focus • TIMSS and other international comparisons suggest that the U.S. curriculum is ‘a mile wide and an inch deep.’ • “On average, the U.S. curriculum omits only 17 percent of the TIMSS grade 4 topics compared with an average omission rate of 40 percent for the 11 comparison countries. The United States covers all but 2 percent of the TIMSS topics through grade 8 compared with a 25 percent non coverage rate in the other countries. High-scoring Hong Kong’s curriculum omits 48 percent of the TIMSS items through grade 4, and 18 percent through grade 8. Less topic coverage can be associated with higher scores on those topics covered because students have more time to master the content that is taught.” • Ginsburg et al., 2005

  16. Grain size is a major issue • Mathematics is simplest at the right grain size. • “Strands” are too big, vague e.g. “number” • Lessons are too small: too many small pieces scattered over the floor, what if some are missing or broken? • Units or chapters are about the right size (8-12 per year) • Districts: • STOP managing lessons, • START managing units

  17. What mathematics do we want students to walk away with from this chapter? • Content Focus of professional learning communities should be at the chapter level • When working with standards, focus on clusters. Standards are ingredients of clusters. Coherence exists at the cluster level across grades • Each lesson within a chapter or unit has the same objectives….the chapter objectives

  18. What does good instruction look like? • The 8 standards for Mathematical Practice describe student practices. Good instruction bears fruit in what you see students doing. Teachers have different ways of making this happen.

  19. Mathematical Practices Standards • Make sense of complex problems and persevere in solving them. • Reason abstractly and quantitatively • Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others. 4. Model with mathematics. 5. Use appropriate tools strategically. • Attend to precision • Look for and make use of structure 8. Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning. College and Career Readiness Standards for Mathematics

  20. Expertise and Character • Development of expertise from novice to apprentice to expert • Schoolwide enterprise: school leadership • Department wide enterprise: department taking responsibility • The Content of their mathematical Character • Develop character

  21. What does good instruction look like? Students explaining so others can understand Students listening to each other, working to understand the thinking of others Teachers listening, working to understand thinking of students Teachers and students quoting and citing each other

  22. motivation Mathematical practices develop character: the pluck and persistence needed to learn difficult content. We need a classroom culture that focuses on learning…a try, try again culture. We need a culture of patience while the children learn, not impatience for the right answer. Patience, not haste and hurry, is the character of mathematics and of learning.

  23. Students Job: Explain your thinking • Why (and how) it makes sense to you • (MP 1,2,4,8) • What confuses you • (MP 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8) • Why you think it is true • ( MP 3, 6, 7) • How it relates to the thinking of others • (MP 1,2,3,6,8)

  24. What questions do you ask • When you really want to understand someone else’s way of thinking? • Those are the questions that will work. • The secret is to really want to understand their way of thinking. • Model this interest in other’s thinking for students • Being listened to is critical for learning

  25. Explain the mathematics when students are ready • At the end of the lesson • Prepare the 3-5 minute summary in advance, • spend the period getting the students ready, • get students talking about each other’s thinking, • quote student work during summary at lesson’s end

  26. Students Explaining their reasoning develops academic language and their reasoning skills Need to pull opinions and intuitions into the open: make reasoning explicit Make reasoning public Core task: prepare explanations the other students can understand The more sophisticated your thinking, the more challenging it is to explain so others understand

  27. Language, Mathematics and Prior Knowledge

  28. Develop language, don’t work around language • Look for second sentences from students, especially EL and reluctant speakers • Students Explaining their reasoning develops academic language and their reasoning power • Making language more precise is a social process, do it through discussion • Listening stimulates thinking and talking • Not listening stimulates daydreaming

  29. Prior knowledge There are no empty shelves in the brain waiting for new knowledge. Learning something new ALWAYS involves changing something old. You must change prior knowledge to learn new knowledge.

  30. You must change a brain full of answers • To a brain with questions. • Change prior answers into new questions. • The new knowledge answers these questions. • Teaching begins by turning students’ prior knowledge into questions and then managing the productive struggle to find the answers • Direct instruction comes after this struggle to clarify and refine the new knowledge.

  31. Variety across students of prior knowledge is key to the solution, it is not the problem

  32. 15 ÷ 3 = ☐

  33. Show 15 ÷ 3 =☐ • As a multiplication problem • Equal groups of things • An array (rows and columns of dots) • Area model • In the multiplication table • Make up a word problem

  34. Show 15 ÷ 3 = ☐ • As a multiplication problem (3 x ☐ = 15 ) • Equal groups of things: 3 groups of how many make 15? • An array (3 rows, ☐ columns make 15?) • Area model: a rectangle has one side = 3 and an area of 15, what is the length of the other side? • In the multiplication table: find 15 in the 3 row • Make up a word problem

  35. Show 16 ÷ 3 = ☐ • As a multiplication problem • Equal groups of things • An array (rows and columns of dots) • Area model • In the multiplication table • Make up a word problem

  36. Teach at the speed of learning • Not faster • More time per concept • More time per problem • More time per student talking • = less problems per lesson

  37. Personalization The tension: personal (unique) vs. standard (same)

  38. Why Standards? Social Justice • Main motive for standards • Get good curriculum to all students • Start each unit with the variety of thinking and knowledge students bring to it • Close each unit with on-grade learning in the cluster of standards • Some students will need extra time and attention beyond classtime

  39. Standards are a peculiar genre We write as though students have learned approximately 100% of what is in preceding standards. This is never even approximately true anywhere in the world. Variety among students in what they bring to each day’s lesson is the condition of teaching, not a breakdown in the system. We need to teach accordingly. Tools for teachers…instructional and assessment…should help them manage the variety

  40. Grain size is a major issue • Mathematics is simplest at the right grain size. • “Strands” are too big, vague e.g. “number” • Lessons are too small: too many small pieces scattered over the floor, what if some are missing or broken? • Units or chapters are about the right size (8-12 per year) • Districts: • STOP managing lessons, • START managing units

  41. Unit architecture

  42. Four levels of learning • Understand well enough to explain to others • Good enough to learn the next related concepts • Can get the answers • Noise

  43. Four levels of learningThe truth is triage, but all can prosper • Understand well enough to explain to others As many as possible, at least 1/3 • Good enough to learn the next related concepts Most of the rest • Can get the answers At least this much • Noise Aim for zero

  44. Efficiency of embedded peer tutoring is necessaryFour levels of learningdifferent students learn at levels within same topic • Understand well enough to explain to others An asset to the others, learn deeply by explaining • Good enough to learn the next related concepts Ready to keep the momentum moving forward, a help to others and helped by others • Can get the answers Profit from tutoring • Noise Tutoring can minimize

  45. When the content of the lesson is dependent on prior mathematics knowledge • “I do – We do– You do” design breaks down for many students • Because it ignores prior knowledge • I – we – you designs are well suited for content that does not depend much on prior knowledge… • You do- we do- I do- you do

  46. Classroom culture: • ….explain well enough so others can understand • NOT answer so the teacher thinks you know • Listening to other students and explaining to other students

  47. Questions that prompt explanations Most good discussion questions are applications of 3 basic math questions: • How does that make sense to you? • Why do you think that is true • How did you do it?

  48. …so others can understand • Prepare an explanation that others will understand • Understand others’ ways of thinking

  49. Minimum Variety of prior knowledge in every classroom; I - WE - YOU Student A Student B Student C Student D Student E Lesson START Level CCSS Target Level

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