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The Impact on Teachers of Immersion in Mathematics

The Impact on Teachers of Immersion in Mathematics. Glenn Stevens Wayne Harvey Ryota Matsuura Al Cuoco Steve Rosenberg Sarah Sword (Boston University) (Education Development Center) . Focus on Mathematics. Focus on Mathematics (NSF/EHR-0314692) ‏.

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The Impact on Teachers of Immersion in Mathematics

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  1. The Impact on Teachers ofImmersion in Mathematics Glenn Stevens Wayne Harvey Ryota Matsuura Al Cuoco Steve Rosenberg Sarah Sword (Boston University) (Education Development Center) Focus on Mathematics

  2. Focus on Mathematics (NSF/EHR-0314692)‏ a Wide-Ranging Partnership of Grade 5-12 Teachers, Administrators, University Educators and Professional Mathematicians Boston University Education Development Center, inc and five school districts

  3. Immersion in Mathematics Three examples: • PROMYS for Teachers • FoM “Study Groups” • PCMI’s “Developing Mathematics”

  4. The Immersion Experience Teachers experiencing mathematics • as exploration and problem-solving • as an empirical science • as a community activity • as mathematicians experience it Key Features • emphasis on learning and doing mathematics • strengthening mathematical habits of mind • low threshold, high ceiling • deeply personalengagement in mathematical ideas

  5. PROMYS for Teachers • Immersion experience of mathematical exploration • six week summer component • Reflection on classroom practice • 5 daylong workshops in academic year • Doing mathematics together • Sharing classroom experiences • More immersion in mathematics in second summer (six weeks)‏ • advanced mathematics seminars • more reflection on practice

  6. Habits of Mind • Acquiring experience • numerical experimentation • alert observation • Good use of language • asking good questions • formulating conjectures • proofs and disproofs • Review • identifying important ideas • Formalization • looking for connections • Generalization • broadening applicability • questioning answers

  7. Culture of Exploration • Immersion in new ideas • Necessity foropen communication • Acquiring taste for hard problems • The central role of experience • empirical basis of mathematical knowledge • personal experience as guide for new explorations • Learning good judgement in recognizing significant ideas • Sharing ideas with others • in writing • in seminars • Questioning answers

  8. Methods • Rich mathematical content- number theory- discrete mathematics- geometry- analysis • Intense problem solving- problem-solving seminars- independent work and in groups • Multi-tiered structure • History and tradition • Open-ended explorations- teacher/student teams- final papers- oral presentations

  9. To think deeply of simple ideas Arnold Ross

  10. The Mathematics

  11. The PROMYS Community • First year participants • 20 teachers • 8 pre-service teachers • 45 high school students • Returning participants • 8 teachers • 20 high school students • Counselors • 6 graduate students • 6 teachers (alumni)‏ • 15 undergraduates (for students)‏ • Faculty • 5 mathematicians • 2 math educators

  12. PROMYS for Teachers • Stand-alone course for graduate credit in mathematics • The entry level course for the Master of Mathematics for Teaching degree at Boston University or

  13. Focus on Mathematics Masters Degree inMathematics for Teaching Designed to develop and sustain: • School-based intellectual leadership in mathematics • Learning cultures in school settings involving • Students • Teachers • Educators • Mathematicians

  14. Masters Degree inMathematics for Teaching Elements of the Program: • Immersion Experience of Mathematics (Entry Level Course!)‏ • Mathematics in the Curriculum • Research experience in mathematics • Classroom Connections Seminars • Leadership Experiences (Capstone Course!)‏

  15. The Experience “The first weeks of the program, I could connect to things I knew. Even if I was frustrated one day, the next day I'd have an epiphany - there were lots of ups and downs. Understanding math concepts was not enough, you had to look at things in different ways. It's not necessarily intuitive. I learned a lot about my own patience. Every time I felt frustrated, I realized something that I wouldn't have realized without being frustrated.”FoM Middle School Teacher

  16. “A lot of us didn't feel we were prepared for the summer program . . . Afterwards we felt we could do anything.”FoM Middle School Teacher

  17. What lessons are to be learned? • What is it in the structure of PROMYS that makes it possible to “succeed” with such disparate audiences? • the genius of Arnold Ross’s problem sets; • low threshold, high ceiling; • the depth of the traditions and the community. • Are these teachers “special” before they begin the program? Undoubtedly, “yes”! • What is special about them? • How rare is this brand of “specialness”? • What relationship does this have with leadership? • How does the immersion experience affect teachers’ work in the classroom? • Can we replicate (generalize) key elements of the program?

  18. Remarks • The number of “special” mathematics teachers having both significant talent and significant interest in mathematics is significantly higher than is commonly believed. • Helping these teachers is work that mathematicians are uniquely prepared to do. • The mathematical habits of thought required for excellence in teaching are similar to those required for excellence in research. • Mathematicians can benefit AS MATHEMATICIANS from engagement in issues of mathematics education.

  19. An Open Invitation Visit the programs: PROMYS (July 2 to August 10)‏ Focus on Math (all year)‏ Visit our websites: http://www.promys.org http://www.focusonmath.org http://www2.edc.org/cme/showcase http://math.bu.edu/study/mmt.html

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