Thursday, February 4, 2016

Math Philosophy


Math education is the view of numbers and equations used in everyday life. As human beings, we rationalize and find a solution to problems we are confronted with. The purpose of math education is to teach students how to use a logical thought process to help them frame a problem in a way that allows for computation and decision making. Students should be taught the importance of making conclusions from information they are provided and be able to use advanced concepts of mathematics in everyday life.
When it comes to learning mathematics, students have a role to fulfill in the classroom. The role of the student in learning mathematics is to be actively engaged in the learning process. The student will be responsible for putting in the effort to find the solution to a problem and not expect a teacher to give them the answer. Students will research and use their resources to help get to their answer. The teacher will firstly teach the lesson and provide an example for the visual learners. Once students have been taught the logical reasoning behind a concept and have seen an example of every possible form of the question they may see, they will be able to do some practice problems in a group during class. I believe that students learn more from their peers. Therefore, students will be able to interact with their classmates to share ideas and knowledge. I have previously learned that through peer tutoring the student that is assisting the other gains knowledge through the process as well. Students are expected to be respectful towards their peers during group time and to the teacher during instructional time. 
The role of the teacher in teaching mathematics is to be a facilitator or coach. The teacher will not give students the answer, but push their students to use their critical thinking skills to come to the answer on their own. The most important thing a teacher could enforce is making the classroom one where the students speak and volunteer often instead of one where the teacher is the only one speaking. In classrooms where the teacher is the only one speaking, students will absent-mindedly copy down all the notes and not understand the major key points of the lesson. To keep the students engaged, the teacher will use different activities to teach the students. The teacher could do a fun hands on activity or an activity that will help relate the lesson to a real life situation. Using resources in the classroom would be helpful as well to correlate the content with real life through math YouTube videos and virtual fieldtrips. Davison and Mitchell mention in the article that “John Dewey supported a vision of education as one connected with experience and real-life. [He] argued that mathematics education should be integrated” (2008). To ensure comprehension, the teacher could stop after a major skill is learned in the lesson to allow the students to practice before continuing to the next skill. When students answer a question in class, the teacher should encourage the student to explain why they chose their answer. This allows the student answering to think the problem further and logically explain their reasoning and it helps other students who may be confused. The teacher should also allow creativity in the classroom and not make everything seem like a drill. Teachers should encourage the different ways a student may solve a problem. Students should have the flexibility when finding their solutions as long as it is accurate and can work for similar problems.
Learning strategies are methods “used by students to help them understand information and solve problems” (Learning Strategies, 2016). Not all students will know strategies to help them learn; therefore, the teacher is responsible for providing strategies for students to use. A student learning strategy I would use in my classroom is having students write exit slips. Exit slips require the students to write what they have learned and to reflect on the lesson. Another strategy could be organizing certain information in the notes into a chart or graph that makes it easy for students to remember information covered in the class. According to Hamilton, using groups to allow students to share ideas and teach each other is a good learning strategy as well (Hamilton, 2015). When students are in a group and they are assigned a role for the activity they are going to participate in they take in information from their part and their partners through the teamwork. The students must explain to each other how they got their answer and all students must agree on the answer and the method on how they got to it. The teacher can ask the students a question, allow the students to discuss it in their group, and then the teacher chooses a random person from the group to answer and explain.
Effective teaching strategies are the different ways a teacher may present information to the class to increase learning. Before beginning a lesson, the teacher should use the strategy of activating students’ prior knowledge. In math, everything a student learns is based on prior basic math they have learned before. To prepare students to learn a new concept, the teacher should go over the information the students should already know to refresh their memory and then begin teaching the new material. Another effective strategy is modeling; it involves the teacher demonstrating to the students how to do a task with the expectation that the student will follow the model. A benefit of this strategy is that it requires the teacher to think aloud and talk through a task to explain the steps which allow the students to understand the reason behind every step of solving a problem. Repetition during instruction is also a good strategy to use to help students learn. Repeating important key concepts and vocabulary to students could help them remember the information if they hear it enough times. Lastly, the use of illustrations and diagrams in a math class is crucial when teaching students. This strategy allows the teacher to spend some time discussing any illustrations, graphs, or charts that may appear in the text book that could reinforce the information from the lesson. The use of these visuals could also spark interest in the students and intrigue them to learn more about the topic.
Classroom management plays an important part in making sure the classroom runs smoothly. There will be high expectations of the students that will be made clear in the first month of school and will be reinforced throughout the year. In class, students will also be expected to pay attention and to participate. If any problem arises the student will be spoken to in privately in the hallway and if necessary with the parents. Any misbehavior will be handled firmly and calmly without yelling or sarcasm. According to Englehart, students do not respond well to public confrontation or yelling and sarcasm; it causes students to close themselves off or become rebellious (2013). A teacher can maintain good classroom management and keep students engaged by walking around the classroom. When a teacher walk around the classroom students feels the teacher presence a lot more on them which will keep them on task. If students are on task then they will be engaging more in the lesson and class discussions (Hamilton, 2015).
There are five content standards according to the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) that have goals for the students to some degree no matter the grade level (De Valle, Karp, & Bay-Williams, 2013). The five standards are in number and operations, algebra, geometry, measurement, and data analysis and probability. In every mathematical level of education, several of these standards will be the base of the new concept the students will be learning. There are also five process standards to which “students should acquire and use mathematical knowledge” (De Valle, Karp, & Bay-Williams, 2013). The standards are problem solving, reasoning and proof, communication, connections, and representation. In my classroom, these standards will be met and considered for every lesson to apply the standards that are appropriate.



References

Davison, D. M., & Mitchell, J. E. (2008). How is Mathematics Education Philosophy Reflected in the Math Wars? The Montana Mathematics Enthusiast, 5(1), 143-154.

De Valle, J. A., Karp, K. S., & Bay-Williams, J. M. (2013). Elementary and Middle School Mathematics: Teaching Developmentally (8th ed.). Pearson Education, Inc.

Englehart, J. M. (2013). Five Approaches to Avoid When Managing the Middle School Classroom. The Clearing House, 103-108.
Hamilton, S. (2015, November 16). Creating and Maintaining a Collaborative Classroom. Retrieved from http://www.carnegielearning.com/resources-support/events-webinars/webinars/creating-and-maintaining-a-collaborative-classroom
Learning Strategies. (2016). Retrieved from http://www.kucrl.org/sim/strategies.shtml