Sunday, December 13, 2009

Education 6630: Critical Issues in Mathematics

Inquiry Paper: The Graphing Calculator’s Affect and Effect

Scott Walsh

Introduction

For hundreds of years mathematics could be distinguished from all other scientific school disciplines by the stability and economy of the tools used in its teaching and learning system: the lowly pencil, the one-size-fits-all textbook, the ruler, the abacus, and others. Specifically, over the last century pedagogical methods in mathematics have been in a gradual yet constant state of change. Arguably, the chief instigator of this change has been technology, specially the adaptation of scientific and more recently graphic calculators into mathematical practice. Kaput (1992) described the role of technology in mathematics education as “a newly active volcano – the mathematical mountain… changing before our eyes, with myriad forces operating on it and within it simultaneously” (p. 515). It is generally agreed upon that to teach mathematics well at any level in the K-12 education system is indeed a challenging endeavor. Moreover, teaching with a focus on investigative, student-centered, open-ended projects and problem solving routines further increases this challenge. Add to the equation the onslaught of a variety of new technologies for instructional and student’s use, and even the most refined and accomplished teachers may struggle with the demands. Today’s technology-rich environment places a unique demand on teachers at every level of the education system to implement these resources into the curriculum in an effective and efficient manner.

“Technology, and the pedagogical changes resulting from it, has a decisive impact on what is included in the mathematics curriculum” (Ellington, 2003, p. 433). Specifically, what students are taught and how they learn are influenced considerably by the technological factors at work on and within the “mathematical mountain.” The NCTM has recognized that calculators and other technologies are reshaping the mathematical landscape, and as a result our school mathematics teaching needs to reflect these changes. From being able to make and test conjectures, to working at higher levels of generalization or abstraction, research has shown that students can learn and be successful in mathematics through responsible and appropriate usage of the graphing calculator. It is interesting to note that, in 2000, the NCTM confirmed this technological choice:

Calculators are reshaping the mathematical landscape, and school mathematics should reflect those changes. Students can learn more mathematics more deeply with appropriate and responsible use of technology. They can make and test conjectures. They can work at higher levels of generalization or abstraction.

Nevertheless, the NCTM also emphasizes the necessary ‘control by teachers’ of the integration process:
Technology cannot replace the mathematics teacher, nor can it be used as a replacement for basic understandings and intuitions. The teacher must make prudent decisions about when and how to use technology and should ensure that the technology is enhancing students’ mathematical thinking.

And so it is these decisions that cause the greatest stress for teachers as they try to find the balance and integrate these tools into the curriculum. There are still many skeptics who do not perceive technology generally, calculators specifically, as being able to provide new pedagogical enhancement opportunities, but rather believe that these tools will impair students’ mathematical ability, resulting in increased mathematical illiteracy and incompetence. “They are often reluctant users of instructional technology who tend not to share the excitement associated with calculators and may consider technology as a replacement for learning skills that are the core of what constitutes mathematics” (Sturdivant et al, p. 164).

Purpose and Rationale

One particular piece of technology proven to enhance mathematical student learning is the graphing calculator. In their research, Doerr and Zangor (2000) found that graphing calculators are “effective in achieving certain instructional objectives, which are often left unchanged from traditional paper-and-pencil approaches [by] providing students with new approaches, such as the use of multiple representations, to the investigation of mathematical ideas” (p.144). However, ultimately it is the classroom teacher who decides the extent to which graphing calculators will be used in the delivery and implementation of a mathematics curriculum. Goos et al (2007) note that “to become effective users of technology in mathematics education, teachers need to make informed decisions about how and why to integrate different types of technology into their classroom practice in order to support students’ learning of mathematics” (p.75). How the teacher makes use of the graphing calculator in instruction and the reasons for using such technology in a particular way are serious underlying factors. Coupled with that is the teacher’s philosophies of math and mathematical education and how they are manifested in instructional practice. Essentially, the technology used in the classroom is only as good as the teacher allows it to be. Wilson and Krapfl (1994) suggested that there is an urgent call to better comprehend teachers’ knowledge and pedagogical strategies in their use of the graphing calculator, along with a need “to focus on the qualitative aspects of knowledge construction of students using graphing calculators” (p. 261).

In this paper I will investigate the process of learning mathematics in a technology-rich environment predominantly at a secondary school level. To do this one must consider the point of view from the two principle protagonists in the educational institution: the students and the teachers. How do students use the graphing calculator to help broaden their mathematical understanding and improve their learning capabilities? Are teacher’s ready and accepting of this new era of a becoming technologically-centered curriculum? To what extent do the teacher’s role, knowledge, and beliefs about the graphing calculator influence how they are utilized in the classroom? What are students’ responses about their teacher’s attitudes over calculator integration in their math lessons? Finally, a look into trends and standards surrounding the prevalence of and attitudes toward calculator use in our province and country will be discussed.

The Graphing Calculator – An Overview

With the availability of electronic technology since the mid 1980s mathematics education has undergone monumental changes as “educators began to study the role and impact of this tool on the teaching and learning enterprise” (Katsberg & Leatham, 2005, p. 25). According to Reznichenko (2007) “the reason for the major impact of technology on the reform in mathematics education is its effect on the cognitive processes – nature of mathematical thinking and understanding” (p. 5) From there it is possible to study the impact of the graphing calculator on mathematics education using a concept of “cognitive technologies,” defined as “media that help transcend the limitations of the mind…in thinking, learning, and problem solving activities” (Pea, 1987, p.9).

The graphing calculator has brought reforms to mathematics education, creating a shift in “pedagogical philosophy from behavioral to constructivist, from introverted learning to cooperative, with an emphasis on conceptual understanding” (Reznichenko, p. 4). These changes in the system has resulted in the NCTM to revise it’s Principles and Standards for School Mathematics document to now deemphasize computational skills and encourage use of graphing calculators to complete routine computations in order to concentrate on conceptual understanding (NCTM, 2000). It would be interesting to determine if many of the math teachers out there are even aware of such recommended changes to the nature of the teaching and learning style. With respect to secondary school, the greatest reforms in mathematics education were found in computing graphical results in algebra, with an emphasis on functions. The graphing calculator can be used to facilitate student understanding by enabling a multiple representation approach to functions through tabular and graphical representations, symbolic expressions, and real-world modeling.

Hembree & Dessart (1986) conducted a landmark study on the effects of calculator use on student achievement and attitude in secondary mathematics. Their findings confirmed that “calculator use during instruction does not hold back computational skills and conceptual understanding; furthermore, it increases outcome results on non-calculator tests, both computational and conceptual” (Reznichenko, p. 6). A more recent meta-analysis study by Ellington (2003) helped to further open the door for a broader use of calculators in mathematics classrooms. He concluded that when graphing calculators were part of both “testing and instruction, the operational skills, computational skills, skills necessary to understand mathematical concepts, and problem-solving skills improved for participating students” (Ellington, p. 455). Dick (1992) found that graphing calculators free up time for instruction by reducing attention to algebraic manipulation, and supplying more tools for problem solving, especially useful for students with weaker algebraic skills. Another very interesting discovery in his research was that students perceive problem solving differently when they are freed from numerical and algebraic computations to concentrate on problem set up and analyzing solutions. Hence, given all of these research supports, it still is interesting to delve into the thoughts of the users (and non-users) of such technology to see how their perceptions affect the way in which math is learned. Perhaps in the ideas, data, and discussions presented we may find our own voice as an educator, and hopefully a new method of reasoning for justifying teaching practices with respect to calculator use.

Teacher Perceptions

Do we assume that teachers genuinely welcome graphing calculator technology into the classroom to provide rich and meaningful learning experiences for their students? How powerful are the teachers’ perceptions in determining the extent to which the calculator is used for teaching and learning? It is necessary to probe into the teacher’s use of graphing technology and selections of tasks to help us better comprehend their perceived usefulness of this technology in mathematics education. Simmt (1997) suggests that “all teachers have philosophies of mathematics and mathematics education and that these philosophies, even if ‘scarcely coherent,’ underlie mathematics pedagogy” (p.270). The availability of the graphing calculator now provides teachers with the opportunity to not just teach mathematical concepts differently, but also to extend the content of the curriculum far beyond the possibilities in the past. For sure, the graphing calculator expedites computations, but it also offers instructional variety, and can be used as a motivational device for all students on the mathematical spectrum, regardless of exceptionalities, abilities, or disabilities. Working with teachers who exert both eager and reluctant philosophies to technology use is fundamental to ensuring the graphing calculator is properly used in math classrooms.

In one view, some teachers perceive mathematics as a collection of procedures and rules focused on computational learning. Penglase & Arnold (1996) noticed that teachers who perceived the graphic calculator as a computational tool tended to stress content-oriented goals and viewed learning as listening. The goal then of instruction is to master formal manipulations of mathematical expressions, objects, and symbols while developing algorithmic skills. Teachers with this rule-based view present a special challenge for integrating more graphing calculator technology into the classroom. “They are often reluctant users of instructional technology who tend not to share the excitement associated with calculators and may consider technology as a replacement for learning skills that are the core of what constitutes mathematics” (Sturdivant et al, p. 164). These teachers are characterized as perceiving the graphing calculator as a crutch, preventing the learning of “real” mathematics. While this group maintains a “mastery first” attitude, an alternate view showcases a typically eager attitude to employ technology in non-routine ways to explore concepts and complex problems.

In order to justify their reluctance “teachers often appeal to a risk of social inequity (calculators are expensive), and to pedagogical difficulties linked to the diversity of calculators used by students” (Trouche, 2005, p. 18). However, Bruillard (1995) discovered that teachers still remain reluctant even when the same model of calculator is freely provided to all students, due to fears that the calculator prevents the learning of the basic elementary processes. Bernard et al (1996) found teachers believed calculators would reduce mathematics to an experimental practice that restricts the place of formal proof, quoting one teacher as claiming that “calculators deny the mathematical reflex.” Others trends in the research pointed to teachers seeing the tool as being too crude and dangerous as the graphics calculator results are sometimes approximates, resulting in particular errors and misconceptions on the part of the student.

With excitement about the graphing calculator other educators share a vision of using it to enhance instruction, especially in problem solving situations. This alternative view of mathematics “sees algorithms and symbol manipulation as components in a wider set of practices that include patterning and problem solving; here the goal for teachers is to develop students’ abilities to find and understand solutions to real problems, model phenomena, and develop conceptual understanding” (Sturdivant et al, p. 164) through the use of graphing calculators and other dynamic software. Teachers who saw it as an instructional tool had more student-centered goals and views on learning, with more interactive-driven teaching styles.

Through promoting careful decision making about technology use and effectively integrating it into the curriculum these teachers help students to become judicious technology users.
Discussions are held that gets students reflecting on their own mathematical thinking; that is, their metacognition. By sharing decision making about mental, pencil-and-paper, and technology approaches with the class, as well as allowing students to discuss decisions about these three approaches with one another, judicious technology use can be acquired. Ball & Stacey (2005) suggest “an instructive exercise to promote careful decision making is to have students monitor their own overuse or underuse of technology on an assignment” (p. 12). What they found in other research was that students underuse technology even when it is freely available. Secondly, mathematics teachers who are more eager technology users in class integrate calculator use through a mix of problems, some that are best done without technology and others that really demonstrate its power. “If the curriculum includes only questions that are comfortably within the range of expected paper-and-pencil skills, then permitting technology sends the message that technology is either useless or (worse) should be used on simple problems” (Ball & Stacey, p. 12). To encourage the discriminating use of technology we need to create assessments that contain some items which are most effectively done with calculator use and some without it.

Student Perceptions

The supports and connections that can be made through the implementation of the graphing calculator are too numerous to discuss here but let it be said that this piece of technology can support inductive thinking by allowing students to efficiently generate and explore a large host of mathematical examples, and then make conjectures about their patterns and relationships. With access to the graphics calculator students no longer have to be restricted to learning from and working with data sets published in textbooks or contrived by their teachers to make calculations easier. One of the greatest advantages of student use of the graphing calculator is the opportunity for the learner to visualize mathematical concepts. Since students are now able to see patterns, observe changes, and view images of geometric figures, data, and relationships, visualization through the use of the graphing calculator, it has gained more prominence as a means of learning math. As a result “visual reasoning has become more widely acknowledged as acceptable practice for mathematicians in the mathematical discovery process” (Goos et al, p. 84).

As an educator and collaborator with other mathematicians it is evident that most perceptions of the advantages of the graphing calculator appeared to be instructionally related. On the flip side, most teachers deem the disadvantages to be primarlily logistical in nature. Doerr and Zangor (2000) found that a common fault is that students do not have a meaningful strategy for the use of the calculator. They found “students attempted to use it as a ‘black box’ without attempting to form meaningful interpretations of the problem situation” (Doerr & Zangor, p. 158). In many classrooms the teachers uses the device during class discussion, as a shared tool via the TI-Smart View or overhead screen. When used in a shared, public display, the calculator fosters communication among the students, encourages student initiative, and often results in students leading the discussion. However, in its use as a private device downfalls can be created. It is a common occurrence that student’s use of their calculators as private devices leads to breakdown of group interactions within a group. Doerr and Zangor (2000) found that “when two or more students in a group tested or checked a possible conjecture or computation on their own calculators, they then continued to use the tool to explore possible situations, interpretations or refinements of their own thinking” (p. 158). Once the closed communication network is established within a group, students tend to continue to pursue their investigations as individuals, with very little talking, sharing of ideas, results, and representations. Too often the students then turn to the teacher for assistance rather than to each other. Hence, much consideration must be given from a logistical perspective on how to achieve balance with students in class so that communication is fostered and student group discussions are optimized. Collaboration needs to take place between teachers and students so that effective modeling strategies of how to work together using technology is fostered, encouraged, and productive during the required time of class.

While we have demonstrated that teacher beliefs about graphing calculators influence student access to graphing calculators, research has also been done to show how access to graphing calculator influences student performance. Harskamp, Suhre, and van Streun (1998; 2000) carried out a study that compared the performance of students given varying levels of access to graphing calculators. Students from 12 math classes were randomly assigned to one of three cohorts: those with access for one full year to graphing calculators, those with access during one unit of instruction, and those with no access. While the graphing calculator groups received additional instruction on how to use it to perform tasks such as graphing functions, finding solutions graphically, and checking algebraic solution, more advanced operations were not explored. Interestingly, none of the teachers had any prior experience in teaching with the graphing calculator.

Kastberg & Leatham (2005) reference in their research “results showed that students with the longest access to calculators used a wider range of problem-solving approaches and tended to attempt more problems and obtain higher test scores than the students who had not” (p. 27). Also, students tended to replace more common algorithmic practices and heuristic strategies with graphical approaches. Furthermore, students classified as “below average” by the researchers made more frequent use of graphical strategies and “achieved a significantly higher [score] than students in the control group” (Harskamp et al., 2000, pp. 47-48). In the end they suggested that even limited access to graphing calculators may have a positive effect on students’ attitudes, approaches, and accomplishments in mathematical problems. Something for us to consider for sure the next time we question whether it is worth the “aggravation” (a word teachers use all too often) to take the extra time in class, even if it is for just a small period, to get the calculator in the hands of the students.

In 2001 Faure & Goarin analyzed the results of a survey of 527 eleventh grade students and the relationship they established with their graphing calculators. Over the span of nearly eight years there was not a significant change in the way that students learned how to use their calculator, even though the prevalence of this tool has grown in leaps and bounds since 1992. The survey found the main process of appropriating the graphing calculator is based on individual exploration-discovery; afterwards a social dimension with friends is applied. The most startling piece of data in this figure (1-1) is that the teacher was the least involved factor in the process of calculator appropriation by math students. While ‘playing’ with the calculator in formal and informal settings is no doubt good hands-on practice for students, having a professional lead them in their in-servicing is no doubtful purposeful and necessary.

Ironically, further data in their report indicate that students desired for their teachers to be involved in the process of learning about the graphing calculator, indicative of the institutional recognition of the tool. It is quite evident that in hindsight many of the students wished they did not have to do the majority of their learning by trail and error, through friends, or even with instructions for use, but rather with their teacher in class. We need to carefully reflect on such statistics and ponder the degree to which we use the precious time we have with our students to ensure their needs in mastering new technological tools like the graphing calculator are met. It is through these opportunities with them that we can ensure the real power of the tool can be showcased, the misgivings can be highlighted, and the intentions of it can be made explicit. The results are displayed in figure 1-2.

Figure 1-3 investigates the reasons why students actually use a calculator both in math class and at home. The authors note that the calculator is mainly used by students during the reinvestigation of knowledge through drill exercises and assessments, moderately during more open processes of investigations and explorations, and disturbingly low when new concepts are being presented and established in class. Faure & Goarin (2001) suggest this situation is linked to the weak integration of this tool into the classroom. Major initiatives also need to be taken in our pedagogical approaches to increase the calculator use outside of class, where more time is available for students to master the concepts through home studying.

Canadian Frameworks

In the curriculum guides for the math courses across the K-12 system in Newfoundland and Labrador the department of education (2006) outlines that the “learning environment will be one in which students and teachers make regular use of technology” since “calculators will be an integral part of many learning activities” (www.edu.gov.nl.ca). When the WNCP Common Curriculum Frameworks for Mathematics K-9 and Mathematics 10-12 (WNCP, 2006 and 2008) were adopted as the basis for the K-12 mathematics curriculum in this province, technology was one of seven key “critical components that students must encounter in a mathematics program in order to achieve the goals of mathematics education and embrace lifelong learning in mathematics” (www.edu.gov.nl.ca). It went on to say that technology and calculator use “contributes to a learning environment in which the growing curiosity of students can lead to rich mathematical discoveries at all grade levels” (www.edu.gov.nl.ca; emphasis added). This is just not an issue for intermediate and secondary teachers but one that primary and elementary educators must also make significant in their pedagogical practices. Of course, one of the biggest barriers that remain is access to the technology, getting graphing calculators to become common place in our classrooms.

A survey done by the Ministry of Education in Ontario during the 2003 school year with grade nine teachers found that fifty-one percent of these educators indicated their students had access to graphing calculators at school during the course only a few times, never or hardly ever (EQAO, 2003c). As a means of integrating handheld technologies such as the graphing calculator into the classroom, the Expert Panel on Student Success in Ontario (2004) recommended “time for teachers to observe classrooms where technology is an integral part of the learning process” (p. 57) Just the technology and just the handbooks will not be enough for educators to see how to best use these powerful tools in the classroom. Real discourse and concrete professional development in a classroom setting would be a great enhancement to learning how to best integrate the graphing calculator into the curriculum.

Conclusion

The graphing calculator is a powerful, rich, multi-dimensional tool that needs to be optimized and further integrated into the mathematics classrooms. This incorporation can improve students’ conceptual understanding, attitudes towards math, and arguably, retention beyond secondary level studies in mathematics and related fields. The benefits of the graphing calculator go a long way in advancing student understanding of the topic they are learning. Enabling hands-on activities, students are then able to collect, explore, and analyze data through the use of many applications and data collection extension devices. Teachers need to become familiar with the disadvantages as well as the advantages of using graphing calculators in their classrooms. Supplemented with that, there needs to be discussion about the limitations of graphing calculators to ensure valuable learning experiences exist not just for students but for teachers as well. As my inquiry paper has discussed students do acquire many of their skills with their calculator through trial and error, when in actual fact they seek out more involvement from their teachers. A lack of proper integration of the tool in class has resulted in an overemphasis of the calculator for simple algorithmic computations in lieu of more powerful explorations and investigations that the calculator can be very useful in supporting.

My research has also found that a prolonged exposure to the graphing calculator can result in higher test scores for students of varying abilities in their mathematics, something that surely would be interesting to carry out in today’s test obsessed mode of teaching and learning. While there still remains much reluctance on the part of many teachers to give this technology the recognition and respect it deserves, minds are changing, pedagogical practices are evolving, and mathematical arguments are transforming. For sure, finding the balance with calculator use requires careful consideration by the teacher, in-depth consultation with all levels of academia, and most of all prudent communication with the most important players, the students.

Toward the end of this research study I became increasingly curious about the role that undergraduate education programmes have on establishing particular attitudes about calculator use in the classroom and how effective they are in either establishing or dismissing a full integration of the calculator with the curriculum. Identifying the needs, adapting courses appropriately, and aptly skilling all pre-service mathematic teacher educators are among the challenges facing the system today that would be interesting to study and build upon in my inquiry project. In addition, finding antidotal evidence from teachers at the local level in terms of their attitudes, pressures, and success surrounding calculator use and misuse would be a very interesting venture to extend my work. There are so many facets to this truly fascinating subject of the graphing calculator’s affect and effect on our math education system that I truly feel the surface has been merely scratched. I look forward to continuing this investigation in my practice.

References

Ball, L., and Stacey, K. (2005). Teaching strategies for developing judicious technology use. In W.J. Masalski (Ed.), 2005. Technology-Supported Mathematics Learning Environments, Sixty-Seventh Yearbook; pp.3-16. Reston, VA: National Council of Teachers of Mathematics.

Bernard R., Faure C., Noguès M., & Trouche L. (1996). L’intégration des outils de calcul dans la formation initiale des maîtres, Rapport de recherché IUMF-MAFPEN. Montpellier: IREM, Université Montpellier II.

Bruillard, E. (1995). Usage des calculatrices à l’école élémentaire et au début du college, Rapport de recherche. Créteil: IUFM de Créteil.

Dick, T. (1998). Symbolic-graphical calculators: Teaching tools for mathematics. School Science and Mathematics, 92, pp.1-5.

Doerr, H. & Zangor, R. (2000) Creating Meaning For And With The Graphing Calculator. Educational Studies in Mathematics 41, pp. 143-163.

Ellington, A.J. (2003). A meta-analysis of the effects of calculators on students’ achievement and attitude levels in pre-college mathematics classes. Journal of Research in Mathematics Education, 34, pp.433-463.

Education Quality and Accountability Office. (2003c, November). Highlights of provincial achievement results: Grade 9 assessment of mathematics, 2002-2003. Retrieved December 5, 2009 from http://www.eqao.com/pdf_e/05/05P016e.pdf

Expert Panel on Student Success in Ontario: Mathematical Literacy, Grades 7-12. (2004). Leading Math Success. Retrieved December 5, 2009 from http://www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/document/reports/numeracy/numeracyreport.pdf

Faure, C. & Goarin, M. (2001). Rapport d’enquête sur l’intégration des technologies nouvelles dans l’enseugnement des mathématiques en lycée. Montpellier: IREM, Université Montpellier II.

Goos, M. et al. (2007). Teaching Secondary School Mathematics: Research and practice for the 21st century. Allen & Unwin. Crows Nest, Austraila.

Harskamp, E., Suhre, C., & Van Streun, A. (1998). The graphing calculator in mathematics education: An experiment in the Netherlands. Hiroshima Journal of Mathematics Education, 6, 13-31.

Harskamp, E., Suhre, C., & Van Streun, A. (2000). The graphics calculator and students’ solution strategies. Mathematics Education Research Journal, 12, 37-52.

Hembree, R., and Dessart, D. (1986). Effects of handheld calculators in precollege mathematics education: a meta-analysis. Journal of Research in Mathematical Education, 17 (March), 83-89.

Kaput, J. (1992). Technology and Mathematics Education. In: D. Grouws (Ed.). A Handbook of Research on Mathematics Teaching and Learning. NY: MacMillan (pp. 515-556).

Katsberg, S., and Leatham, K. (2005). Research on graphing calculators at the secondary level: Implications for mathematics teacher education. Contemporary Issues in Technology and Teacher Education, 5(1), 25-37.

National Council is Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM). (2000). NCTM Principles and standards for school mathematics. Reston, VA: Author.

Newfoundland and Labrador Department of Education Curriculum Guides in Mathematics for K-12. Retrieved December 3, 2009 from www.edu.gov.nl.ca

Pea, R.D. (1987). Cognitive technologies for mathematics education. In A.H. Schoenfeld (Ed.), Cognitive Science and Mathematics Education. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.

Penglase, M., and Arnold, S. (1996). The graphics calculator in mathematics education: A critical review of recent research. Mathematics Education Research Journal, 8(1), 58-90.

Reznichenko, N. (2007). Learning Mathematics with Graphing Calculator: A Summary of Students’ Experiences.

Simmt, E. (1997). Graphing calculators in high school mathematics. The Journal of Computers in Mathematics and Science Teaching, 16(2-3) pp.269-289.

Sturdivant, R. et al. (2009). Preparing Mathematics Teachers for Technology-Rich Environments. PRIMUS, 19(2). pp. 161-173.

Trouche, L. (2005). Calculators in mathematics education: A rapid evolution of tools, with differential effects. In Guin, D., Ruthven, K., Trouche, L. (Eds.), The Didactial Challenges of Symbolic Calculators. New York, NY: Springer.

Western and Northern Canadian Protocol for Collaboration in Basic Education (Kindergatend to Grade 12). TheCcommon Curriculum Framework for K-9 Mathematics: Western and Northern Canadian Protocol – May 2006 and The Common Curriculum Framework for Grades 10-12- January 2008.


Wilson, M.R. and Krapfl, C.M. (1994). The impact of graphics calculators on students’ understanding of function. Journal of Computers in Mathematics and Science Teaching, 13(3), pp.252-264.












Looking To The Future

Well it's been a great run with all of you throughout our short stay discussing critical issues in mathematics. You know, I don't think there's a more critical issue out there in math classes for us to discuss than the one we have. We have discusses the misbehaviors, the low grades, the disinterested students, the textbook lesson plans, the lack of time to teach, the CRT's, the pathways program, the pressures from school district and higher personnel - the list goes on. And a common theme throughout all of our discourse, the tread that binded them all together has been how we teach and how our students learn math. The "conservative vision of education" that not only finds a home in Amber Hill but many of our schools is really having severe implciations on the future potential of so many young people. We now know unequivocally that as teachers we need to engage students, all students, and provide them with appropriate, stimulating activities in a class environment condusive to open-ended projects and tasks. We need to tune out the naysayers, we need to try something different, now. I wish all of you the very best in these endeavours we will each take back to our classrooms. I hope from time to time we can check back here with each other to update the group on any new initiatives we may be taking in class. Today and tomorrow it is our responsible, our duty to bring about the change we know we need, the change we've finally found, in all of our math classes. We too can become a Phoenix Park.

I'll see you down the road. All the best.

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Well it looks like another of my beliefs on the "ideal" way of teaching students has gone down the drain! Since my position as a student in high school, through my university years, and during my three years as an educator, I always though it was best to have students separated accoridng to their ability so that, as I thought, "they were learning at a learning they were capable of" and "being taught at a level they understand." I was convicned, not knowing why however, that this separation was necessary and vital to student success. Looking back I think many of my reasons as a teacher for having such a stance was to curb student misbehavior, to increase student interest, and as a result have better results. However, if we were to visit many of the general math classes today, do you think we'd find an abundance of interested, motivated, well behaved students? For that matter, would we find these behaviors in our academic classes? advanced classes? I've taught at all three levels in our high schools and in all cases there still is a lack of motivation by some, great work ethics by others, and interest (or lack thereof) in the subject matter. As we discussed in class ability grouping seems to be more of an advantage for the teacher than it does for the students in general.


Needless to say reading about Boaler's research has opened my mind up to an entirely different way of believing how we can best ensure learning takes place with our students. All of the reasons she highlighed such as working at a fixed pace, the pressure, anxiety, and restricted opportunities, as well as the setting decisions were all points I could certainly identigy with. We, as teachers, do have influence in the courses our math students enter. Can we be accurate by making a judgement based on a grade, 50% of which was decided in 2 hours on a warm day in June? Are we basing some decisions too ont he behavior of a 15 year old whose behavior is not idyllic, who doesn't fit the typical? I think we make too many assumptions about the inabaility of all our classes to achieve higher grades that we percieve them to be able to attain. Then again, our sacred textbook style may have something to do with this notion. The system we have set up in our high school sof ability grouping still pits students against each other, still makes them feel as though they are being judged. The excuse we use that "competition helps raise achievement" is relaly insignificant when you weigh that against all the implications of ability grouping.

As we noted during our discussion in class, ability grouping classes at AMber hIll did not achieve better results than Phoenix Park's mixed ability classes, despite an increased amount of time spent "working" by Amber Hill students. At this point, it really does not take much convicing to see that working is not equal to learning. Our classrooms today are full of students being busy. But, busy at what? We assign enough questions on the board to keep them working (there's that word again) for the rest of the period I don't think we ever title the time students spend a their desk as "class learning" but rather "class work", "seat work", "homework". How can we really measure how much they know through all of this work? We're trying, obviously it's not working as successful as it needs to be, especially for those with weaker math abilities. The mixed ability grouping our schools adhere to now seems to be grosely inadequate in raising the learning levels of all students.

And so as I finished reading this chaper and reflecting back on the discussions we had in class I wish now I had the opportunity to initiate a mixed ability experience with my classes. However, the textbook approach got to go if we are imlement such a trial in our classroom. Mary said in class one night that our job, as teachers, is to design effective lesson plans that can allow for multiple entry points to problems, that asks the questions in effective ways to ensure connections are made. I believe we relaly need to begin making these attempts, we really do need to step away from the status quo and develop a new plan. Phoenix Park teachers taught a wide range of students in the same class and still provided stimulating and enriching experiences for all their students. There's no reason why we can't either.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Ch 9 - XX and XY Learning Styles

I remember my grandmother often saying "It's a man's world." Now I'm sure her statement had more to do with the cultural norms her generation lived through and less to do with the shortcomings often assumed of the female gender in their education ability. But nevertheless, the notion was there and perhaps it's still there in so many ways we've yet to uncover. But if we take her simple sentence and dissect it, when who made it a 'man's world." Of course - men did! For centuries my gender has corrupted and abused the system of humanity to gain a firm grip on the upper hand, to keep our partner gender just a little (ok, a lot) more below us. Event hough it has no mathematical relevance here, check out the poem "A Work of Artifice" by Marge Piercy and surely you'll find a much more refined and interesting look at how the woman's lot in life is decided.

Thankfully, we're moving beyond this dreadful period in our existence now. However, have our classrooms? Are they still set up for male succession over the female. Are the lessons we teach, the activities we develop, the awards we present all geared more toward the male than the female student? Throughout Rosemary's presentation we learned that indeed female underachievement should never be considered a "collary of being female". From Jo Boaler's work to numerous other researchers it is clear that the teaching environment itself is what drives the majority of the confidence, beliefs, and mathematical acheievement in many of our female students. The system seems completely ignorant to the effect its structure is having on the potential for women to reach their potential.

When I recall my school days I remember there being just 1 girl ina class of 13 for advanced math in a school where there was just about 50 graduates. Then it seemed so odd, and I remember our teacher encouraging other girls in our class to move up from the academic level but they declined. Surely some of them were at comparable levels in their math to many of the boys in our advanced class. Today, looking back perhaps those girls realized they were working against a system that was setting them behind no matter how hard they worked, perhaps they were clever in their understanding of the inequities that were unknowingly being placed out in the school system. They knew the "game" they were playing int hat the time and opportunity for understanding would not be granted in a manner they preferred in math class. Whatever the reason the motivation was not there for many to participate in the top level math course available to them. Interestingly enough though, the one girl who was in the class ranked overall second in the 13 students. In some ways, apart from her brillance in academics, she was able to rise above the cloud of confusion and disillusionment many of her female colleagues were victims of.

Today, I see such a difference in the presence of female showing up in higher level math courses and in their attitudes towards their ability and beliefs. Confidence spews from math of them, and now upon revisiting my high school the advanced math class has gone compeltely the other way, with just one male student registered compared to the seven females. It was very interesting to me in that 1) girls seem to be cogniziant that they need to work that much harder to maintain an equal footing with their male counterparts and 2) the system has changed in ways that now foster the learning styles of female students in ways that encourage their participation. Whatever the case I have noticed an increase in the number of women comign to the forefront to become reputable learners and teachers in our mathematics class. All I have to do is look around our class every Thrusday night. Need I say more? :)

With respect to the females beliefs and attitudes toward math classed Boaler sums it up best when she says that "it is important not to lay blame for their disaffection on mathematics per se because the fault lies not with the instrinsic nature of mathematics, but with school mathematics as it is commonly constructed" (p. 153). Girls can achieve. Girls want to achieve. And now girls are seeing their appetite and desire for success comign true. Girls are achieving. They are not incapable but were inherently crippled in many ways because of the nature of the school mathematics they were forced to comply with. Through a more open-ended style of teaching and learning math the creativity, intuition, and experience of our bright young female students will be enhanced, will be acknowledged, and will be most importantly sustained.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Chapter 8 - Knowledge, Beliefs, and Mathematical Identities

As Sharon so effectively talked about in her blog, I too am becoming increasingly frustrated with the procedures I find myself and my students stuck in. As I read through Boaler and continue my substituting the feelings of ineffectiveness in how we're teaching and how students are learning are growing. I long now to have a full time position where I can begin to impliment some of these ideas we're discovered through Phoenix Park's approach. And like Sharon, I'm being to realize that I can't wait. Each day that goes by without bringing about change runs the risk of perhaps losing another student, turning them further away from mathematics learning, entrenching them with fictious ideas about the relevance of math in their own lives. We need to start today.

Terri-Lynn raised a very important question during her presentation: How often do you see students handing in answers in which they have no concept of whether or not they are even logical, let alone the correct response? We see it all too often in our classes where students do not (for many reasons) thinking about, analyze, and interpret the answers they have arrived at. I think our methods of extreme pencil and paper tasks without enough investigative work and explorations have often led students to a point in their learning where they haven't been taught the fundamentals of checking the reasonableness of an answer. We overhwlm them with so much classwork assigned from textbooks and extra assignment practice outside of class that it would be too time consuming to go back and check all their answers. Another thought of mine just came up here and it is this: I think we are perhaps assigning too much work for our students to complete. I think that often times our teaching strategies are too time consuming, especially when it comes to having students write off notes from the board, and as a result the majority of the practice, the time when students need to talk math between each other, is often lost in the classroom. That means the majority of the work is then left to be done in isolation usually away from class. The math is then perceived as labouors, monotonous, and routine, instead of something that should be interacitve, interesting, and fun inside class. We really can do more with less.

As we read through this book we realzie the importance of incorporating project work into our math classes. Geeno and MMAP (1998) reported that in this type of work students "develop abilities of collaborative inquiry and of using the concepts and methods of a discipline to solve problems." Given this highly significant piece of research it is quite evident that the inquiry and cleverness we expect from our students is not going ot happen by osmosis, or by us standing in front of them asking them to dictate onto their exercises what we say. We have trained our math student not to be disciplined, but rather dependent on us. While substituting for a math teacher a few weeks ago one of hte classes I had to supervise a junior high test. He had written in the notes that it was ok to provide help to the students during the test, give them hints, etc. A year ago I probably wouldn't have blinked at such a request. That day I couldn't stop blinking. We weren't five minutes into the test and hands were going up all around me. The test was constructed well and had a good range of quesitoning for the class so I didn't perceive there would be much trouble. However, the students sat there like drowning rats desperate for a push, a start in a question. Everything from what the word "prime" means to "how do I draw a numberline to show + 3 multipled by -2 was asked. It was so disappointing to see so many students suffereing through this. I wondered to myself what are we really doing to our students? Why are they failing in their learning so badly? How did they get to the point where independence was non-existent in their math? Is it too late to change the tide? I hope not.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Exploring The Differences

As I continue to work through this fall semester both in my graduate studies and in my substituting experiences in a variety of classrooms and subjects, now more than ever I feel I'm both exploring and experience the differences of our schools and students. I feel the frustrations of my students when they're subjected to note taking and textbook drill. What once fell deaf to my ears is now being hear loud and clear - our students want to be challenged, they are bored with the daily routines of pencils and paper practice. The idleness I see all around me resonates so much more now, for I am finally feeling, through our class discussions and Boaler's words, the effects of such a stagnant method of teaching and learning smothering our schools. If we really listened to our students we'd find many of the solutions to classroom management, to a lack of student engagement, and to the stress we put on all our students in over testing. By incorporating their voices, their thoughts, we can put into practice a way of doing, a means of learning as Phoenix Park has accomplished.

"The Amber Hill students believed the mathematics they encountered in school and the mathematics they met in the real world to be completely and inherently different" (p. 111). What are we doing in our classrooms to bridge this gap? Are our practices and teaching styles making the learning relevant outside our class and into the everyday lives these students live? How sad it is that our education system demands are not being linked by our students in similarities to the real world. The math is not "totally different". The methods used can be the same! Our math classrooms can be social! And most important, our classrooms should provide opportunities for students to work it out for themselves, instead of relying solely on textbooks to provide algorithm after algorithm in how to "solve" the problems. There is a need on us now, like never before, as teachers to ensure perceptions of the environments created by the real world and the mathematics classroom are no longer inherently different, but rather, the same.

Although there are many, a particular idea Boaler raises from Lave (1996a) is that "notions of knowing should be replaced with notions of doing, arguing that the only indication that someone has knowledge is that they can use it" (p.117). This relational view is the essence of what Phoenix Park's approach to learning and teaching mathematics is all about. Like Paul and others at PP, our students too will support this logic and will fulfill it. Transmitting knowledge has been tried. It hasn't work. Why don't we try something different? That is, why don't we try holsitic means of thinking and doing with our students. Let's desconstuct the boundaries around school mathematics that currently exist, that currently cripple so many of our youth. It can be done.

One small step for math, one giant step for math minds.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Chapter 6 - What Could They Do?

I wanted to return back to the questions I asked during my lead discussion in class on Chapter 6 here within my blog. These questions were a reuslt of stunning quantitiative data Boaler presented to us in her study.

Firstly, she stated that 94% of AH and PP students correctly answered questions on the test concerning angle calculations whereas only 63% of those same students in AH and 83% of PP students correctly estimated the roof's angle in the activity. Also, the AH students in the highest sets (1 and 2) did worse that the students of AH ins ets 3 and 4. Are our teaching styles prompting inappropriate learning cues by our students? In AH and in many of our classrooms the answer is sadly yes. We are caught up in a system so focused on testing that we teach students to find clues within a question that would turn them to a particualr recipe for answering teh question correctly. Often times these cues mean the student has to do so little thinking the work becomes mechanical, thoughtless, robotic, useless. Are we truly aware of the implications such hints whether verbal or written are having on the independence of student thought and learning. We've become so good at this cueing that our students sometimes cannot succeed without it. They too have become conditioned to needing these explicit instructions in order to correclty answer many of their questions. In so many of our classes students arrive at nonsensical answers, unaware of the obvious errors in their answers. Many times it's because they take a word in the question out of context and do not have a full mastery of the outcome beng tested.

Students at both schools reported enjoying the activities immensely, particularly the AH students, many of whom asked if they could do more work of a similar nature. Are we doing a good enough job to make math class enjoyable for our students? Again, I must revert back to the system we as teachers have innocently and blindly taken as the "way" things must be done. We use the timelines from governement, the pressures from districts for improved marks, and the established doctrine of teaching to the test as all crutches for why we've taken so much of the poential fun and enjoyment out of math class. Replacing the investigations and modelling sessions we give them endless practice sheets to prepare for the summative evaluations months away. When times gets short something enjoyable is always the first to be cut because we think it's not as important as "time on task" routines of pencil and paper work. Again, it's not intentional, and some will say we don't know any better. However, Boaler is telling us better, she is now ensuring we do know better. She found only 3% of AH students added any creativity in their flat designs compared to 33% of PP students. We can create demanding cognitive takss while still having students adhere to certain rules within the class. So, let's listen to her. Let's try her approach.

Success on the GCSE exams was important for students at PP but their teachers were cavalier about exam preparation. PP provided no calculators to students needing them and the school was void of any real motivation or "gearing up" for exams. Are we giving our students enough responsibility? In many ways we, as teachers, are making our students more responsible and ready to learn. We ask them to show up to class on time, bring their supplies, complete the assigned work both in and out of class, hand in projects on time. I could go on. However, we bend ever so quickly, extend wilingly on times, and believe it or not become more stresses out over students responsibilites than they do themselves. Many of us bring the wiriting tools, the calculators, often the paper itself for our students to complete their work. Especially at test time we scurry around to bum calculators and scrap up things our students should have brought but didn't. Yes, we all forget things sometimes and there's nothing wrong in helping at times like this. However, we go to the extreme many a time. I think many of us in a desperate plea for improved scores in exams will cater to our students. I personally try to be as nice as I can when moments of "oops" come from my students. I have loaned loaned my own calculator and I have turned students away too to fend for themselves. It's a tough act to adhere to and one that we must practice every opportunity we get.

A question that raised a lot of interest in class was: How often and to what extent do we talk and stress CRT, public exams to our students, making it the focus and purpose of the course? It would be very interesting to do such a study in our classrooms, making note of the number of times we defer to "tests" as a reason for learning a concept, as a reason for paying attention, as the reson for doing well in the course. I have a fear that student hear more references to testing in their classes than any other feature of their education. From day 1 in the syllabus we highlight public exams 10 months down the road, instilling perhaps fear withint he class that everyone is here for one reason only: to be ready for that test. Again, I say our language is often deferred to test preparation because that is the system of education created and followed year after year. The top-down, hierarchial system demands a concentration on testing, on these results as a way to justify funding or lack there of, to declare success of a program or its failure. However, we as teachers are the adult, often the only adult in the classroom. We are the voice the students hear and from us they hear too much about testing, too much about getting ready for tests. Instead of putting emphais on learning for its own sake and relating it to the world around our students, we exhaust them with test prep and success. Next time, let's try to catch ourselves before we use the test as the focus of our conversations with our students. No doubt, it will be tough.


Of all the results revealed in this chapter the one that stood out to me the most was that only 9% of the AH top set of students retained the material they learned just a few months after it was assessed. PP students retained four times the amount that some AH students had.Therefore, are our tests giving a realistic picture of what our students are learning? These results show the damage, real damage that the current teaching and learning styles are having on our students long term retention and understanding. Tests really aren't all they're cracked up to be, yet we still use them to draw a line in the sand, separating those who know from those who don't. These tests determine really who succeeds, who make it, and who gets left behind. It's time to revisit the value of these test papers and their role in shaping our student's education and their futures.

Scott

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Chapter 5 - PP Experiences and Reflections

First, kudos to Michelle for leading a terrific discussion on this chapter. I thoroughly enjoyed the class.

The more I read through this book and reflect on Boaler's research the more I become angered when I walk into the math classrooms I find myself in. Everywhere I turn students are disinterested, disruptive, unwilling to engage, and excude hopelessness. We are the Amber Hill's of the world and after realizing the implications of such an identity we still remain resistent ot change. I recall my first two years of "teaching" - if I can call it that - junior and senior high. Overwhelmed with the business of the job and feeling disillusioned most of the time I did notice some interesting facets of how a math class can work better. Throughout Boaler's discussion regarding "Time On Task" my mind goes back to those two years. I began to notice that class management - the behavior and flow of the class was so much better when the students saw more of the front of me and less of the back. Besides being able to span the classroom and spot those off focus, the students in general felt more engaged, more a part of the math learning that was taken place. Whether I taught from a projection unit or from my laptop through power points and graphs the class was quieter, questions of interest from the students were more frequent, and the sense of enjoying the math rose so much higher. Today, I realize even this method of teaching is not the ideal practice, it sure was a huge improvement from the times when I basically taught "chalk and talk".

As I move about from school to school this fall I see the excitement in student's when the smart board becomes a tool for learning in class. They want to use it, experiment with it, and have it a part of the routine in math class. I wonder if we as teacher's have the same enthuasism? A lot of us don't have the training, confidence, time - whatever reason (or excuse) we'll use to impliment many of the new technologies available for teaching and learning. We are working against the grain in so many aspects of the education system. We have to basically fight tooth and nail for resources, plead for PD to be able to adequately implement these new sources into the classroom. However, we must find a way to make sure this change happens. We need to collaborate and unit like teachers of Phoenix Park and develop pilot projects on a small scale at first to test the water, to fell the security if that's what's necessary to essentially catch up with a generation that is moving beyond the ways and means we remain stuck in. With respect to open-natured teacing methods at Phoenix Park, Boaler noted that "what for some students meant freedom and opportunity, for others meant insecurity and hard work." I think the same could be true for many of us teachers. For some, we can finally tear ourselves away from the textbooks and test-driven nature we've been mandated with. For others, such a teaching style would open up vunerabilities and insecurities - which can be rememdied and which can be changed.

We've been complaining about the textbooks in our high schools particularly since they were brough in during 2002. As the years went by more issues were brought to light about the inappropriateness and inadequacy of these for student learning. Not enough practice! Not enough examples! No answer keys! Those chants echoed in every corridor around the province by students, teachers, and parents alike. To remedy the situation, some of us locked up the textbooks and replaced them with plasters of worksheets, binders of teacher notes and workbooks that some parents, some students, and even some teachers began buying hand over fist - all in an attempt to "fix the math". However, the problems still remain. Scores have not increased. MPT success is dropping. Frustrations are growing. Pockets are emptying. And, the reputation of mathematics continues to crumble. Why aren't the voices calling on a new approach to teaching math being listened to? Are our parents misinformed on how their children are learning? Are we, as educators ignorant to the implications our teaching acts are having on many of our young people? Yes, it's definitely challenging and scary times in our math classrooms.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Chapter 4 - Amber Hill Experiences & Reflections

First, congratulations to Sharon for leading and delivering a very organized and interesting discussion on Chapter 4. The class led to some particular issues that I wanted to bring forth here in my blog.

Our discussion and Boaler's research provided to really reflect on how much "learned helplessness" we are disabling our students with. I pictured myself there as Tim in the math class, embarassed that I too perhaps acted out very much like he did some of the time. I knew students in my class were distracted, they weren't listening. I waled around my classroom as students worked from their textbooks adn instead of asking them to really think hard about the problem I would end up helping many of the weaker students out by providing a receipe - a step by step set of instructions to get them through the problem successfully. Did I do that out of pity for the students who I though just couldn't get it? Was it just to satisfy my own frustrations with the students who couldn't learn from my teaching? (What is wrong with them, they couldn't learn from me - I taught it clearly, didn't I???) In the end my leading questions, my coaxing, my ignoring of wrong answers, and my endless lists of rules and algorithms did nothing for those who never really got it the first time around. My way of teaching was not working for those who needed it to work, who depended on it to work. I was in such a panic to in getting through the work, in meeting the deadlines that I rarely afforded my students time to really think and grapple with the problems I had given them to consider. I look back now and shamefully realize how many things I was doing wrong in my class, that was really to their detriment. Why didn't I see it then? Why did I do the things I did? We are addicted to teaching the way we are. It has become so ingrained within us that change seems almost incomprehensible.

Hilary's teaching of trigonometry also send me back to the past, questioning if my teachign was as ineffecitve as hers, if I ended up confusing my students more with enless rules to remeber and unclear explainations all in an attempt to give my students a procedure to learn . Now ina ll honesty, my students probably did not develop a clear sense of what the rules meant, where they came from, or how they related to different situations they encountered. Three years later, and after many mistakes, Boaler and our discussions made me realize that I, like Amber Hill teachers, are "driven by a desire to compartmentalize and provide models and structures that make sense for teachers but often do not for students" (p. 32). We are driven by the race against the clock, against ourselves - trying to pass a test that we are set up to fail. Given the structure we have in place, all of us as teachers, really are set up for failure. We will not cover all the curriculumt he way we want to, we will not meet all our students needs the way we know they need us. Then, we blame ourselves and the system. Every year it's the same routine. But really, do we try to change it? Sure we do, we go faster, assign less questions, further falsely exemplying the myth that mathematics is all about speed. We, too, end up lowering our expectations.

During the discussion in class I raised the notion if we as educators do expect less of ourselves and our students if we are teaching in a socio-economically deprived school versus an urban setting where parents are generally more educated and achievenments are often higher? Is the bar lower in the working class, rural schools? Are we satisfied with minimum successes in our math classes if we know we won't be held as accountable? One thing is for sure though, the students often meet us where we hold the bar.

Hearing the students voices through the quotatiosn Boaler presents here really gives us a wake up call that students do want change. The only ones standing in the way of this change, is us. We hear from our students on a regular basis, the brighter ones too, that the work is boring, monotonous, yet we continue to stuff it to them, we continue to stay the course - all int he name of perceived success in testing. I knew my most intelligent students were extremely bored within my grade 9 class. It was not until late in my second year of teaching that I really realized students apperciate and develop cognitive thinking at a higher level when their work is made enoyable. We dubbed the day long math workshop for our students "Math Fun Day" and in groups scattered about our gym they were givena series of small projects from the four main topic they studied in the previous months. I finally seen so many of my students happy, but also engaged, inquisitive, and relaxed. They remakred to be after that the stress of assessments had entirely left them. They were learning the concepts I tried beating into their heads with boards and books simply by using their hands with tangible products. They still made mistakes but they laughed them off and reflected on why their project results didn't turn out as they had hypothesized. Then I knew assignments and tests handed back with red ink all over them really didn't result in students reflecting on why they went wrong, really didn't correct the mistakes students made, really didn't improve their interest or their learning.

With the images and thoughts resurfacing from that math fun day Boaler brought back to life many ideas that I questioned back then too. How useful are time-on-tasks as an everyday lesson plan for mathematical learning? To what extent does our obsession with keeping students quiet and orderly play in inhibiting real learning from taking place? Like Keith (p.41), as soon as many of our students enter the classroom and open their textbooks they are switched off. The rule following can't be helping either. The cue-based teachign we transmit is doing more long-term damage than we even realize or will acknowledge. However, we hold on to the conventional pedagogical practices in mathematics but still scratch our heads and wonder why so many of our students stop working.

Experiencing School Mathematics - Ch 3

Structured, disciplinded, and controlled. In a nut shell that basically summarizes the illusion many teachers, administrators, and district personelle have when they picture the ideal classroom and school. We have become exceedingly great at molding the clients into beings that learn, listen, and respond in a unision of our choosing. We bend over backwards in our institutions to induce obedience and conformitiy to the nth degree. We tell students to "just be quiet", to "put their heads down" , to "just sit there" if there's not willing to participate - all in the name so that we can cover the curriculum, so that we can get our end of the job done. The fallout is huge, but we plead innocent, helplessness. The mess of a system we have helped to create has polarized our students and staff alike. Teachers pin themselves against each other to hoard materials, to secure funding for their department. Our staff rooms are no different than the student's cafeteria - we immediately congegate ourselves into "strong subject loyalties" as the students hoard into their familiar peer pockets. What Boaler describes in Amber Hill is very much what we find, but more sadly, what we want to find in the school we teach at. It's less stressful on us, right? Our parents will give us less grief if we follow the status quo. We perceive these schools as being safe, secure, stable. Us teachers like that. A lot.

One idea that was raised in our class continues to stay with me. We talked about the teacher who come June 1 claps the chalk off their hands and says "I'm done." We've imparted the necessary knowledge from the curriculum unto our students. We've got all our mandatory tests in, all review sheets practiced and corrected, and heaven forbid all the "good questions" from the textbook assigned. Why do we continue to think this way? How come we don't want to raise the bar, to dig further, to take the extra time and investigate mathematical modelling situations with our students? Why are we stuck? Some say it's the time pressures, the work load, the fact that come May and June we are worn so thin we just want to survive. I say it's because that's what our school systems, our departments of education have expected of us, because that's what we believe our jobs are. As Edward Losely was quoted as saying "you've got the national curriculum basically and if you cover the national curriculum you're doing your job." However, the jobs we're doing are failing children, are dismantling many of their inherent abilities. Oh sorry, I forgot, those abilities aren't wanted in our classrooms. Leave them at the door. Sir Ken, come save us!

As I read the second half of this chapter and came to realize the drastic differences between Amber Hill and Phoenix Park I realized that hmmm, just maybe there is a better way. I knew instantly that I could buy into such a system of "progessive education, placing particular emphasis on self-reliance and independence." (p. 18). I have been in very few school's where the ambiance was one of peacefulness instead of screaming and chaos. My curiosities increased with bewilderment firstly over the fact their mathematical teaching virtually eliminated the use of textbooks. Secondly, the notion that teachers allowed students to work on their own, unsupervised, while still expecting them to be responsible for their learning was truly fascinating. Tell me, please tell me where I can find a staff room where I won't suffocate from listening to endless complaints form my colleagues, where people are actually relaxed and unintimated by their administrations. What is the directions to Phonnix Park again?

"Jim treated the students as if they were adults; he rarely reprimanded them, and when students misbehaved he had conversations with them about the inconsiderateness of their behavior" (p. 20).

Jim's demenaour with his students is one we really need to start incorportating more into our relationships with our students. I've seen white board in the general office completely full with dentention lists more backlogged than the surgury appointments at the Health Sciences Centre. I admit I was one of those who assigned students to a complete hour of silence, without sound, without movement. After the hour they'd dash for the door, only to find themselves back there again the following Tuesday. However, after supervising the dentention session once I vowed unto myself never to subject my students to such a waste of time again. I was working against years of a tradition at this school - this is how it is. I admit too I never spoke with my misbehaved students enough either to really understand the reasons for their actions but I tried to change despite what was going on around me. I began to model myself after another teacher on our staff, one who had the respect of all students, but more interestingly, the respect of the lower-achievers, the ones who "caused all the trouble in the school." I remember asking Paul how he did it and his message was simple: make them feel important, that they matter, that you care about their futures more than you care about the material you're given to cover. They just needed attention, recognition, validation, conversation. Rising above the politics of the school and the traditions they peached I followed Paul's advice and witnessed noticeable differences in the demeanour of many students. Finally, it started to become a pleasure to teach them. Who knew which just a few simple changes in me, the teacher, could reuslt in such monumental changes for them, my students. Today, I see Paul's philosophy resonating once again here across Boaler's pages as I uncover Phoenix Park's raison d'etre.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Experiecing School Mathematics - Ch 2

Two aspects discussed in chapter 2 raised enough curiousity within me that warranted an entry here on my blog: test design in standardized testing and mixed vs. ability grouping. In Newfoundland CRT tests at the junior high level are designed with 62% of the test closed constructed repsonses, exclusively multiple choice items. The items cover all three main stands of procedural, conceptual, and problem solving. The problem we've found in the past is that stem of a lot of these questions are so long in text and worded so poorly that many students cannot even understand what it is there're asked to find. In many instances too a lot of these questions required more workings, more thought, more understanding of mathematics that some open-ended questions would (which were worth three times the multiple choice item). A lot of weaker students would end up getting most of these questions wrong because a) they couldn't process all the reading of the question and b) most students have the impression that multiple choice questions should not require a lot of time and work to find the correct answer. Here's a questions from the CRT test in 2005.

Josie noticed a rainwater barrel read 18 L at 2:00pm. At 3:00pm it read 14 L and was leaking water at a constant rate. Josie got back at 3:30pm with a 5 L bucket to catch the water until she could fix the leak. There was 12 L left in the barrel then. How long, in minutes, will Josie have to fix the leak if she works until her bucket fills up?

(A) 30
(B) 60
(C) 75
(D) 125


Some will argue it is a perfectly fine question and perhaps it is. But for one mark in a test I think is perhaps a stretch. I remember looking at this quesiton in particular the following year in my first year of teaching. I gave it to my class on a chapter quiz to see how they would handle it. I recall there being a lot of questions from students not understanding the premise of the question. Perhaps it's a language problem, perhaps it's a lack of ability on the student's part to think critically. That's just one example, perhaps there's a lot more out there. My point in all of this is that if the standardized tests are to reamin then their design styles need to become more open response in nature. Students will only put down their workings on the page in a coherent manner if they know there's a chance they can earn marks from it. Of course it's about the money - it's a lot cheaper to put a response form through a solution feeder to spit out the results than itis to hire hundreds of teachers to mark the papers. But, really how can we discover the falsehoods students have in their mathematical thinking if an evaluator will never see their work on the question. It would be interesting to have a pilot CRT with exclusively open response items and then have follow-up commentary and research done on how much better or worse the students would perform, in addition to antedotal evidence on their views about writing such a test. We definitely need to rethink how we assess our own students' thinking. I've already been a fan of oral defenses, mathemtical modelling presentations, and other alternate forms of assessment to provide my students with the opportunity to show how much and what they understand about mathematics through alternate means from pencil and paper.

The other idea raised by Boaler here that I've often debated with myself is how our math classes are organized. Amber Hill used a system of teaching their students in ability grouping, or sets, whereby the different sets were taught similar content, but the higher sets were generally taught at a faster pace and covered more difficult material. At Phoenix Park the students were taught in mixed abilit classes through all three years less three weeks before the national exams when they were place in target groups for the test preparation. Here in Newfoundland we have mixed ability grouping for the first ten of thirtenn years of the students schooling. During times in my practice I wished for ability grouping because I seen so many of my brighter students bored and dragged down by the pace of our classes. I seen so many weaker students frustrated by the seemingly fast pace I was "covering the curriculum" Yes I too was one of those obsessed with covering the curriculum, teaching with the text. Perhaps, there in lies my and my classes problems! But in any regard I felt I could not provide the help the weaker needed and coul not meet the expectations of my enriched students. The job of teaching to the "middle, normal" students is frivilous. I was frustrated with what was happening in my math classes, feeling helpless in an attempt to save the class and save myself. If only I could have them all separated accoridng to ability I though so many times. Unfortunately I never gave enough attention to what would happen to those int he bottom "barrels" Boaler says "the set in which students are placed has significant implication for their attainment some years later." Powerful statement. And so from that I asked, "Should I really be deciding which opportunities a student should have access to later int heiur life right now when they are merely 13 or 14 years old." If we decided to initiate such a program whereby a student was put in the lowest set in grade 7 and as a result could not apply to any university or college program because they would not have the pre-requisites met further in their secondary schooling. I seriously found myself begininng to realize that we need to stop the practice of cutting the legs off from under our children in their early teenage years. We're basically throwing those who don't fit the norm, who don't comply, who don't understand the way we teach, into courses that bring them to a dead end, that close more doors in their lives than are opened.

If only we would lay down our texts and answer keys, then maybe we could develop a system that allows the weakest of the weak and the strongest of the strong to co-exist in the same classroom. The teachers at Phoenix Park did and it worked. Why can't we?

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Experiencing School Mathematics - Ch 1

"The question of which approach we should use to teach mathematics in schools is one that has perplexed parents, teachers, mathematicians, and others for decades (Benezet, 1935)." Boaler cited this work from more than 70 years ago, but she wouldn't have to change one word arguably to make it a researched fact from 2009. Amazing isn't it. What is wrong with us mortals that we cannot seem to find a reasonable, efficient, effective methology of teaching mathematics that works for all parties involved? We've complained our ways through decades upon decades of teaching this subject yet very little changes from each "new math" curriculum to the next. It's not the curriculum as such that the problem is about, but moreso how we teach the curriculum, we it's delivered - that is how it's taught and learned. She notes that "there is an established concern that many people are unable to use the mathematics they learn in school in situations outside the classroom" (p.1). Then, the first question which comes to my mind is if the students are actually learning the maths. The inability to transform the knowledge and skills one acquires in the classroom should be transferable into real life situation, in mathematical modelling that makes sense to the person. If not, we, as teachers are not doing a good enough job of teaching. Period. Jo Boaler's impressive research here is truly fascinating to me in that we are finally seeing careful research being done on how different approaches to mathematics effects teaching and learning.

Relatively new to the study of research but still knowledgeable enough given my prior graduate courses and B.Ed. program, the fact that she took on a 3 year longitudinal study with such a high number of participants is truly commendable and more than impressive. In addition, the fact that she not oinly monitored th effectiveness of Amber Hill and Phoenix Park's approaches to teaching math, but also analyzed the means through which these approaches influenced the the students actions, teacher decisions, curriculum perceptions, and student-teacher relations. In our day to day grind as educators we seldom have the chance to delve into the core of why our math system seems to be failing so many, why our basic classes are overflowing and our advanced classes are cancelled because of low registration. I could tell from the first chapter this book will finally give me the insight I have been looking for. It is intriguing to know that there is a system, tried and true out there (and not too far away either) that is better than ours, that is working, that has the results to back up their rationale for why they do what they do. How come we're not following? How come we're not even making an attempt to follow? In fact, it seems we're going even further in other direction. Moreover, our parents, our students, and yes, many of our teachers are preferring a system that reverts back to the past, that essentially ignores the results of this research. It is embarassing that we as teachers are in the dark about the issues Boaler is about to raise. Are we really equipped to not just teach but to teach well? I fear we're not. Are we aware of the issues surrounding gender and learning styles for example? I fear we're not. Are we making far too many generalizations during our time in the classroom? This time, I fear we are.

And so I put my faith and trust in Boaler to show us the way to better teaching to engage our minds and finally give us reason to pause, and perhaps, just maybe speak out and seek out to find the change we so desperately need.

SAW.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Experiencing School Mathematics - Forward

As I made myself comfortable in the silent reading area of the QEII I opened Jo Boaler's book expecting to finally find something of interest (knowing of course that Mary surely would put an intriguing selection on the syllabus) to us as math teachers - something practical for us to ponder and reflect on, a story that will enlighten us as to how we do things ourselves, and yes, an opportunity for reflection of our own system and of ourselves. I didn't need to go beyond Schoenfeld's brillant forward to realize that this would be exactly what I'd find. Even though I'm relatively new to the profession I was aware through my practice and studies it is veru difficult to find longitudinal studies of this nature in a multifaceted manner. Alas a study of not just the students but also the teachers. His forward grabbed me and ignited an interest insdie me to read further, to become informed on the nature of the issues, the results she found, and hopefully answers to "What Can We Do About It Now?"

His praise for her scholarly work ix z terrific stepping stone to keep the reader engaged in discovering what it is she has to say. As a teacher I put myself right there, aware of which school it is I was a part of, more certain of which school I wanted to be a part of. His forward was very informative in introducing my ignorant self to a different way of mathematical instruction, through sets, with many options in a decentralized type of education system. Familiar with preparation for standardized testing I knew instantly "this book is for me." We, as teachers here in NL are slaves to the system, robots pushing through a curriculum to cover it before the June plague hits our students and ourselves. This forward held fo rme the promise that finally, substantial, reasonable, unequivocal evidence exists that "students who receive project-based instruction that does not focus on skills learn more mathematics than students receiving traditional skills-based instruction." He brought up the old-age issues of gender vs. math performance which I look forward to reading about.

By including verbatim quotes from Boaler's book, Schoenfeld gives us a glimse into the brillant research and conclusions she has made over the three year period. He executes justification for reading the book (to the American audience) beautifully by explicitly stating the universality of the themes. We know these schools could exist in anytown. We know our children could be the victims and product of such a system. As our eyes go down the page we realize that her findings are relevant, are real to ongoing educational debates that are forever purging our classrooms of children, our moral as educators, and our system as a whole.

Alan Schoenfel, I will definitely read on!

SAW

Sunday, September 27, 2009

When Good Teaching Leads To Bad Results....

As educators and parents we all want our students and children to be part of a classroom that is successful - that is, well managed and well taught, with impressive performance measures and results. Yet, how many of those same classrooms are probably, mind you unintendedly, "an important and illustraive failure?" We have been cultured and have accepted and truly believe that an A in math surely equates proficiency int he subject area. However what is behind that grade, what was required to attain such a desired status? In Schoenfeld's article the alarm is sounded that many perhaps many of us are victims of learning and possessing a fragmented understanding of many math topics with frail backgorund to make connections between different subject matter streams. Have we been learning inacurately? We are teaching inacurately? Is this accepted and justified system impeding, as Shoenfeld says, the acquisition and use of other mathematical knowledge.

Shoenfeld talks brings to leight several empirical standards that he discovered during his research. While reading about his findings I realzied many similarities here in our own provincial system comapred to his studies in America. As a teacher of CRT and public exam courses there is a high degree of pressure put on the teacher from government and school districts to get the marks up in provincial assessments. The primary focus on many professional development days included how to move our district from the bottom in pronvical testing results. Are governments suggesting to test design boards to lower the degree of difficulty in public exams so that the pressure will be lessened from parents? In our B.Ed. programs we always joked about what the right answers were to the questions posed when interview time came around. "Oh, I'll teach my math course according to the outcomes, follwoing the suggested guidelines as prescribed in the provincial curriculum." We gave the textbook answers, the ones they wanted to hear. In actual fact we all knew we'd have to follow the system and teach to the public exam. Here we were fresh, new, innovative teachers and already at Day 1 we felt the pressure to cover off ourselves and our students by teaching according to how the public exams were developed. Schoenfeld hits home when he says that the amount of time given to teacher and the way to teach it for "mastery" of the topic is the centerpiece of many assessment outlines today. Accuracy and speed has without a doubt compromised the ability of many student's to understand math. Look through many CRT and public exams- the amount of credit given to explaining and answeris minimal. Really, it's pathetic!

I agree with his findings that students have this notion that any math problem should be solvable in a few minutes. Many will give up or not even attempt problems that they'r enot compeltely sure of. Yes, there needs to a place for drill exercises and exploratory problems. However, as Shoenfeld points out our system needs to allow to students to become engaged in real mathematical thinking, where concrete and abstract thinking can occur, where relationships are made with real-life phenomeon. Non-routine problem solving seems to be disappearing from our curriculum entirely. I remember back in the ninth grade we would have three non-routnine word problems to solve each week ongoing throughout the entire year. Just last week a teacher commented to me how great the new math program is in grade eight because the worksheets developed for the course gives an examples of every type of problem the student would ever be expected to know. I immediately thought, is that really what we want?

While reading about Shoenfeld's findings on the "form of mathematical answer is what counts" I recall seeing as a student myself and as a teacher copy of tests in which very little credit was given for the workings wrote down in response to the question on a test. Granted the answer was not correct, but if time was given to really look through the workings you would very often find many correct ideas being used in the problem. But because it was not written in the way taught in class students very often do find themselve sbeing punished for venturing outside the narrow guidelines from class. Much improvement has been made in provincial assessments but really how much of it goes uncontrolled in the typical classroom? Again, relating back to Sir Robinson's idea, how often is the creativity of the students (in this case solving, or attempting to solve, the problem in an alternate form) rejected? How can we move students beyond the point where they simply view themselves as "passive consumers of others mathematics"? How do we allow them to see that through their own mathematical modelling and experimentation and study they can make new discoveries for themselves and deduce meaning for why and how things happen in their own lives through the use of math.

Schoenfeld leaves us with many wonderful ideas to ponder and reflect on. One that struck out to me was that "if we intend to affect practice, we will need to become deeply involved in the development and testing of instructional material." We need to examine our practices as educators in how we test and evaluate our students. To do that the curriculum we're given to teach does need revising, do need to include more real mathematical thinking opportunites, does need to provide us with irection for how we can improve our evaluation and assessment strategies. We just need the round table to not just be heard, but to also feel heard.

SAW

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Math Autobiography

The year was 1988 and I began my first days of official math class as a mighty Kindergarden learner. I recall our classroom very well. The chairs had never been sat in, the crayons have never been used, the blocked brand new. We were the first cohort in a brand new school and little did I know we had manipulatives galore. Tackling our counting numbers came with many bright blocks, hand-size bumble bees with sticky backs we could use on our counting boards. I always remember working in primary and elemtary grades in groups for mathematics, sometimes in pairs, but usually groups of four. From what I can remember my teachers did use the textbooks extensively back then, often page by page progressing chapter by chapter through the book. For the frist three grades we used the MAth Quest 1 and 2 where we'd write in the actual books. I remember it being so cool but I also recall when we'd have to practice carrying the questions over from the books to our own exercises at the start of grade 3.

I remember math being very easy with much drill and practice. I never recall games or investigations that we did play, but my teachers were colorful so I'm sure some fun things were done as well. In elementary grades I do not recall the fraction strips we see in today's classrooms but rather a set of rules that we just had to know. All in all though I found the math easy, probably too easy, often bored at times. I just got it, immediately very often. I remember my teachers telling my parents at PT interviews that I was gifted in the subject area and should study it further probably as an account because get this (I could do better than a teacher - haven't we all heard that encouragement before!) There was no enrichment from what I can remember, no math competitions eithers. One thing I remember from my cousins who struggled a bit more with the maths back then was that their parents seemed to be able to help them (Is this still true today given how much the math has changed accoring to today's parents?).

So I guess my worst memory was that the math was never really challenging for me most of the time. Therefore, my greatest memories includes being able to help my friends in class, proud that I was able to be the teacher's helper when I got my work done. Now, more than 20 years later I look back on the way it was then and realize that there needs to be a greater spread in the curriculum, opening up room for more capable students to still keep their interests peaked, and also more investigative, hands on methods for young children to understand the math their expected to learn in a manner they are capable of applying. Sure, there needs to rules and reminders but they cannot be the essence of an introduction to a topic with students expected to micmic the laws of math with just pencil and paper work exclusively. I remember my teachers for the most part being the leader in the class. I don't recall much student-centered learning taking place during my elementary years. The chalk board was very often the centre of our classes. My teacher's seemed to enjoy teaching mathematics, and provided enthuasism especially for word problems in middle school years. We would practice four steps to solving a problem: 1) Re-write the question in our own words; 2) indicate which operations we'd have to use 3) Solve the problem 4) State the answer in a sentence. Ourside of formal tests I don't remember there ever being journal entries, portfolios, or other alternate assessments (besides assignments) at any point until grade 9. Most tests I recall were a combination of selected response items and constructed response items, however the lack of graphics still remians in my mind.

My high school days of mathematics were much different than the first 10 years of class. I was in one of three classes in the province that were part of the pilot program for the present stream of Math 1204, Math 2205, Math 3205, Math 3207 courses. There was no textbook but rather a series of booklets which contained very little direction, practice, or help. The courses were clearly way too loaded with material. I recall spending a lot of our classes going through very tedious investigations that needed much pruning and modifications. Math classes were very frustrating for both us and our teacher, a woman with more than 24 years of experience in the math classroom. Again, I found the "math" part easy, but it was frustrating working through all the cracks and gaps in the curriculum we were given to work with.

I went through my B.Sc. degree, completing 18 math courses in the Applied Mathematics program. Ranging from calculus to linear algebra to numerical analysis, including ODE's and mathematical modelling my program provided a wide range of mathematics to study. Do I engage in mathematics in major ways in my life? Well as a math teacher of course the answer should be yes, and it is, but to to the extent that I wish it would be. I really would like to be able to devote more time to researching mathematics, learning and exploring more issues and new theories in the area. In my three years in the profession thus far I've served in several school district committees in the areas of improving test design, adopting and faciliating technology into the classroom, and improving math interest through "math fun days" held at the school. At the college level I took part in curriculum modifications for entry-level math courses and developed a MPT for registered students at the CNA-Q campus.

All in all I'm very much enjoying the role that teaching and learning mathematics is serving in my life. I realize its importance, I see its potential, and I strive to engage and open up more young people's minds to the possibility that the maths have.

SAW

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Creativity At Its Best Or Worst?

I must admit that my years of being educated and educating never once have I heard such a brillant point of view on schools usefulness in the creativity department! Sir Ken Robinson has spectacularly brought out for us the notion that the system we have been manipulating and pruning for more than two hundred years since the Industrial Revoultion, the same system we claim is the only true, guaranteed, systemic means out of poverty, is in fact the same one that is destorying and rejecting the creative capabilites of today's and tomorrow's children. Can it be true that the ingenuity of many children are being "squandered ruthlessly" by the creators, protectors, and servers of our education system?

After watching this video I gave some thought to the children I've had as part of my classes over the past three years, and even before then as a student myself, a peer. We've all had them in our class - the guy who never is willing to freely engage in class discussion, the girl who mkaes excuses for why her work is not compelte, the one you think is just too lazy to put forth the effort required to pass on the grading rubric. Am I a boring teacher? I hope not. Are they just not interested in learning and being successful? I think not, well most anyways. But in all honesty I think we've all had could-be's, should-have beens in our class. Granted our math classes weren't the nail in the coffin to elimiate and defer a child's true potential from their passions and goals, but we are part to blame - unconscious of it as we are.

Robinson's words must make us realize the power and ability we as teachers have to evoke change, instill dreams, and provide hope. We should tread lightly with our most vulnerable clients, not isolate them further from the norm, but rather integrate them and their potentials into something that become meaningful. Be realistic, too. Take the time to show the doors that open when education, integerated with determination are put into play. All too often we point to the university educated as our most successful, to those with more letters after their name than Kellogg's has Corn Flakes to provide exemplars for our young. Why is that? Because we've been taught this way and we're simply "paying it forward." We, as teachers, as graduate students are examples of a mind-set which pays homage to B.A.'s and M.Eng.'s , rightly by society, wrongly by the Sir.

So let's use our math classrooms and schools as more than just a place to turn algebra tiles over, more than just a place to cruch numbers through algorithms, and even more than just places to make spectacular discoveries through discovery and calculation. Let's reach into our student's and talk with them through formal and informal instruction about their goals, their expecations of us as their teachers, and themselves. Are we ready for that? How creative can we be?