Showing posts with label NCSM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NCSM. Show all posts

Sunday, July 26, 2015

NCSM 2015, Boston. Tuesday


NCSM Boston Tuesday Notes. Not the band, the math conference, but I liked this picture better than generic pictures of Boston.


Elham Kazemi
Developing a school-wide culture of risk.
Teaching mathematics well is both possible and difficult.


(She spoke for a bit, then asked attendees at her session to tweet questions to her. Nice use of twitter to get audience participation.)


How do we organize schools for teacher learning?
1. Fostering and developing an intellectual culture establishing a vision for working on practice together, how we get better at practice and offering opportunities for teachers to deprivatize their practice and work on it together. It takes a lot of trust. Take risks. Foster that culture.


2. Strategizing and planning for accountability and assistance.
Who will be applying pressure and support?


3. Developing and elaborating a shared set of principles and practices for teaching shared vision for math instruction. Developing tools, establishing routines.
Facilitating a common language for talking about practice among principals, teachers and coaches.


You can change teachers thinking about something without changing what those teachers do in classrooms. -Dylan William


They used something called “Math Lab” that is like lesson study. While the lesson was being taught, they would use something called Teacher Time Out. Teachers would collaboratively make a decision or confer for a moment about what to do next. Students sometimes gave their opinions also. Students see that teaching is about learning.


Talking is not teaching.


They used the term “open-source teaching”.


They shared this website: tedd.org


Karen Karp
Teaching K-5 Students Who Struggle in Mathematics
I sat next to Sandi Stanhope at this one and we just laughed because Karen is so engaging and funny.
This was partly about RTI, and she was happy to see NCSM’s position paper on that topic.
Relational understanding versus instrumental understanding.
Teachers help students make connections.


There is data showing that Tier 2 Interventions aren’t helping.
Why?
Kids are getting worksheets. The kid didn't get it with a teacher, now why would they get it with a worksheet?
OR
Kids sitting at computer with a generic program, essentially a worksheet on a computer. They are practicing what they don’t know.


Karen talked about misconceptions and rules that teachers should not teach. She wrote a great article about this in Teaching Children Mathematics called 13 Rules that Expire.


You can't think just about your year. You have to think about the future of these ideas.
What is our responsibility to the teachers that come after us?


Telling isn't teaching.


Told isn't taught.


Explicit instruction isn't telling.


At all grades, students who struggle see each problem as a separate endeavor.


They focus on steps to follow rather than the behavior of the operations.


They tend to use trial and error - disconnected thinking not relational thinking.


They need to focus on actions, representations and general properties of the operations.

Create scenarios. When do I add? What does it mean to add? Not just addition problems.

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

NCSM Boston, 2015. Monday


A room full of math coaches! 

NCSM Boston. Some of my Monday notes.

Jo Boaler’s Keynote
On teacher attitudes
We urgently need to shift teachers, parents, and students ideas about who can achieve in mathematics.
Students of color and girls show the sharpest increase in achievement with mindset interventions.

On achievement
The lowest achievers in the world are the "memorizers".
The highest achievers in the world are those who think about big ideas and connections.

On mistakes
Every time you make a mistake in math a synapse fires. When you get a question correct, there is no brain growth.
Teachers should encourage mistakes.
Students need open and challenging work so they will make mistakes.
Teachers need to change classroom culture to openly value mistakes.

Jo has a new version of her book, called What’s Math Got To Do With It
Jo is working on a Week of Inspirational Math, a series of free lessons designed to be used for the first week of school.

Susan Jo Russell
How "Lingering" on Ideas about the Meaning of the Operations Can Include All Students in Significant Learning

Access and equity
Engaging students with challenging tasks, discourse, and open-ended problem solving has the potential to raise the mathematics achievement of all students, including poor and low income students.

"Productive lingering" is essential to engaging in mathematical argument for all.

Amy Lucenta, Grace Kelemanik, Susan Creighton
Engaging ALL Learners in Mathematical Practices through Instructional Routines

All students must be able to…
Interpret and chunk complicated objects,
connect representations
change the form of the numbers, expressions, space, etc. to create and leverage equivalences,
recall and use properties, rules of operations and geometric relationships,
and find the right distance from a problem...i.e. shift perspective.

The math practices open doors for struggling students.

Problems were presented and the audience was asked what we noticed. We were encouraged to find “shortcuts”. However, the shortcuts are based on mathematical reasoning, and are one way to facilitate productive math classes.

If we don't seal the deal with a meta-reflection, we are just talking about strategies.

Students generate “Ask Myself” questions.
Next time I will ....before I calculate because....
Paying attention to ....is helpful because....

Deborah Ball, et al
How can explicitness about mathematical practices support equitable instruction?

Deborah Ball teaching video
Task: Make as many 3 digit numbers as possible using the digits 4, 5, and 6.

I would like someone to give a wrong answer to this problem.
Do others agree this is wrong?
Can someone share one reason why it is not one of the answers?

Explicit teaching…
… unpacks practices or knowledge to make it open to learners, not doing it for them.
...is not about the teacher demonstrating.
...seeks to maintain complexity but make complex practice accessible to all students.

Students do the work, teacher highlights what they just did. Makes elements visible, provides language and supports.

I have opinions about the idea that “mathematicians are lazy” and the term “shortcuts”. I won’t share those now, nor will I write about more speakers I saw on Monday, or all the other questions and thoughts I have, because I am tired and have to get to sleep. Another time.

Saturday, April 12, 2014

Latest and Greatest in a Nutshell

Dan Meyer
There are some very good things happening right now in the world of mathematics education. Being at the NCSM Conference gave me the opportunity to connect with many of the greatest minds in the field and hear about their current projects.

Here are my top picks for books to buy, courses to take, blogs to read...right NOW.

Books
NCTM’s Principles to Actions: Ensuring Mathematical Success for All. The book Steve Leinwand keeps waving around. I read a draft in the fall. Educators need to start turning to this when figuring out how to do professional development, how to craft school goals, what to look for in classrooms. It’s radical.

Visible Learning by John Hattie. This book is being enthusiastically talked about by greats like Tim Kanold and Bob Laird. Subtitled “A Synthesis of Over 800 Meta-Analyses Relating to Achievement”, it’s the new go-to resource for knowing what truly works in education.


Blogs
Tim Kanold. Check out his most recent post about math homework.
Max Ray. I went to an excellent workshop for teachers by Max and also saw his engaging Ignite talk. He’s with the Math Forum @ Drexel. There are problems, videos and more.
Dan Meyer. Prolific blogger, thinker. Recently published Great Modeling Tasks in Three Acts (for NCSM members only, except for one freebie).
Annie Fetter. At Math Forum with Max. Great Ignite talk about her artist mother and the math she used.
YouCubed. Not a blog but go there and sign up for updates. Watch some of the videos.

Courses
There are two online Stanford courses taught by Jo Boaler that are a must-do. Last summer, I took How to Learn Math for Parents and Teachers. It was fabulous. It was free then, now it costs $125. Worth it.

This year, Jo Boaler has added a brand new course called How to Learn Math for Students. It’s free. I haven’t taken it yet but I recommend trying it with a young person you know. It sounds like it is appropriate for children ages 10-18, but for children younger than 13, a parent or teacher should register and share the material with the child. Go to the site and register. It begins in May.

People to Follow on Twitter

Who I missed
Uri Treisman. But here’s the audio of his talk.

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

NOLA Greats


There is a treasure trove of greatness at NCSM New Orleans. See below for conference tweets that will link you to wonderful minds and resources.
Choose a problem and anticipate student responses. T/F: 80/4=(80/2)+(80/2). Kazemi & Hintz

Rethink homework! Purpose is not to give a child a grade, ever. What's your homework protocol? @tkanold tkanold.blogspot.com

Go beyond checking for understanding. Students must get feedback, take action. @tkanold

Working on our practice. Teach the same lesson twice with collaborative reflection in between. Nice! @maxmathforum http://mathforum.org/pps/

Number sense is acquired; you don't teach it, you nurture its development. @SkipFennell mathspecialists.org

Set it up so kids are asking the next question of the teacher, using the lang. of our discipline. @jgough http://jplgough.wordpress.com/

Stop making excuses. Implement what we know works. @steve_leinwand http://steveleinwand.com/
We say all students can learn, now we need to act that way. Cathy Seeley (via @Maryvfitz)

Saturday, December 7, 2013

Vermont Math Leadership Council

the view from my porch
Vermont has a new education organization - Vermont Math Leadership Council - thanks to Julie Conrad, Tracy Watterson and others for getting it off the ground. Thanks to me we have a blog with the easy URL vermontmathleadership.org. Thanks to Tim Whiteford, there is a bunch of great posts on the blog! Check it out. We’d like to get more material from more voices on this blog and increase our readership. Anyone can join the organization. Our next meeting is January 29, 2014.

I was about to post something here on my blog about the new Institute of Education Sciences Educator’s Practice Guide called Teaching Math to Young Children. But then I saw that Tim beat me to it by posting about the very same thing on the VMLC blog. So, read his post here.

What I like about this publication is that it helps both rookies and veterans understand how best to work with young children and math. There are clear, specific recommendations that are easy to follow and a selection of easily usable games and ideas that illustrate the concept.

Whereas we often encounter activities or lessons and need to figure out what math we’re really going for, this resource communicates the math goals clearly and first, then hands us the activity to use.

Saturday, October 26, 2013

Breathe collaboration

From Dan Meyer's You Pour I Choose Math Task

Steve Leinwand came to Killington, Vermont, on Wednesday night and I made sure I was there to see him. Dinner and the presentation by Steve was hosted by the fledgling local chapter of National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics (NCSM) called Vermont Math Leadership Council (VMLC). I made them a website at www.vermontmathleadership.org, where you can find resources shared by Steve, including his powerpoint from the dinner.

Here are a few things from the notes I typed on my iPad instead of eating dinner:

Take risks, make mistakes. The stuff we have now is bad. Enter the Common Core. Hope and change have arrived, like the calvary. This is a once in a lifetime opportunity to rescue ourselves and our teachers from all the problems we have had.

Effective teachers create language rich classrooms.

Effective teachers take every opportunity to build number sense.

Effective teachers embed math content and connect to the real world.

Effective teachers devote the last 5 minutes to formative assessment.

See Steve’s document called High Leverage Mathematics Instruction Practices for more.

I am not an effective leader if I don't breathe collaboration.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

NCSM Denver - Brilliant Minds



Penny Stearns and I flew to Denver for the NCSM 2013 conference. NCSM is an organization focused on mathematics education leadership. They have resources on their website. The powerpoint presentations from the conference presenters aren’t posted yet but I hope they will be soon.

We’ve seen some incredible speakers over the last 3 days. These include the following:

Cathy Seeley
Marilyn Burns
Kati Haycock
Jo Boaler
Steve Leinwand
Cheryl Adeyami
Greg Tang
Deborah Ball
Heather Hill

These are folks you will want to look up. I will definitely get their entire presentations when they become available.

Steve Leinwand is my new hero. He yells, which I appreciate. Speak truth to power, Steve says. He talked about how he helped turn around a middle school in Missouri. His stories and learning from that process are fascinating. Steve keeps teachers and students at the center of his school reform work. At the end of his compelling talk, he showed a slide listing the names of the teachers at the Missouri school. He thanked them and dedicated the talk to them.

Steve shared 9 research affirmed practices for improving a school.
Number one is that effective teachers respond to most student answers with Why? How do you know that? or Can you explain your thinking?

Instruction is everything, says Steve.

Regarding the Standards of Mathematical Practice: Practice #3 is where it’s at. Those 9 words are the most important words in the entire Common Core standards. Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others.

Finally, Steve said we probably shouldn’t be talking about an achievement gap. This makes it sound like it is the students’ fault. We should instead be talking about an instruction gap. Wow.

I was going to write something about these other speakers as well, but I wrote so much about Steve that I think I will postpone. More to come.

Here is Steve today. I took this with my phone. Go Steve!