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February 1, 2023

Why teachers are letting students solve math problems in lots of different ways

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Families might be wondering why their child's math classroom looks so different from what they remember in school.

Why aren't putting students on the spot and getting them to prove that they know the math? Why are teachers letting students solve problems in lots of different ways instead of just telling them how to do it?

Teachers are moving beyond and shifting towards more evidence-based equitable teaching and assessment practices. This means every student is provided with what they need as opposed to being provided with the exact same resources and assessment practices.

For example, instead of giving all students in the classroom the exact same test, a student with test anxiety will be given an alternative format to showcase their learning.

Math is not 'neutral'

Mathematics is not a "neutral" subject—biases in math exist that are grounded in colonial ideals.

For example, what is traditionally considered in a Canadian math curricula is only standard in .

focuses on the teacher's way of solving a problem as the right way. Students who might think about the problem in a different way are then at a disadvantage. In some cases, their cultural way of doing mathematics is then viewed as incorrect.

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Many strategies can be used

One . In Japanese culture, children learn a formal multiplication method (kuku) that involves learning to recite times tables, whereas in the Philippines, it is common to use finger multiplication.

The study found that immigrant Filipino families only taught their children finger multiplication if they found that their child was struggling with multiplication. The children would hide this method from their teachers.

When only one strategy for math is taught as universally correct, and compounds inequities.

Draw on existing knowledge

What are some signs ?

Teachers draw on . In order to serve each student and their unique learning styles, teachers ideally get to know their students and how they learn best.

This means teachers view their students as having knowledge that can be shared within the learning community. This is in contrast to traditional teaching practices that work on the assumption that students are .

Peer collaboration

When you were in school, what did participating in classroom activities look like? Did you raise your hand? Did you turn to your elbow partner? Were you sitting in rows and expected to be quiet until you were called upon?

Equitable classrooms promote student voice and agency, peer collaboration and values learning from each other.

This creates an equitable learning environment because it provides all students with the platform to have their voices heard and validates students' cultural ways of knowing math that may have otherwise been hidden.

An added bonus is that if all they have more strategies to rely on.

What an equitable math classroom looks like

Instructional time (when the teacher is speaking about the ideas being taught) happens after students engage with their learning. This communicates to the students that they are capable of solving the problem, and that their ideas are both important and valuable.

There are a variety of strategies and solutions generated by the students.

Students have lots of choice about where they are working (standing at whiteboards, working collaboratively with peers or in groups, building hands-on models).

Instead of students only writing tests, the teacher is able to use diverse and different types of data to assess (conversations, , models).

What an equitable math classroom sounds like What an equitable math classroom feels like

Equitable classrooms can be best realized when families, teachers and support the importance and benefits of equitable classrooms.

Provided by The Conversation

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