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Inquiry in Mathematics Learning and Teaching

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How can teachers provide better opportunities for students to learn mathematics? ... and symbolic nature, students often found the use of symbolism alienating. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Inquiry in Mathematics Learning and Teaching


1
Inquiry in Mathematics Learning and Teaching
  • Barbara Jaworski
  • Loughborough University, UK

2
Better mathematics?
  • How can students (pupils) learn mathematics
    better?
  • How can teachers provide better opportunities for
    students to learn mathematics?
  • What kinds of activity in classrooms contribute
    to deeper mathematical understandings?
  • How can didacticians (mathematics educators)
    contribute to improving mathematics learning and
    teaching?
  • What roles should/can students, teachers and
    didacticians play in the developmental process

3
This session
  • 10 minutes introduction
  • 20 minutes working as a group
  • 20 minutes feedback from groups
  • 30 minutes input from BJ
  • 10 minutes questions/discussion

4
Group Task
  • Oranges
  • The mystery of the missing orange
  • Fractions
  • 2 1
  • 3 2

Explain!!

Work on the task yourself. What did you do?
achieve? learn? Imagine offering the task to
pupils. (How would you offer it?) What might
you expect your pupils to do? achieve?
learn?
5
Learning communities
Working
Asking questions
Thinking
TOGETHER
Tackling problems
Seeking answers
Exploring
Seeking new possibilities
Discussing outcomes
Looking critically
In learning mathematics
In teaching mathematics
In researching mathematics learning and teaching
6
Inquiry
  • Ask questions
  • Seek answers
  • Recognise problems
  • Seek solutions
  • Invent
  • Wonder
  • Imagine
  • Look critically

Inquiry as a way of being
Inquiry as a tool
7
Inquiry in mathematics learning and teaching
  • Taking a rich mathematical task (one in which
    people with experience know there is rich
    potential for doing mathematics)
  • Working on the task in inquiry mode with a small
    group and reflecting with others on the group
    work
  • Relating the task to other areas of mathematics
    or mathematical activity
  • Designing further tasks to motivate and challenge
    learners

8
Challenge from a teacher
x 4 4 x
Pupils come to us at upper secondary level making
mistakes such as this.
What can we do about it?
9
x 4 4 x What does this mean? Is it
true? For what values of x?
x 4 x
x 4 4 x
1 4, 3 4 , 9 4 , 1 3 9
? 4
4/3 4 4/3 16/3 4/3 16 . 3 3
4 16 4 4
WHY?
If x ? 0 x 4 4x 4 3x 4/3 x
x 4 4 x
10
What can inquiry bring to such a situation
  • Seeking ways to address a problem
  • Thinking deeply about the problem, what is
    involved and what is needed
  • Taking some action to solve the problem
  • Looking critically at what we do and what it
    achieves
  • Undertaking further systematic inquiry directed
    at specific learning

11
Three layers of inquiry
  • Inquiry in learning mathematics
  • Teachers and didacticians exploring mathematics
    together in tasks and problems in workshops
  • Pupils in schools learning mathematics through
    exploration in tasks and problems in classrooms.
  • Inquiry in teaching mathematics
  • Teachers using inquiry in the design and
    implementation of tasks, problems and
    mathematical activity in classrooms in
    association with didacticians.
  • Inquiry in developing the teaching of
    mathematics
  • Teachers and didacticians researching the
    processes of using inquiry in mathematics and in
    the teaching and learning of mathematics.

12
Inquiry transition
  • From
  • Inquiry as a mediational tool in practice
  • To
  • Inquiry as a way of being one of the norms of
    practice

13
Inquiry as paradigm
  • The idea of inquiry as a way of being can be
    seen as paradigmatic.
  • Paradigms (world views)
  • Positivism
  • Interpretivism
  • Critical Theory
  • Post modernism

Inquiry
14
Positivism
  • Seeking objectivity and truth through defining
    social situations in scientific terms usually
    involving quantification, measure and logic
    defining measurable variables designing
    comparable situations giving absolute values
    not leaving open to interpretation.
  • Justification most often through statistical
    analysis or study of carefully controlled
    experimental conditions .

15
Interpretivism
  • Recognising social situations as complex and
    seeking to describe and characterise them through
    interpretation seeking meaning in observed
    actions and interactions gaining insight to
    peoples perspectives on who they are and what
    they do.
  • Justification through detailed description and
    multiple sources of explanation and evidence to
    support interpretation and throw light on what is
    studied being critical about the perspectives
    one brings to interpretation

16
Critical theory
  • Going beyond descriptive interpretation to
    recognise that social situations embody deeply
    political human issues and power relationships
    that research should seek to uncover and address
    such issues revealing relationships which limit
    or oppress bringing critical analysis to
    accepted traditions to offer opportunities for
    change.
  • Justification through action and interaction that
    examine deeply and overtly ways of thinking,
    reveal factors and conditions that suppress
    individuals or groups and provide
    emancipatory/empowering opportunity through
    giving voice, enabling and enfranchising.

17
Postmodernism
  • Going beyond modernism which rationalises,
    structures and seeks to explain by categorising
    and compartmentalising bringing and valuing
    multiple perspectives and methods questioning
    the dominance of any one view of the world,
    deconstructing to reveal the limiting nature of
    imposed structures revolt against control.
  • Justification in revellation coversation and
    negotiation, opening up not pretending to
    compartmentalise revealing complexity and chaos.

18
Critical theory
Interpretivism
INQUIRY
Postmodernism
19
tomorrow
  • inquiry in Developmental Research

20
Thank You
21
(No Transcript)
22
  • Inquiry
  • in Developmental Research
  • in Mathematics Education

23
Better mathematics?
  • How can students (pupils) learn mathematics
    better?
  • How can teachers provide better opportunities for
    students to learn mathematics?
  • What kinds of activity in classrooms contribute
    to deeper mathematical understandings?
  • How can didacticians contribute to improving
    mathematics learning and teaching?
  • What roles should/can students, teachers and
    didacticians play in the developmental process

24
  • In a study of disaffection in secondary
    mathematics classrooms in the UK, Elena Nardi and
    Susan Steward found that students on whom the
    study focused
  • apparently engage with mathematical tasks in
    the classroom mostly out of a sense of
    professional obligation and under parental
    pressure. They seem to have a minimal
    appreciation and gain little joy out of this
    engagement.
  • Most students we observed and interviewed view
    mathematics as a tedious and irrelevant body of
    isolated, non-transferable skills, the learning
    of which offers little opportunity for activity.
    In addition to this perceived irrelevance, and in
    line with previous research that attributes
    student alienation from mathematics to its
    abstract and symbolic nature, students often
    found the use of symbolism alienating.
  • Students resented what they perceived as rote
    learning activity, rule-and-cue following, and
    some saw mathematics as an
  • elitist subject that exposes the weakness of
    the intelligence of any individual who engages
    with it. (Nardi Steward, 2003, p. 361)

25
Usable Knowledge
  • Educational researchers, policymakers, and
    practitioners agree that educational research is
    often divorced from the problems and issues of
    everyday practice a split that creates a need
    for new research approaches that speak directly
    to the problems of practiceand lead to usable
    knowledge (p. 5)
  • The Design-Based Research Collective (2003), in
    the United States In a special issue of
    Educational Researcher devoted to papers on
    design research

26
Look at Figure 1 here. What is it? What shape is
it? Figure 1 The teachers drawing What would
be your reaction to someone who said it is a
square?
27
The revised drawing
28
Daffodills
  • Margaret Brown (1979, p. 362) reports from
    research into 11-12 year old childrens solutions
    to problems involving number operations. A
    question asked
  • A gardener has 391 daffodils. These are to be
    planted in 23 flowerbeds. Each flowerbed is to
    have the same number of daffodils. How do you
    work out how many daffodils will be planted in
    each flowerbed?
  • The following interview took place between a
    student YG and the interviewer MB

29
  • YG You er I know what to do but I cant say it
  • MB Yes, well you do it then. Can you do it?
  • YG Those are daffodils and these are flowerbeds,
    large you see Oh! Theyre being planted in
    different flowerbeds, youd have to put them in
    groups
  • MB Yes, how many would you have in each group?
    What would you do with 23 and 391, if you had to
    find out?
  • YG See if I had them, Id count them up say I
    had 20 of each Id put 20 in that one, 20 in
    that one
  • MB Suppose you had some left over at the end when
    youve got to 23 flowerbeds?
  • YG Id plant them in a pot (!!)

30
New tasks for old.
  • In Adapting and Extending Secondary Mathematics
    Activities New tasks for old, Stephanie Prestage
    and Pat Perks (2001) look at traditional tasks
    such as one finds in a text book
  • They suggest an alternative perspective on the
    task so that it offers students something to
    think about or explore engaging student in
    mathematical inquiry. An example relating to
    Pythagoras Theorem is
  • What right angled triangles can you find with
    an hypotenuse of 17cm? (Page 25)
  • Such a task is different from traditional
    exercises which ask more direct questions with
    single right or wrong answers.
  • Solving the problem requires the algorithm to be
    used many times as a pupil makes decisions about
    the number and types of solutions. This is
    better than a worksheet any day, and requires
    little preparation. (Prestage and Perks, 2001, p.
    25)

31
Developmental Research in Mathematics Education
  • Research which promotes the development of
    mathematics teaching and learning
  • while simultaneously studying the practices and
    processes involved or
  • as an integral part of studying the practices
    and processes involved

32
Implicitly
  • Much research that studies practices and
    processes in mathematics learning and/or teaching
    is implicitly developmental in that it promotes
    development without this being an intended factor
    in the research design.
  • (Jaworski, 2003)

33
Explicitly
  • Research that is explicitly developmental sets
    out to promote development as part of the design
    of the research.
  • Research and development are often reflexively
    related to each other, so that separation of
    aspects of research and development is difficult.

34
Co-learning agreement
  • In a co-learning agreement, researchers and
    practitioners are both participants in processes
    of education and systems of schooling. Both are
    engaged in action and reflection. By working
    together, each might learn something about the
    world of the other. Of equal importance,
    however, each may learn something more about his
    or her own world and its connections to
    institutions and schooling (Wagner, 1997, p. 16).

35
Examples of Co-Learning Inquiry
  • The Mathematics Teacher Enquiry Project a study
    of teaching development resulting from teachers
    own classroom research as insiders Here teachers
    were invited (by outsider researchers) to ask and
    explore their own questions relating to issues in
    learning and teaching mathematics. Outsider
    research showed that teachers enquiry, in
    collaboration with other researchers, led to
    enhanced thinking and developments in teaching.
    Outsider researchers themselves learned
    significantly from their study of teachers
    activity. (Jaworski, 1998). See also, Hall, 1997
    Edwards, 1998
  • Collaboration between teachers and (outsider)
    researchers to study the use of the teaching
    triad as a developmental tool, while using the
    triad to analyse teaching, led to deeper
    understandings of the teaching triad as a tool
    for teaching development as well as for analyzing
    and understanding teaching complexity. (Potari
    and Jaworski, 2002 J P 2009).

36
Learning Communities in Mathematics
  • A developmental research project aiming to
    improve the learning and teaching of mathematics
    through a design involving teachers and
    didacticians working together for mutual
    learning.
  • (e.g., Jaworski, 2005, 2006, 2008)

37
Co-learning a learning community
  • Teacher-researchers
  • Teacher-educator-researchers

common goal to improve opportunity for students
to engage with mathematics in the best possible
ways to support and build their mathematical
concepts and fluency
  • Teachers
  • Academics/teacher educators etc.

Because I talk here about complex practices, it
seems clear to me that the best possible ways are
what we are all striving to know.
A community of inquiry
38
Inquiry
  • Inquiry is about asking questions and seeking
    answers, recognising problems and seeking
    solutions, exploring and investigating to find
    out more about what we do that can help us do it
    better.
  • I am proposing a process of critical,
    collaborative co-learning - central to this
    process is the theoretical construct of inquiry.
  • The overt use of inquiry in practice has the aim
    - of disturbing practice on the inside, - of
    challenging the status quo, - of questioning
    accepted ways of being and doing.
  • Such use of inquiry starts off as a mediating
    tool in the practice, and shifts over time to
    become an inquiry stance or an inquiry way of
    being in practice

39
The inquiry cycle
  • We implement a cycle of planning, action,
    observation, reflection, feedback.
  • Plan
  • Act
  • Observe
  • Reflect
  • Feedback

A basis for Action research Design
research Lesson study Learning study
Developmental Research
40
Identity in Community
  • For example, the mathematics teachers within a
    particular school have identity and alignment
    related to their school as a social system and
    group of people.
  • Any individual teacher or teacher educator has
    identity related to their direct involvement in
    day to day practice, but constituted through the
    many other communities with which the individual
    aligns to some degree.
  • Wenger (1998) speaks of people belonging to a
    community of practice, having identity with
    regard to a community of practice, in terms of
    three dimensions engagement, imagination and
    alignment.
  • For example, in practices of mathematics learning
    and teaching, participants engage in their
    practice alongside their peers, use imagination
    in interpreting their own roles in the practice
    and align themselves with established norms and
    values of teaching within school and educational
    system.
  • Identity is a concept that figuratively combines
    the intimate or personal world with the
    collective space of cultural forms and social
    relations. (Holland, Lachicotte, Skinner and
    Cain, 1998, p. 5)
  • Identity refers to ways of being and we can talk
    about ways of being in teaching-learning
    situations, which assume alignment with what is
    normal and expected in those situations.

41
From Alignment to Critical Alignment
  • A community of practice becomes a community of
    inquiry when participants take on an inquiry
    identity
  • that is, they start overtly to ask questions
    about their practice, while still, necessarily,
    aligning with its norms.
  • In the beginning, inquiry might be seen as a tool
    enabling investigation into or exploration of
    aspects of practice a critical scrutiny of
    practice.

42
  • Thus, we see an inquiry identity growing within a
    CoP and the people involved becoming inquirers in
    their practice individuals, and the community as
    a whole, develop an inquiry way of being in
    practice, so that inquiry becomes a norm of
    practice with which to align.
  • We might see the use of inquiry as a tool to be a
    form of critical alignment that is engagement in
    and alignment with the practices of the
    community, while at the same time asking
    questions and reflecting critically.
  • Critical alignment, through inquiry, is seen to
    be at the roots of an overt developmental process
    in which knowledge grows in practice.

43
Key constructs
  • Co-learning community
  • Inquiry in theory and in practice
  • Community of inquiry
  • Critical alignment
  • Developmental research
  • Development -- various research projects in the
    literature

Theoretical Constructs
Developmental Outcomes
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