Title: Player A
1Playing board for the game Crooked Rules
Hundreds
Tens
Ones
Player A Player B Player C Player D
Presentation slide 1.1
2Key features of mathematics within the Primary
National Strategy
- The strategy involves
- 1. A structured, daily mathematics lesson of
4560 minutes, depending on the childrens ages.
There is usually a different structure to
teaching in the Early Years Foundation Stage - 2. An emphasis on mental calculation with oral
and mental work in each lesson - 3. Direct teaching of the whole class, with as
many children as possible taking part - 4. Group work in which children in three or four
groups work at different levels on the same topic - 5. Regular activities for children to do out of
class and at home - 6. The renewed Primary Framework offers teachers
guidance on planning and teaching to help all
children to learn mathematics and make good
progress
3Teaching an Early Years Foundation Stage class
- Emphasis on practical, active, imaginative and
enjoyable activities - Children are given many opportunities to develop
their speaking and listening skills - Include problem solving in a practical context
- The environment, daily routines and activities
will be planned to give children opportunities
for mathematical learning - Children will be given opportunities to practise
and talk about their developing understanding in
a broad range of contexts both indoors and
outdoors - Teachers put greater emphasis on using stories,
songs, rhymes and finger games to help with
counting - Mathematics is not taught in isolation, but as
part of a broad, rich curriculum - Children in Early Years Foundation Stage classes
need a balance of adult-led and
children-initiated learning, both outdoors and
inside.
4The daily mathematics activity in the Early
Years Foundation Stage
- An activity with a group or the whole class,
often involving counting, songs or stories - Adult-led activities for smaller groups of
children, focusing on the main topic of the day
or week - Play activities, initiated by either the teacher
or the children themselves - Review of learning with the whole class when the
activities have ended, not necessarily every day
5Video clip working with children in the Early
Years Foundation Stage
- 1. How do the TAs involve the children?
- 2. What sort of questions do they ask?
- 3. Do they help children to work and play
together in any way? - 4. How do they develop mathematical vocabulary?
- 5. How successful are they in helping the
children learn new skills? - 6. What else could they do to help the children
with their learning?
6Working with individuals and small groups
- Get children talking about what they are doing
- Help them understand what they are doing
- Help them to work and play together
- Familiarise them with the rules of mathematical
games - Help them to develop, learn and use new
mathematical language - Help them to use mathematical resources
- Ask them open questions to get them thinking
- Observe, talk and listen to them to find out what
they have learned - Encourage and celebrate success
7Ten Nice Things
Player As objects
Player Bs objects
8Helping children to use correct mathematical
language (1)
- Encourage children to talk about what they are
doing or what they have done, and to listen to
each other - Use mathematical language with children and
encourage them to use it as well - Value childrens own spontaneous mathematical
language, such as if they say Mines a pointy
one to describe an angle - Offer more precise ways of saying the same thing,
such as replacing Its a round with Its a
circle when replying to a child
9Helping children to use correct mathematical
language (2)
- Model language by describing what children are
doing as you work alongside them - Extend what children have said in different
words for example So youve shared these out
has everyone got the same number now? - Set up activities that encourage children to
describe and explain what they encounter for
example Say what you can feel in the feely bag - Encourage children to compare one thing with
another for example How are the two shapes
different? - Use stories, songs and rhymes
- Use child-initiated learning as a context for
developing mathematical language
10Taking part in role-play (1)
- To ensure that children understand that
mathematics is an enjoyable and useful tool for
solving practical problems that arise during
child-initiated activities, TAs could model the
following play situations - Paying for an object in a shop using coins or
notes, or by writing a cheque - Weighing fruit and vegetables in a greengrocers
shop, ringing each price into a till and telling
the customer how much the items will cost
altogether - Looking for a bus number and then buying a bus
ticket - Looking up a telephone number and dialing it
- Reading a clock in a home corner and saying what
may happen at the time shown
11Taking part in role-play (2)
- Also
- Measuring for curtains, wallpaper or shelves in
the home corner - Weighing out ingredients for cooking
- Weighing a baby in a clinic, reading the dial and
recording the measurement - Counting out the right number of plates, knives
and forks to lay the table in the home corner
12Notes for the teacher
- Learning objective for the lesson
- Begin to relate addition to combining two groups
of objects - Feedback notes
- Hassan can count on from the first group of cubes
- Gemma and Jack know that you should count how
many cubes there are altogether - Asha counts each group of cubes separately but
cant get to the total number yet
13Open and closed questions
Closed questions
Open questions
What is this shape called? Which one has
straight edges? How many corners has this
one? Which is round?
What can you tell me about this shape? What can
you say about the edges of this shape? And the
corners? How are these two shapes different?
14When children have difficulties
- If children are having difficulties, you could
ask - What have you done so far?
- What do you think you need to do next?
- Have you done anything like this before?
- Is there anything you could use to help you?
15Challenging questions to ask
- If children are having difficulties, you could
ask - How many cubes do you think are in that tub?
- Are there enough biscuits for all of us?
- Why do the cylinders roll better than the cubes?
16How would you tackle these calculations?
- 23 9
- 19p 18p 21p 25p 22p
- 4358 843 276
17Counting and recognising numbers
- Say and use the number names in order in familiar
contexts such as number rhymes, songs, stories,
counting games and activities (first to 5, then
10, then 20 and beyond) - Count reliably up to 10 everyday objects (first
to 5, then to 10, then beyond) giving just one
number name to each object. Recognise small
numbers without counting - Recognise numerals 1 to 9, then 0 and 10, then
beyond 10
18Counting skills (1)
- Knowing the number names in order
- Synchronising saying words and pointing
- Keeping track of objects counted
- Recognising that the number associated with the
last object touched is the total
19Counting skills (2)
- Recognising small numbers of objects without
having to count them - Counting things you cannot move or touch or see,
or objects that move around - Counting objects of very different sizes
- Recognising that if a group of objects already
counted is rearranged then the number of them
stays the same - Counting out a number of objects from a larger
set, knowing when to stop counting
20The daily mathematics lesson
- Whole-class/group activity
- Oral work and mental calculation for the
whole class to rehearse and sharpen skills - Main part of the lesson
- Interactive teaching input and child
activities including work as a whole class, in
groups, in pairs or as individuals which for
Early Years Foundation Stage may be group
activities over the morning or day - Review and assessment of childrens learning
- All children involved
- Clearing up any misunderstandings and
identifying progress - Summarising the key learning points and what
children should remember and discuss - Identify progress
- Next steps
-
21Language and mathematics
- Children talking and listening to each other and
adults - Adults listening to children's responses
- Different kinds of questioning
22The role of the TA in the whole-class/group
activity (1)
- Being responsible for a small group of children
to ensure they take part in the lesson by
- encouraging them to join in counting activities
- encouraging them to concentrate and take part
- having a smaller version of the resource used by
the teacher - helping children to use resources such as fan
cards
23The role of the TA in the whole-class/group
activity (2)
- Also
- repeating discreetly questions the teacher asks
and helping children find an answer - encouraging those who lack confidence and are
reluctant to join in - alerting the teacher if a child has an answer
- observing children and making notes about their
responses to questions - if asked, working with a small group of children
24The role of the TA in the video
- How did Angela support the children?
- What sort of questions did she use to encourage
the children to think and work things out? - What opportunities are there for the children to
apply what they are learning? - Why is it important for the TA to be involved in
planning and review with the teacher? - Why are the links between assessment, planning
and learning so important? - How did they keep the focus on learning in a
play-based environment?
25Working with a group
- How would you support children as they learn the
key words? - How would your role be different if you were
supporting children in their self-chosen play
activities around the classroom?
26The TAs role
- when working with a group
- Modelling how to use the key words
- Encouraging children to say the key words
together as a group - Encouraging children to demonstrate that they
know what the words mean - Reinforcing social skills such as taking turns
and listening to one another - when children are engaged in self-chosen
activities - Playing alongside them, providing a running
commentary on their actions and where possible
modelling the key words - Making sure they use correct vocabulary
27Giving feedback
- You could
- mention any misunderstandings children had in
relation to the work - state how far the children got with the activity
- list what they found easy and/or hard
- mention a child who has done particularly well or
who has found the work particularly difficult