Title: Capturing Growth in Teacher Mathematical Knowledge
1Capturing Growth in Teacher Mathematical Knowledge
An Inquiry into Elementary and Middle School
Teacher Understanding of Algebraic Reasoning and
Relationships
- The Association of Mathematics Teacher Educators
- Eleventh Annual Conference
- 26 January 2007
- Dr. DeAnn Huinker, Lee Ann Pruske Melissa
Hedges - The Milwaukee Mathematics Partnership
- University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
- www.mmp.uwm.edu
This material is based upon work supported by the
National Science Foundation Grant No.
EHR-0314898.
2Session Goals
- Contribute to the discussions around defining and
measuring the specialized mathematical knowledge
needed for teaching. - Share and examine performance assessments that
look more closely at growth in the mathematical
knowledge targeted on algebra.
3What distinguishes mathematical knowledge from
the specialized knowledge needed for teaching
mathematics?
4Common vs. Specialized Mathematical Knowledge
- Encompasses
- Common knowledge of mathematics that any
well-educated adult should have. - Specialized to the work of teaching and that
only teachers need to know. - Source Ball, D.L. Bass, H. (2005). Who knows
mathematics well enough to teach third grade?
American Educator.
5Some interesting dilemmas
Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching (MKT)
- Why do we move the decimal point when we
multiply decimals by ten? - Is zero even or odd?
- For fractions, why is 0/12 0 and 12/0
undefined? - How is 7 x 0 different from 0 x 7?
- 35 x 25 ? (30 x 20) (5 x 5) Why?
- Is a rectangle a square or is a square a
rectangle? Why?
6Capturing Growth in Teacher Mathematical Knowledge
7Setting
- Content Strand Algebraic Reasoning and
Relationships - Pretest September 2005
- School Year Monthly sessions (20 hours)
- Posttest June 2006
- 120 Classroom teachers Kindergarten - Eighth
Grade
8Algebraic Relationships
Expressions, Equations, and Inequalities
Generalized Properties
Sub-skill Areas
a x b b x a
Patterns, Relations, and Functions
??? 25? 37
9Items
- Measure mathematics that teachers use in
teaching, not just what they teach. - Orient the items around problems or tasks that
all teachers might face in teaching math. - MMP performance assessments to give insight into
depth of teacher knowledge developed around
monthly seminars.
10Teacher Growth in Mathematical Knowledge for
Teaching (MKT)
Gain 0.296 t 5.584 p 0.000
11Complete the following
- A) Draw a sketch of a rectangle to represent the
problem 46 x 37. Partition and label the
rectangle to show the four partial products. - B) Make connections from your partial product
strategy (in part A) to the traditional
multiplication algorithm, explaining how they are
related. - C) Make connections from your partial products
strategy (Part A) to the problem (4x 6) (3x
6), explaining how they are related.
12Reflect and Discuss
- What is the pure mathematical knowledge you
employed while completing this task? - What mathematical knowledge embedded in this task
might be accessed during the teaching of this
concept? - Is this knowledge the same?
13Performance Assessment
- Gain additional insights into our teachers
abilities to - Make solid connections between the area model of
multiplication and the distributive property. - Understand and explain connections between the
standard algorithm and use of the distributive
property for multiplication. - Generalize use of the distributive property.
14Examining Teacher Work
- As you reflect on teacher work samples consider
the following - Is the mathematics correct? Are mathematical
symbols used with care? - Are the connections between representations
clear? - Are explanations mathematically correct and
understandable?
15Performance Activity Results
- 16 (9/56) proficient, good explanations and
connections. - 50 (28/56) getting there, good procedural
skills, limited explanations. - 34 (19/56) did not accurately or completely
solve the tasks.
16Next steps
Next Steps . . .
- Do teachers scores predict that they teach with
mathematical skill, or that their students learn
more, or better? - How might we connect teachers scores to student
achievement data? - More open-ended items to show reasoning
17 Knowing mathematics for teaching includes
knowing and being able to do the mathematics that
we would want any competent adult to know. But
knowing mathematics for teaching also requires
more, and this more is not merely skill in
teaching the material.
- Ball, D.L. (2003). What mathematical
knowledge is needed for teaching mathematics?
Secretarys Summit on Mathematics, U.S.
Department of Education, February 6, 2003
Washington, D.C. Available at http//www.ed.gov/in
its/mathscience.
18Mathematical knowledge for teaching must be
serviceable for the mathematical work that
teaching entails, for offering clear
explanations, to posing good problems to
students, to mapping across alternative models,
to examining instructional materials with a keen
and critical mathematical eye, to modifying or
correcting inaccurate or incorrect expositions.
- Ball, D.L. (2003). What mathematical knowledge
is needed for teaching mathematics? prepared for
the Secretarys Summit on Mathematics, U.S.
Department of Education, February 6, 2003
Washington, D.C. Available at http//www.ed.gov/in
its/mathscience. (p. 8)
19Knowing Mathematics for Teaching
- Demands depth and detail that goes well beyond
what is needed to carry out the algorithm - Use instructional materials wisely
- Assess student progress
- Make sound judgment about presentation, emphasis,
and sequencing often fluently and with little
time - Size up a typical wrong answer
- Offer clear mathematical explanations
- Use mathematical symbols with care
- Possess a specialized fluency with math language
- Pose good problems and tasks
- Introduce representations that highlight
mathematical meaning of selected tasks