pact mathematics connections to good pedagogy. developmental progression of learning less clear....
TRANSCRIPT
PaCT MathematicsConnections to good pedagogy
Developmental progression of learning less clear. Detracting from teacher broad content knowledge. Focus on incremental progress.
Post national standards
0 1 2 34
5 Early Add
6 Adv. + Early x
7 Adv. x Props.
8
After After After End End End End End 1 Y 2 Y 3 Y Y 4 Y 5 Y 6 Y 7 Y 8
Post national standards
Reporting against a universal expectation for time at school eg. Well Below, Below, At, Above
(instead of reporting level of achievement)
Narrows the teacher focus around the expectation for time at school of the year level they teach.
High stakes
Post national standards
High stakes + limited assessment tools
Post national standards
PAT Maths
easTTle Maths
Diagnostic Interview
GloSS
High stakes + limited assessment tools
Narrowed focus for teaching
Post national standards
Tendency to teach to the ‘useable’ assessment measures
When using PaCT... Judge all aspects at a point in time.
Need relatively current knowledge of where a student is at across all aspects.
When using PaCT... Judge all aspects at a point in time.
Need relatively current knowledge of where a student is at across all aspects.
Need shorter cycles of revisiting ‘strands’
Integrating ‘Strands’ within ‘maths time’
Making sure numeracy strategies are well integrated into other strands and vice versa.eg. teaching fractions & probability, or addition and algebra at the same time
1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, … Next five? Rule?
Maths across the Curriculum Looking for teachable moments and monitoring the maths aspects as part of teaching in other learning areas.
eg. building a model animal enclosure to meet its needs.
International rugby field:Playing field length - Min 94m, Max 100mPlaying field Width - Min 68m, Max 70mIn-goal length - Min 6m, Max 22mIn-goal Width - Min 68m, Max 70m
Biggest and smallest area?
Hot Spots/enrichments that revisit prior learning
When using PaCT... Some important aspects in PaCT haven’t been a big focus of other assessment tools.
Need to include these in teaching.
Symbols and ExpressionsNot really taught explicitly- knowing
5+6 =? but not 5+?=11- Common errors eg.
To solve 3+9 writing 3+7=10+2=12
So...Emphasis on recording thinking❏ using number lines, arrays, set diagrams etc.❏ correct use of = sign❏ understanding number properties eg. associative,
commutative etc.❏ setting problems that involve a variety of unknowns
When using PaCT... The illustrations emphasise how the students demonstrate their thinking and understanding.
Lack of Understanding
Children were taught to manipulate numbers using strategies almost as algorithms without any real depth of understanding. This was evident when students were challenged when problem solving in other contexts or when several steps were involved.
Performance of UnderstandingUsing a variety of contexts within instructional groups, or rich tasks/problem solving to demonstrate understanding of concepts
eg. fraction of a number - what’s 2/3 of 24?- using time, money, measurement, shape,
sets of objects etc.
When problem solvingImportance of teacher
observation/questioning/monitoring - rove, rove rove!Importance of developing students skills in problem-
solving and describing mathematical thinking.http://nzmaths.co.nz/mathematics-inquiry-communitieshttp://www.nzmaths.co.nz/bracken/pd/Introduction_to_MIC/index.html
set problems/investigations that involve several steps
2 step problem exampleYou heard that NZ beat England 15-12. (Yay!)The points could have been scored in a number of different ways.What is the chance that NZ scored more tries?(assuming each way is just as likely as another)
Still wondering...how useful information within PaCT is to
inform teachingwhat assessment information is important to
record and how to best keep track of it (and what other assessments give us important information)
Good pedagogyRegular practice activities that connect to prior learning - with rigour. Cross-curricula learning to keep cycling through mathematical aspects, connect to other contexts, see
maths as real lifeBlend knowledge and strategy teaching (not assessed separately in PaCT) - flow in learningProblem-solving - observe and question students articulating, manipulating, recording
show understanding through authentic applicationrequire complexity of reasoning or judgementstudents recording it!
Teacher roving - observing, questioning, challenging, alternatives, discussingProblem solving groups, trained in expectation of contribution, allow maths discussion (set expectation), learning from each other. teach what to do if stuck. teach questions to ask. Mark your work! Reward persistent behaviour.
Symbols and expressions - understanding and using (like the surface features of writing, phonics and grammar of reading)
Guided maths - use problems not ‘routines’Knowing what to look for at the developmental level- critical content knowledge of the teacher