The Morning Call

Teaching math same old way won’t get us out of this mess

- Oliver Miller Chicago Tribune

If ever we needed a wake-up call to improve math learning, especially for historical­ly marginaliz­ed students, the latest scores from the Nation’s Report Card and Northwest Evaluation Associatio­n provide it.

They show math scores hitting the lowest level in decades and pandemic recovery efforts stalling. The trend lines are particular­ly worrisome for low-income students like mine, whose existing opportunit­ies and learning gaps worsened during the pandemic. The need for a major shift predates COVID-19, but the learning lost during this time more acutely highlights the need for change.

I’m guilty of previously using failing instructio­nal methods myself. My early approach to teaching math was a bit like teaching someone to shoot free throws. I thought repetition was everything. If students just practiced the same skills repeatedly and committed them to muscle memory, I figured they’d be ready come “game time.”

I modeled how to solve a math problem using a single procedural approach, then students worked silently practicing the method that made sense to me. I learned math this way, so I taught it this way. While some students could replicate my math, they didn’t understand it and weren’t learning how to communicat­e their strategies. Such superficia­l mastery left them unable to retain or build on their learning in subsequent weeks and years.

After my first two years as a teacher, I tried something new. I started teaching my students how to think more like a coach — to think strategica­lly about the math and what choices they could make, to decide what models to use, to see the “game” as more than free throws. For a task such as solving percent problems, for example, instead of simply identifyin­g the missing informatio­n and plugging it into a formula, I now prompt them to select from various strategies building on previous work they’ve done with ratios to solve the problem.

A question might be: How much money did you start with if you spent $7 and this was 35% of your money? Some students might solve it by drawing a double number line, while others might create a ratio table or use more convention­al methods. That’s fine. By selecting a strategy that makes sense to them, they are connecting percentage­s to previous learning about ratios and improving their understand­ing and retention of both concepts.

The beauty of math is that, like life, there’s no single approach that works best all the time. This also allows for rich classroom discussion­s as students make connection­s between the models they and their peers select.

The way I taught math before didn’t encourage my class to make connection­s to their previous learning. I usually had around half my students show proficienc­y on lessons related to percentage­s, with that figure declining unless we did regular review exercises. By teaching the topic cohesively as an extension of students’ existing ratio knowledge, I now get closer to 80% proficienc­y that I can far more easily maintain over the year because now solving a percentage problem and solving a ratio problem involve the same thinking and tools.

Nowadays my classes typically start with me asking students what they recall from the previous lesson. It’s empowering for them to build on their knowledge. Students talk constantly in class and solve problems collaborat­ively, rather than working silently. The learning process is noisier (and messier), but students are truly thinking and making decisions that make sense to them.

This type of instructio­n will improve math learning and help lift those low scores. Equally important, by giving my sixth graders a chance to think, talk, execute a plan and compare their strategies to those of other students, I’m no longer teaching my students to simply and thoughtles­sly follow the instructio­ns of whoever happens to claim a position of authority. Instead, I’m helping them sharpen the life skills that mathematic­ians, CEOs, doctors, engineers and other profession­als use every day.

Oliver Miller teaches sixth grade at KIPP One Academy in Chicago. He also provides profession­al developmen­t for teachers using the Eureka Math2 curriculum.

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR/AP ?? Elementary math teacher Margie Howells teaches a fifth grade class in West Virginia. The latest scores from the Nation’s Report Card and Northwest Evaluation Associatio­n show math scores hitting the lowest level in decades and pandemic recovery efforts stalling.
GENE J. PUSKAR/AP Elementary math teacher Margie Howells teaches a fifth grade class in West Virginia. The latest scores from the Nation’s Report Card and Northwest Evaluation Associatio­n show math scores hitting the lowest level in decades and pandemic recovery efforts stalling.

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