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Engaging students in maths Patrick Barmby School of Education

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It doesn t make me think I am amazing, it makes me think how I can solve this. ... Being a paper magician; The Power of Two; Stick sculptures. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Engaging students in maths Patrick Barmby School of Education


1
Engaging students in mathsPatrick BarmbySchool
of Education CEM, Durham University
2
The aim of this part of the session
  • Explore the notion of engaging students in
    maths.
  • Why?
  • 10 drop in the take-up of A-level mathematics in
    the 1990s.
  • Numbers in 2007/08 still about 6000 students down
    on the numbers taking the subject in 1990.
  • STEM Mapping Review of 2004 identified over 470
    STEM initiatives.

3
To start then
  • What does your school do to engage students in
    mathematics?
  • (3 minute discussion with your neighbour then
    feedback)

4
What is engagement?
  • The view from research
  • Newmann et al. (1992, p.12) students
    psychological investment in and effort directed
    toward learning, understanding, or mastering the
    knowledge, skills, or crafts that academic work
    is intended to promote.

5
What is engagement?
  • Fredericks et al. (2004) highlighted three
    dimensions to engagement behavioural,
    emotional/affective and cognitive.
  • Behavioural Participation
  • Emotional/affective Attitudes
  • Cognitive Effort to comprehend

6
How can we develop engagement?
  • Teachers
  • Authentic instructional work
  • Meaningful problems with relevance
  • Student ownership of the work
  • Opportunities for collaboration
  • Challenging work which calls for understanding.

7
Tasks to try
  • With your neighbour, choose one the problems
    presented on the sheet.
  • (10 minute discussion with your neighbour then
    feedback)

8
Tasks to try - feedback
  • Game of Nim
  • When picking up to 3 matches, the other person
    will lose if you leave them with 4n1.
  • For a general maximum of picking up m matches,
    the other person will lose if you leave them with
    n(m1)1.
  • A simple word problem
  • Maria is 12, Laura is 18.
  • A spot of bother
  • 258 spots (roughly)
  • More importantly, did these engage you, or would
    they engage your students?

9
Engagement from secondary masterclasses
  • From evaluation completed in July 2008
  • Masterclasses held in schools, universities,
    civic centres on Saturdays
  • Run by lecturers, guest speakers, PGCE students
  • Topic included
  • Optimization of 2D and 3D shape dimensions
  • Problem solving (carousel)
  • Being a paper magician
  • The Power of Two
  • Stick sculptures.
  • 63 of the students agreed or strongly agreed
    that their attitude towards mathematics had
    improved due to the masterclasses.
  • 70 of the students felt that their ability in
    mathematics had improved due to the
    masterclasses.

10
Quotes from students
  • I like it, it is much better than what we do at
    school in some ways. Last week we had a class
    about rainbows, which was about the degree, the
    angle and so on. I didnt know a rainbow could be
    mathematical! It combined maths and science. I
    like it much more now.
  • Some of the things in school, you write the
    answers without even thinking, its easy. But
    here you really have to think about it.

11
Quotes from students
  • I dont feel like a master either! If I was a
    master I would get all the problems straight off!
    But it does make me think. It doesnt make me
    think I am amazing, it makes me think how I can
    solve this.

12
The importance of problems/practical activities
  • I just like puzzles, sometimes in maths you
    just get told stuff or you just have to work out
    things, whereas in those ones youre actually
    making things and doing things that are
    imaginative.
  • You learn yourself through experimenting rather
    than just being told something
  • It is different methods and stuff and we put
    into practice Pythagoras theory and type of
    stuff. You cover it at school, but here you
    actually do it

13
Engagement and understanding
  • A sample of middle school students reported
    higher cognitive engagement and greater use of
    learning and metacognitive strategies in
    classrooms where teachers presented challenging
    work and pressed for understanding
  • (Fredericks et al 2004 p. 75)

14
Engagement and understanding
  • We believe that the primary goals of
    mathematics learning are understanding and
    problem solving, and that these goals are
    inextricably related because learning mathematics
    with understanding is best supported by engaging
    in problem solving. The connection between
    solving problems and deepening understanding is
    symbiotic in order to become a good problem
    solver, you need to have sound understanding.
    Thus, understanding enhances problem solving.
  • (Lester and Lambdin, 2004 p. 192)

15
Engagement and understanding
  • This is in line with the present focus on
    understanding
  • Rose Review of the Primary Curriculum the
    strand of Mathematical Understanding
  • 2008 OfSTED Report Mathematics understanding the
    score
  • Independent Review of Mathematics Teaching in
    Early Years Settings and Primary Schools
    (Williams, 2008)

16
To conclude then
  • Let us be clear about engagement
  • The important role of problems and teaching for
    understanding.

17
Thank you!
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