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Supporting Rigorous Mathematics Teaching and Learning

Supporting Rigorous Mathematics Teaching and Learning. The Instructional Tasks Matter: Analyzing the Demand of Instructional T asks. Tennessee Department of Education Elementary School Mathematics Grades 1 & 2. Rationale Comparing Two Mathematical Tasks .

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Supporting Rigorous Mathematics Teaching and Learning

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  1. Supporting Rigorous Mathematics Teaching and Learning The Instructional Tasks Matter: Analyzing the Demand of Instructional Tasks Tennessee Department of Education Elementary School Mathematics Grades 1 & 2

  2. Rationale Comparing Two Mathematical Tasks Tasks form the basis for students’ opportunities to learn what mathematics is and how one does it, yet not all tasks afford the same levels and opportunities for student thinking. [They] are central to students’ learning, shaping not only their opportunity to learn but also their view of the subject matter. Adding It Up, National Research Council, 2001, p. 335 By analyzing two tasks that are mathematically similar, teachers will begin to differentiate between tasks that require thinking and reasoning and those that require the application of previously learned rules and procedures.

  3. Learning Goals and Activities Participants will: compare mathematical tasks to determine the demand of the tasks; and identify the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) for Mathematical Content and Mathematical Practice addressed by each of the tasks.

  4. Comparing the Cognitive Demand of Mathematical Tasks What are the similarities and differences between the two tasks? • The Strings Task • The Apples Task

  5. The Strings Task Solve the set of addition expressions. Each time you solve a problem, try to use the previous equation to solve the problem. 7 + 3 = ___ 17 + 3 = ___ 27 + 3 = ___ 37 + 3 = ___ 47 + 3 = ___ Solve each problem two different ways. Make a drawing or show your work on a number line. What pattern do you notice? If the pattern continues, what would the next three equations be? 5

  6. The Apples Task One basket has 27 green apples and 3 fell out of the basket. How many green apples do we have? Another basket has 37 red apples and 3 fell out of the basket. How many red apples do we have?

  7. The Common Core State Standards (CCSS) Examine the CCSS: • for Mathematical Content • for Mathematical Practice • Will second grade students have opportunities to use the standards within the domain of Operations and Algebraic Thinkingand Number Operations in Base Ten? • What kind of student engagement will be possible with each task? • Which Standards for Mathematical Practice will students have opportunities to use with each task?

  8. The CCSS for Mathematical Content: Grade 2 Common Core State Standards, 2010

  9. The CCSS for Mathematical Content: Grade 2 Common Core State Standards, 2010

  10. The CCSS for Mathematics: Grade 2 Common Core State Standards, 2010, p. 19, NGA Center/CCSSO

  11. The CCSS for Mathematics: Grade 2 Common Core State Standards, 2010, p. 19, NGA Center/CCSSO

  12. The CCSS for Mathematics: Grade 2 Common Core State Standards, 2010, p. 19, NGA Center/CCSSO

  13. The CCSS for Mathematics: Grade 2 Common Core State Standards, 2010, p. 19, NGA Center/CCSSO

  14. Table 1: Common Addition and Subtraction Situations Common Core State Standards, 2010

  15. The CCSS for Mathematical Practice Common Core State Standards, 2010 • Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them. • Reason abstractly and quantitatively. • Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others. • Model with mathematics. • Use appropriate tools strategically. • Attend to precision. • Look for and make use of structure. • Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning.

  16. Comparing Two Mathematical Tasks How do the differences between the Strings Task and the Apples Task impact students’ opportunity to learn the Standards for Mathematical Content and to use the Standards for Mathematical Practice?

  17. Linking to Research/Literature: The QUASAR Project Stein M. K., Smith, M. S., Henningsen, M. A., & Silver, E. A. (2000). Implementing standards-based mathematics instruction: A casebook for professional development, p. 3. New York: Teachers College Press …Not all tasks are not created equal - different tasks require different levels and kinds of student thinking.

  18. Linking to Research/Literature There is no decision that teachers make that has a greater impact on students’ opportunities to learn and on their perceptions about what mathematics is than the selection or creation of the tasks with which the teacher engages students in studying mathematics. Lappan & Briars, 1995

  19. Instructional Tasks: The Cognitive Demand of Tasks Matters

  20. Linking to Research/Literature: The QUASAR Project TASKS as they appear in curricular/ instructional materials TASKS as set up by the teachers TASKS as implemented by students Student Learning Stein, Smith, Henningsen, & Silver, 2000, p. 4 The Mathematical Tasks Framework

  21. Linking to Research/Literature: The QUASAR Project (continued) • Low-Level Tasks • The Apples Task • High-Level • The Strings Task

  22. Linking to Research/Literature: The QUASAR Project (continued) • Low-Level Tasks • Memorization • Procedures Without Connections (e.g., The Apples Task) • High-Level Tasks • Doing Mathematics (e.g., The Strings Task) • Procedures With Connections

  23. The Mathematical Task Analysis Guide Research has identified characteristics related to each of the categories on the Mathematical Task Analysis Guide (TAG). How do the characteristics that we identified when discussing the Strings Task relate to those on the TAG? Which characteristics describe the Apples Task?

  24. The Cognitive Demand of Tasks(Small Group Work) • Working individually, use the TAG to determine if tasks A – L are high- or low-level tasks. • Identify and record the characteristics on the TAG that best describe the cognitive demand of each task. • Identify the CCSS for Mathematical Practice that the written task requires students to use. • Share your categorization in pairs or trios. Be prepared to justify your conclusions using the TAG and the Mathematical Practice Standards.

  25. Identifying High-level Tasks(Whole Group Discussion) Compare and contrast the four tasks. Which of the four tasks are considered to have a high-level of cognitive demand and why?

  26. Relating the Cognitive Demand of Tasks to the CCSS for Mathematical Practice What relationships do you notice between the cognitive demand of the written tasks and the Standards for Mathematical Practice?

  27. The CCSS for Mathematical Practice Common Core State Standards, 2010 • Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them. • Reason abstractly and quantitatively. • Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others. • Model with mathematics. • Use appropriate tools strategically. • Attend to precision. • Look for and make use of structure. • Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning.

  28. Linking to Research/Literature: The QUASAR Project Stein, M. K. & Lane, S. (1996). Instructional tasks and the development of student capacity to think and reason: An analysis of the relationship between teaching and learning in a reform mathematics project. Educational Research and Evaluation, 2 (4), 50-80. If we want students to develop the capacity to think, reason, and problem-solve, then we need to start with high-level, cognitively complex tasks.

  29. Linking to Research/Literature Adding It Up, National Research Council, p. 335, 2001 Tasks are central to students’ learning, shaping not only their opportunity to learn but also their view of the subject matter.

  30. Gallery Walk Procedure • Circulate and analyze the modified tasks of the other groups. • On a yellow sticky-note, comment about the ways in which the task was modified to increase the cognitive demand of the task. • On a pink sticky-note, write wonderings if you can think of other ways the demand of the task can be increased.

  31. References Smith, M. S., Stein, M. K., Arbaugh, F., Brown, C. A., & Mossgrove, J. (2004). Characterizing the cognitive demands of mathematical tasks: A task-sorting activity. In G. W. Bright and R. N. Rubenstein (Eds.), Professional development guidebook for perspectives on the teaching of mathematics: Companion to the sixty-sixth yearbook (pp. 45 - 47).Reston, VA: National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. Smith, M. S. & Stein, M. K. (1998). Selecting and creating mathematical tasks: From research to practice. Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 3 (5), 344 - 350.

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