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“If learning doesn’t happen, there has been no teaching. The actions of learning and teaching are inseparable.” Fosnot,

“If learning doesn’t happen, there has been no teaching. The actions of learning and teaching are inseparable.” Fosnot, Dolk, 2001. “Enabling students to learn with understanding depends heavily on the opportunities that a teacher provides to his or her students.” Fagan, 2005.

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“If learning doesn’t happen, there has been no teaching. The actions of learning and teaching are inseparable.” Fosnot,

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  1. “If learning doesn’t happen, there has been no teaching. The actions of learning and teaching are inseparable.” Fosnot, Dolk, 2001

  2. “Enabling students to learn with understanding depends heavily on the opportunities that a teacher provides to his or her students.” Fagan, 2005

  3. “The assumption was that math facts had to be taught before problem solving could be. But the reverse approach, in fact, works. The techniques of teaching math facts in the context of real experiences is succeeding beyond anyone’s expectation.” Berliner, 1990

  4. “It boils down to this--- if you can’t talk about math, you are unlikely to do it well. Story problems, anyone?” Newsweek 1996

  5. “Math is not about numbers or the right answer. Math is about discovery. and exploring different ways of thinking. It’s about teaching your students that they can solve anything. And giving them the tools to make it possible.” Unknown

  6. “There are two kinds of teachers: the kind that fill you up with so much quail shot that you can’t move, and the kind that just gives you a little prod behind and you jump to the skies.” Robert Frost

  7. “The greatest sign of success for a teacher…. is to be able to say: The children are now working as if I did not exist.” Montessori

  8. “HOW a student learns is as important as WHAT a student learns. WHAT a student learns depends on HOW the student learns it.” NCTM Standards

  9. “Mathematics is no more computation than typing is to literature.” John Allen Paulos

  10. “It is the duty of all teachers, and of teachers of mathematics in particular, to expose their students to problems much more than to facts.” Paul Halmos

  11. “Arithmetic is being able to count up to twenty without taking off your shoes.” Mickey Mouse

  12. “What’s one and one and one and one and one and one and one and one and one and one? I don’t know, said Alice. I lost count. She can’t do addition, said the Red Queen.” Lewis Carroll

  13. “A mathematician, like a painter or poet, is a maker of patterns. If his patterns are more permanent than theirs, it is because they are made with ideas.” G. H. Hardy

  14. “We cannot hope that many children will learn mathematics unless we find a way to share our enjoyment and show them its beauty as well as its utility.” Mary Beth Ruskai

  15. “Mathematics, in the common lay view, is a static discipline based on formulas…But outside the public view, mathematics continues to grow at a rapid rate… the guide to this growth is not calculation and formulas, but an open-ended search for pattern.” Lynn A. Steen

  16. “Calculators can only calculate – they cannot do mathematics.” John Van De Walle

  17. “Attitudes create a self perpetuating cycle: Children with positive beliefs about math perform well, which makes them like math and feel good about themselves; students with negative beliefs fall farther behind, which reinforces their low expectations and sense of failure.” Nancy Kober

  18. “Children do not learn by doing… They learn by thinking, discussing, and reflecting on what they have done.” Dr. William Speer

  19. “Learning Mathematics: In reality, no one can TEACH mathematics. Effective teachers are those who can stimulate students to LEARN mathematics. Educational research offers compelling evidence that students learn mathematics well only when they CONSTRUCT their own mathematical understanding.” Everybody Counts

  20. “Connections are crucial. They are the bridges between informal and formal understandings. Some are formed through conversation, some through writing, some through drawing. All are formed by the mind of the learner, often with the guidance of the teacher.” Unknown

  21. “The soundest way to convince students of the relevance of math is not by saying so, but by offering a curriculum that is relevant to today’s job and life demands, one that builds students’ problem-solving skills, challenges their powers of reasoning, and incorporates technology.” Nancy Kober

  22. “Skills are to mathematics what scales are to music or spelling is to writing. The objective is to write, to play music, or to solve problems – not just master skills.” Everybody Counts

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