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The Talking Cure: Teaching Mathematical Discourse

By Marsha Ratzel 鈥 December 31, 2012 6 min read
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What鈥檚 on the horizon for my young learners? I can鈥檛 predict the future, but I know this much is true: Performing basic computational tasks won鈥檛 be a gateway to a well-paid or long-term career. My students will need to be adept at locating information, analyzing it, and synthesizing it into something useful. They will have to be able to think, reason, and communicate to solve complex challenges.

This has big implications for how we teach math.

The Common Core State Standards, of course, highlight the importance of 鈥.鈥 The idea is that if you can鈥檛 talk about or explain the math you鈥檙e doing, you don鈥檛 know it well enough.

Middle school students are fairly accustomed to making educated guesses and talking in science class about how something works or will turn out. But it isn鈥檛 something they are used to doing in math class. I realized that my middle schoolers needed to start discussing their math ideas in a logical way: forming conjectures, then using evidence and logic to 鈥減rove鈥 their ideas. So I set out to get them talking.

Defining the Goal of Mathematical Discourse

My students had never heard of 鈥渕athematical discourse,鈥 so first we had to define it. Being typical middle school students, they liked the idea of arguing, but needed to learn the difference between arguing and discourse.

We started from the premise that a 鈥 for which someone thinks that there is evidence that the statement is true. The main thing about a conjecture is that there is no proof.鈥 That is, there鈥檚 no proof at the time, but mathematical thinkers can create a process by which we test and generate proof, learning that our conjectures are (or are not) accurate.

Kicking Off Conversation

I wasn鈥檛 exactly sure how to accomplish this kind of conversation, so I went to my Twitterverse friends and colleagues. Many math teachers I follow seem to be encouraging mathematical discourse effectively. I feel lucky to be able to read about how other 糖心动漫vlog have done this with their students before trying it with my own.

My students first worked on this kind of thinking/reasoning when I adapted an activity created by and shared by my . I presented students with 20 equations that they had to classify as being true. The results were mediocre the first time, but as we tried versions of this activity again and again to work on different kinds of problems, students got better and better.

What鈥檚 especially amazing: Students liked this approach and asked that we do something similar again. And let me tell you, when 8th graders ask to do an assignment again, it鈥檚 a real victory!

These initial experiences helped students as we tackled lessons about linear and nonlinear equations and models. We worked on different versions of , including and . In each case, students considered the information at the beginning of the problem, offered a conjecture, figured out what else they needed to know, and set about testing their ideas. They compared notes with each other to identify what was鈥攁nd wasn鈥檛鈥攚orking.

Where We Are Today

We鈥檙e nearing the end of the first semester of the school year, and lately I鈥檝e been noticing that students are approaching problems in more systematic ways.

In a recent series of lessons, we were studying functions and trying to figure out what the domain of a function might be.

Mind you, most of my students are still trying to amp up their number sense. Thinking about functions requires students to have a working knowledge of how numbers are strung along the number line and why numbers fall into different categories. This goes well beyond identifying and understanding odds, evens, composite, or prime numbers鈥擨 ask students to build on that knowledge but to consider bigger sets/categories.

For example, students had to . I asked them what kinds of 鈥攄o positive numbers, negative numbers, fractions? And what about zero? Students couldn鈥檛 find a domain if they didn鈥檛 have a grasp of those kinds of number sense questions.

After further developing their number sense, students began building conjectures. It鈥檚 critical for students to have the opportunity to exchange ideas and figure out how to test them, working alongside classmates. I stood nearby, occasionally offering questions or encouragement鈥攎ore like a sports coach than a traditional lecturing math teacher. If you鈥檙e anything like me, you may find it tough not to jump into the conversations, but it鈥檚 so exciting to hear students stretching their thinking!

I had the delight of watching students work and work on finding the domain of a function, figuring out whether a table was a function, and similar problems. Calculators in hand, they鈥檇 test out a bunch of ideas, then check in with other groups to compare notes. They鈥檇 be excited and hopeful about an initial answer 鈥 only to have that idea go, 鈥淧OP!鈥 Then they鈥檇 regroup and try another approach.

They didn鈥檛 give up. With time, they pieced together a common understanding. And they drew upon the language and concepts we鈥檇 been building, lesson by lesson, throughout the semester.

Discourse as Classroom Culture

For homework one night, students answered this question: 鈥淲hat is the set of routines that defines how you approach testing your ideas?鈥 They shared their responses with partners in class the next day, and then the class collaborated to identify a common working process. Students defined a set of steps they felt were handy for sizing up a problem, logically working through possibilities, and (after the testing) crafting a general statement.

This is abstract stuff. Open-ended educational experiences can be tough for students (especially if they haven鈥檛 learned this way before), and I see how they . But when I continuously build this kind of thinking into daily lessons, I see students becoming more confident.

Here鈥檚 my status report, midway through the school year: In a class of about 30 students, I鈥檇 wager that at least half look forward to tackling open-ended questions. About a quarter are enjoying the experience and can function well within groups, but struggle with individual work. And a quarter are frustrated鈥攖hey just want the right answer.

What does this mean for me as a teacher? I provide additional support, prompting, and encouragement to students who don鈥檛 feel comfortable with offering their guesses about math ideas. It鈥檚 a delicate balance; I don鈥檛 want to do the work for them, but they sometimes need specific direction to keep them from giving up.

Reflecting on where we are and how far we鈥檝e come this semester, I see great progress. Progress that I鈥檓 not sure we鈥檇 have accomplished without incorporating mathematical discourse and conjecturing.

Sometimes I think it鈥檚 the actual math skills where I see the most build-up of students鈥 proficiency. Other times, I believe where they鈥檝e made the most progress is in the act of talking math with each other.

When I observe my students, I see future architects, engineers, accountants and computer app developers gaining critical skills in analyzing, creating ideas, testing them out, and then defending them. I also witness students taking risks and supporting each other in being mathematical thinkers.

And as these kinds of assignments become routine, I see our classroom culture shifting. My classroom is becoming more like the collaborative, challenging work environments my students will face in the future鈥攚hether or not their careers have anything to do with math.

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