Student and Teacher Roles in Contemporary Classrooms


Parts of the ‘Contemporary' Mathematics Lesson

         The student . . . . .
 
Before: Activate
  • Students develop an understanding of the problem
  • Students recall prior learning
  • Students ask questions and participate in discussion for further clarification
  • Students develop possible strategies and discuss them with their peers

During: Acquire/Apply
  • Students share their work within their small groups, check answers and strategies, ask questions to provoke further clarification and elaboration
  • All students share their strategies, listen to the ideas of others, question what they do not understand and defend their thinking
  • Students are working with hands-on-material such as manipulatives
  • Students are discussing using mathematical language 
  • Students find ways of displaying their information
After: Connect/Reflect
  • The class gathers strategies by watching presented strategies
  • Students defend their strategies or develop new ones based on what they have seen
  • Students engage in discussion on key concepts and ideas
  • STudents make connections between key concepts and ideas
  • Students can participate in a gallery walk where they can examine and comment on the work of their peers



Parts of the Contemporary Math Lesson
        
          The Teacher...
 
Before: Activate
  • Sets up classroom and materials up and ready to go before students enter
  • Prepares a variety of manipulatives and materials to work with 
  • Begins the lesson by asking the student to draw upon their prior knowledge or brain storm 
  • The teacher may stand at the front of the class, circulate, or sit in a visible place (desktop) to maintain conversational tone.
During: Acquire/Apply
  • Teacher groups students for the task as required

  • Teacher provides instructions regarding the problem that focus on higher order thinking
  • Teacher circulates during task to correct and assist where necessary
  • Listen for discussion and use of academic language
  • Understand student strategies 
  • The teacher is visible and available for help

After: Connect/Reflect
  • Facilitates student-driven discussion 
  • Helps students reviews solutions and discuss what works and what doesn’t work
  • Suggests areas for improvement and further opportunity to apply learning to other problems
  • The teacher organizes student work  

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