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Lift horizons

The purpose of this resource is to offer actions teachers can take to help foster a positive mathematical identity in students.

Teacher and student sit together in the classroom counting numbers on an abacus.

Tags

  • AudienceKaiako
  • Curriculum Level12345
  • Learning AreaMathematics and Statistics
  • Resource LanguageEnglish
  • Resource typeActivity
  • SeriesAccelerating learning

About this resource

This collection of resources has been developed to support the implementation of the Accelerated Learning in Mathematics (ALiM) project.

Low-achieving students often spend much more time on skill-based activities than their mathematically confident peers. This can lead to them feeling bogged down in number knowledge and strategies and prevent them from seeing mathematics as useful and interesting. This resource provides suggested actions for teachers to take to address this.

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    Lift horizons

    Mathematics is the study of patterns and relationships, and all strands of mathematics are based on this.

    Zevenbergen, Dole, and Wright (2004) expand on this by describing mathematics as:

    • a way of thinking, seeing, and organising the world—organising and analysing information or events in a systematic way
    • a language—a precise way to communicate complex ideas
    • a tool—useful for efficiently solving problems and making wise decisions
    • a form of art—for some, mathematics is inherently beautiful
    • power—a contributor to success, a social filter, a foundation for other powerful forms of knowledge.

              adapted from pages 8–9

    Low-achieving students often spend much more time on skill-based activities than their mathematically confident peers. This can lead to them feeling bogged down in number knowledge and strategies and prevent them from seeing mathematics as useful and interesting.

    Limiting students to repetitive skills-based activities in mathematics is a bit like limiting a piano student to scales or a hockey student to drills. In each case, the learner never gets to the point of the learning.

    Actions

    • Consider what you emphasise in your teaching. Think about ways to help students develop a big-picture view of mathematics.
    • Delve deeper when a student says, “Maths is boring." They may be trying to hide a sense of inadequacy, but they could also be responding to the way that maths has been presented to them.
    • Focus on finding patterns, identifying relationships, and problem solving.
    • Prioritise exploring mathematical ideas in context and making connections between mathematical ideas.

    Back to resource 1: Fostering positive mathematical identities.

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