Math
Math
Math
high school math teachers are troublingly attached to their preferred algorithms for math
computations because they are not very comfortable with the concepts behind math. She referred
to one specific example in multi-digit multiplication. Elementary school curriculums are moving
toward using the lattice method of multi-digit multiplication, which is just as much of an
algorithm as the traditional method of using 0s as placeholders (which is not exactly an accurate
description but is how most teacher explain it). When these children reach middle school,
however, the lattice method causes much consternation amongst their teachers, who do not know
the algorithm, have not studied it as part of their curriculum, and do not have the deep math
knowledge to understand why it works. If they were like the Chinese teachers that Ma
interviewed, they would be able to compute the problems in multiple different ways, as many of
the Chinese teachers did [CITATION]
I myself have worked in high school with colleagues who did not have an understanding
of the concepts that they are teaching. I once observed a ninth-grade math teacher teaching a
lesson on dividing with fractions; he taught only the procedure, and when I asked him why the
procedure worked, he could not give me an answer. When I worked in first- and second-grade
classrooms, I saw how little time the teachers devoted to studying the math curriculum (and
rightly so, because they had so little time for planning!). The elementary teachers I worked with
rarely explained the concepts behind procedures, or, if they did, they did not do so fully. In
addition, the teachers I have worked with have all told me that they understand language arts
more than they do math, so they put more focus and thought into the former. It seems that math
is not the strong suit of most teacherseven those who teach math at the secondary level!
Ultimately, my own experiences confirm what Ma describes about U.S. teachers.
The last thing that Ma discusses in the book is how teachers can gain a profound
understanding of fundamental mathematics. Some of the ways that the Chinese teachers had such
success with math are studying the teaching materials, talking about math with other teachers,
learning math from studentsthat is, listening to how they solve problems, as well as
investigating their questions with interestand, of course, doing more math (pp. 130-141). Ma
describes how Chinese teachers engage in learning about math from their fellow teachers (p.
137). I have not seen teachers in the United States collaborate to study math together at all,
except in one seminar that we had at Stanley. I found that math seminar, during which we spent
most of our time solving math problems together, to be enjoyable and exciting. I would love to
have the time to spend with other teachers learning and practicing math ourselves, and something
that I would like to commit to as an elementary school teacher is strengthening my own math
skills by practicing and learning the concepts behind the procedures that I teach.
Ma also points out that teachers sometimes disparage textbooks and curriculums,
believing that they can create a better plan. She writes that this is unnecessary, and that teachers
can and should use curriculum to inform their teaching, while using their own deep
understanding of math to bolster the curriculum (p. 150). She writes extensively about how
Chinese math teachers construct knowledge packages to help them teach concepts: in order to
teach subtraction with regrouping, for instance, students must already know related concepts
such as adding and subtracting within 10 and within 20, adding and subtracting as inverse
operations, and composing and decomposing a higher value unit (p. 19). This is my chief
takeaway from Mas research: that when I am teaching elementary mathematics, I must carefully
study the curriculum, make sure that I practice and understand the math contained in that
curriculum, and support the curriculum by creating knowledge packages for the concepts that my
students are learning, which should not be particularly difficult if I understand the concepts and
how they are related.