Cultivating Perseverance in Students Who Struggle in the Elementary Classroom
Research has shown that for students living in poverty or who have struggled with mathematics, instruction commonly focuses on "rote skills and procedures, with scant attention to meaningful mathematics learning" (NCTM, 2014). The Standards for Mathematical Practice (SMP) define guidelines for developing “mathematical character” in our students. To expect struggling students to meet SMP 1: “Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them,” educators must first teach them to name and normalize productive struggle. When that is not enough to maintain perseverance, teachers must ask questions that encourage agency. Participants will learn how to support teachers and para-educators in creating learning cultures that embrace “tinkering”; shift “helping” to “conferring,”; and provide mathematical models to scaffold grade-level learning. All of which establish a culture for learning and encourage confidence in at-risk students who typically struggle in math.
Download Session Materials
Handouts
- 0-Coversheet.pdf
- 1a-References for Cultivating Perseverance.pdf
- 1b-Problem Solving K-2 with pictures.pdf
- 2a-Problem solving 3-5footer.pdf
- 2b-3a-Conferring Hoffer.pdf
- 3b-6b-Models for Coherence CC and NBT.pdf
- 7a-8a-Video Tier 2 Look-Fors.pdf
- 8b-implications.pdf
- Upload.only-Email Correspondences with MV Title.pdf
- Upload.only-How Kids Learn Resilience.pdf
- Upload.only-Teaching Between the Desks 2016.pdf