Prologue
Acknowledgments
About the Authors
1. Managing Your Classroom
1. Create your own support network as soon as you begin your first
teaching job.
2. Before beginning a lesson, put an outline of what you are going
to cover on the blackboard.
3. Make realistic time estimates when planning your lessons.
4. Make classroom activities flow smoothly.
5. Have “eyes in the back of your head” so you notice misbehavior
at an early stage.
6. Help students develop self-control to enhance their thinking and
independence, as well as to ease your own workload.
7. Do more than one thing at a time.
8. Work directly with individual students as often as possible.
9. Use classwide peer tutoring to help your students learn, whether
or not they have learning disabilities.
10. Encourage students to be mentally active while reading their
textbooks.
11. Avoid reacting emotionally when evaluating problematic
situations in the classroom.
12. Carefully select problems for use in cooperative learning
groups.
13. Encourage students to work cooperatively with other
students.
14. Use group problem solving to stimulate students to apply
mathematical thinking skills.
15. Use the Jigsaw Technique of cooperative learning as an
interesting and effective way for students to learn.
2. Enhancing Teaching Techniques
16. Find out about your students’ motivation regarding mathematics,
and use that knowledge to refine your instruction.
17. When trying to determine how to motivate students’ interest in
mathematics, teachers should differentiate between personal and
situational interest and use both forms to increase students’
motivation to learn mathematics.
18. Treat students in ways that reflect the belief that you have
high expectations for their performance.
19. Praise mistakes!
20. Call on students more frequently to promote their
achievement.
21. Make sure to pause for at least four seconds after listening to
a student’s communication before responding.
22. Use questions for different and versatile functions in the
classroom.
23. Teachers should be tactical in their use of questions.
24. Make a lesson more stimulating and interesting by varying the
types of questions you ask students.
25. Use a variety of sequences to ask questions.
26. Use a variety of strategies to encourage students to ask
questions about difficult assignments.
27. Use a Question-Asking Checklist and an Evaluation Notebook to
help students become better learners.
28. Use school fundraising projects, such as students’ selling
candy, as the basis of mathematics lessons.
29. Don’t give students feedback on their performance too
early.
30. Use homework as a way of delving more deeply into important
mathematical concepts and skills.
31. When doing inquiry lessons, give students clearly written
materials to guide the inquiry process.
3. Facilitating Student Learning
32. Use inquiry-based learning in addition to problem-based
learning.
33. To reduce math anxiety, focus on both the thoughts and the
emotions of the students.
34. Adolescents need extended support to acquire the ability to
visualize.
35. Use graphic representations or illustrations to enhance
students’ memory while they are listening to you. Abstract
representations such as flow charts are more effective than
colorful pictures.
36. Teach students to ask themselves questions about the
problems/tasks they are working on.
37. Teachers can help students learn to ask better questions.
38. Give students the kind of feedback that will most help them
improve their future performance.
39. Help students understand their own thought processes and guide
them in learning to think like mathematicians.
40. Playing makes understanding mathematics easier and more
fun.
41. Select and carefully structure homework assignments so that
they require the development of mathematical thinking and
reasoning. Anticipate changes that might occur while students are
working at home.
42. Use homework assignments as opportunities for students to get
practice and feedback on applying their mathematical knowledge and
skills.
43. Assign homework and other projects requiring students to write
about connections between mathematics and other subjects.
44. Consider whether a student’s learning weakness might involve a
deficiency in auditory perception.
45. Complex exercises that give students freedom tend to fit the
way older students learn.
46. Emphasize higher-level thinking objectives in regular
mathematics classes so that all students incorporate the features
of enriched academic and honors classes.
47. Use analogies to help students develop more valid
conceptions.
4. Assessing Student Progress
48. Feedback on practice is essential for improving student
performance.
49. Promptly give students information or feedback about their
performance.
50. Make sure students pay attention to the feedback you give
them.
51. Systematically incorporate review into your instructional
plans, especially before beginning a new topic.
52. Provide all students, especially students lacking confidence,
with “formative assessments” to allow them additional opportunities
to succeed in mathematics.
53. Find out why students rate a mathematical task as difficult so
you can increase the difficulty of exercises and tests more
effectively.
54. Increase your understanding of factors that affect students’
attitudes before and after testing. You may be surprised!
55. Be aware of students’ different levels of test anxiety as it
relates to different subject areas, and use a variety of techniques
to help them overcome their test anxiety.
56. Do not assume that students accept responsibility for or agree
with their bad grades on tests.
57. If students do not follow your instructions and/or if their
achievements do not fulfill your expectations, the cause may not be
students’ incompetence. It could be a result of your
self-overestimation.
5. Teaching Problem Solving
58. Get students to “think out loud” when solving problems.
59. Have students study written model solutions to problems while
learning and practicing problem solving.
60. Encourage students to make mental pictures while applying rules
to solve problems.
61. Provide hints or clues or ask leading questions when students
need help solving problems instead of giving them the answers.
Gradually phase out this support so as to foster independent
problem solving.
62. Teach students to ask themselves questions about what they
already know about a problem or task they are working on.
63. Emphasize the general principles that underlie solving specific
types of problems.
64. Examine your students’ knowledge of mathematics and use this
information to write challenging word problems that they will enjoy
solving.
65. Structure teaching of mathematical concepts and skills around
problems to be solved, using a problem-centered or problem-based
approach to learning.
66. Help students learn without relying on teacher-centered
approaches. Give them carefully chosen sequences of worked-out
examples and problems to solve.
67. Students need time to practice planning their solutions to
problems.
6. Considering Social Aspects in Teaching Mathematics
68. Make multicultural connections in mathematics.
69. Find out about your students’ families and how their values and
practices might affect students’ attitudes and performance in
mathematics.
70. Reach out to parents to form a partnership for educating
elementary and high school students.
71. Inform parents that they should not let media reports about
studies of other children change their views of their own
children’s abilities to be successful in mathematics.
72. Some students do not think they have control over their
academic successes and failures. Help these students recognize that
they do have some control.
73. Teach students, especially girls, to believe that success in
mathematics results from their efforts.
74. Give girls the same quantity and quality of teacher attention
as boys.
75. Make special efforts to encourage girls to study
mathematics.
76. Use different motivational strategies for girls and boys.
77. Take into consideration how students view successful teachers
and how this differs for girls and boys.
78. Praise, encourage, and help your older students.
79. Does grade skipping hurt mathematically talented students
socially and emotionally? Don’t worry about accelerating your
talented students!
Resource. What the Authors Say: Enriching Instruction
Epilogue
References
Index
Alfred S. Posamentier is professor of mathematics education and dean of the School of Education at the City College of the City University of New York. He has authored and co-authored several resource books in mathematics education for Corwin Press.
"I love the format of the strategies, research, standards,
applications, and pitfalls—so easy to follow."
*Deborah Gordon, Teacher*
"A great resource for math teachers to fine tune the
strategies they are currently using. I wouldn’t need much
encouragement to recommend it to a colleague who is new to the
field and is currently having problems in any of the areas covered
in the book."
*Kimberly C. Smith, Teacher*
"A unique opportunity to really help new and novice
teachers."
*M. Brad Patzer, Teacher*
"The strategies are understandable and easy to
implement...honest and reality based, not preachy versions of what
could be."
*Charles Espalin, Director, School Counseling Program*
"For the secondary mathematics teacher, the combination of
practical tips confirmed by educational research provides a
much-needed addition to our arsenal of instructional tools.
Particularly for new teachers, this book is like having a colleague
with years of experience always at your side."
*Linda Curtis-Bey, Director of Mathematics*
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