Saturday, July 30, 2016

TAI and ALiM

I have always loved everything about Maths and sometimes have not understood the difficulties people have understanding MATHS.

At the moment my Teacher Action Inquiry is on how an intervention can make a impact for the struggling mathematicians in my class. This has made me unpack what maths is, how it is taught (by myself and the school's protocols) and why don't these children "get it". These children have been failing in Maths for sometime and have been on the radar as children needing help. Of the 5 children in the intervention, 1 was part of an intervention last year.

What I first noticed of these children, was their lack of confidence and willingness to try to solve problems. Even when the problem was at their level they need more encouragement to use what they did know such as skip counting, making tidy tens and counting through 10s, 100s, 1000s. These children said out loud to me, " I can't do maths" "I don't get it" "Is the answer..." " I'm not sure, could it be.."

So how do you get children to take risks when they have always got the answer wrong? The approach needs to be about the learning not so much the answer.

  • How will you find the answer? 
  • What do you know and how can you use that?
I also decided that these children needed some of the fundamentals of how numbers work, what they look like and the unpacking of the language of maths. To do this I work with these children every day for an extra 15mins after lunch. They are doing the thinking and I am recording their thoughts, and materials to manipulate are used. I have used a range of number knowledge problems as well as taught them new strategies before the rest of the class (front loading) and their confidence has improved. Also at the end of the week, I teach them a game using counters, cards, dice and photocopied and laminated game boards to take home and play with their families and friends. The game reinforces the learning of the week. The children are required at the end of each session to tell me what they have learnt and how they can use the strategy or knowledge in the real world.

As part of the intervention (funded by the Ministry) parent contact is a requirement and the ALiM mentor ran a parent night to informing the parents of why their child had been chosen, what we hoped to achieve and what they could expect during the 15 weeks. I have used my class dojo to regularly inform the parents of the children's efforts and how they are progressing. Also when those parents come to class, I make an effort to reinforce the progress the child is making in maths and asking them what they have noticed.

 I have discovered that the children are now more willing to share ideas with their peers when first challenged with a new problem. They want to record their thinking and will challenge others when they think/know they are wrong. The children are often ready before myself after lunch and want to learn new maths. Also some of the other children in the class have joined in the group as they see themselves not doing as well as the selected group.

My challenge is to sustain the confidence and knowledge for these children for the rest of the year as the problems become more challenging and without the intervention. Maybe I need to set aside time for these children to come for help/ next steps when working with the normal rotations.


Here is the link to my updated Inquiry template so far. SH - 2016