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Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results Save | Export
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Melissa A. Gallagher; Jennifer E. Scholla – Mathematics Teacher: Learning and Teaching PK-12, 2025
Adaptive teachers use student data to guide instruction. Learn about using an anecdotal record form to support adaptive teaching. In this article, the authors describe how teachers can use learning trajectories to make adaptive decisions to meet the needs of their students. They provide an example using the U .S. Math Recovery Council's learning…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Learning Trajectories, Developmentally Appropriate Practices, Student Needs
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Ebby, Caroline B.; Hulbert, Elizabeth T.; Fletcher, Nicole – Teaching Children Mathematics, 2019
Assessing student learning traditionally involves determining whether students can solve a certain percentage of problems correctly, under the assumption that this achievement indicates they have the knowledge and understanding they need to progress to new topics. This article explores what teachers can learn from looking closely at student…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Problem Solving, Mathematical Logic, Learning Processes
Schifter, Deborah; Bastable, Virginia; Russell, Susan Jo – National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, 2018
The "Reasoning Algebraically about Operations Casebook" was developed as the key resource for participants' Developing Mathematical Ideas seminar experience. The thirty-four cases, written by teachers describing real situations and actual student thinking in their classrooms, provide the basis of each session's investigation into the…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Elementary Schools, Middle Schools, Teaching Methods
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Miller, Geoffrey; Obara, Samuel – Australian Mathematics Teacher, 2017
A mathematical mnemonic is a visual cue or verbal strategy that is used to aid initial memorisation and recall of a mathematical concept or procedure. Used wisely, mathematical mnemonics can benefit students' performance and understanding. Explorations into how mathematical mnemonics work can also offer students opportunities to engage in proof…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Mnemonics, Learning Strategies
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Whitacre, Ian; Schoen, Robert C.; Champagne, Zachary; Goddard, Andrea – Teaching Children Mathematics, 2017
Data (Schoen et al. 2016) suggests that because many students' understanding of subtraction is limited by thinking about the operation only as take-away or by using a default procedure, such as the standard subtraction algorithm in the United States, second graders are much more likely to solve 100 minus 3 correctly than 201 minus 199. This…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, Subtraction, Concept Formation
Powell, Sarah R.; Fuchs, Lynn S. – TEACHING Exceptional Children, 2018
Many general and special education teachers teach mathematics word problems by defining problems as a single operation and linking key words to specific operations. Unfortunately, teaching students to approach word problems in these ways discourages mathematical reasoning and frequently produces incorrect answers. This article lists eight common…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Word Problems (Mathematics), Problem Solving
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Bishop, Jessica Pierson; Lamb, Lisa L.; Philipp, Randolph A.; Whitacre, Ian; Schappelle, Bonnie P. – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2016
Recognizing and using mathematical structure are key components of mathematical reasoning. The authors believe that one productive way to support students' use of structure is by identifying opportunities to address structure in the context of what teachers are already doing, rather than developing additional tasks or new curriculum materials. The…
Descriptors: Mathematical Logic, Mathematics Instruction, Instructional Materials, Numbers
Whitacre, Ian; Schoen, Robert C.; Champagne, Zachary; Goddard, Andrea – Grantee Submission, 2016
How much is 41 - 39? How about 100 - 3? Which of those computations was easier for you to do? It so happens that first graders are much more likely to solve 100 - 3 correctly than 41 - 39. Likewise, second graders are much more likely to solve 100 - 3 correctly than 201 - 199. Our data (Schoen et al. 2016) suggest that the latter problems are more…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, Subtraction, Concept Formation
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Hillen, Amy F.; Watanabe, Tad – Teaching Children Mathematics, 2013
Recent documents suggest that all students, even young children, should have opportunities to engage in reasoning and proof (CCSSI 2010; NCTM 2000, 2006, 2009). One mathematical practice that is central to reasoning and proof is making conjectures (CCSSI 2010; NCTM 2000; Stylianides 2008). In the elementary grades, "formulating conjectures…
Descriptors: Subtraction, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Logic, Validity
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Wessman-Enzinger, Nicole M.; Mooney, Edward S. – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2014
The authors asked fifth-grade and eighth-grade students to pose stories for number sentences involving the addition and subtraction of integers. In this article, the authors look at eight stories from students. Which of these stories works for the given number sentence? What do they reveal about student thinking? When the authors examined these…
Descriptors: Numbers, Story Telling, Mathematics Instruction, Middle School Students
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Loong, Esther Yook Kin – Australian Mathematics Teacher, 2014
When solving mathematical problems, many students know the procedure to get to the answer but cannot explain why they are doing it in that way. According to Skemp (1976) these students have instrumental understanding but not relational understanding of the problem. They have accepted the rules to arriving at the answer without questioning or…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, Concept Formation, Mathematical Logic
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Selter, Christoph; Prediger, Susanne; Nuhrenborger, Marcus; Hussmann, Stephan – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2012
Subtraction can be understood by two basic models--taking away (ta) and determining the difference (dd)--and by its inverse relation to addition. Epistemological analyses and empirical examples show that the two models are not relevant only in single-digit arithmetic. As curricula should be developed in a longitudinal perspective on mathematics…
Descriptors: Equations (Mathematics), Mathematics Instruction, Learning Processes, Subtraction
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Flores, Alfinio; Priewe, Melina D. – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2013
This article describes how teachers address issues and tensions that students meet in learning division of fractions. First, students must make sense of division of fractions on their own by working individually and in small groups, using concrete or pictorial representations, inventing their own processes, and presenting and justifying their…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Middle School Students, Thinking Skills, Problem Solving
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Sci, Eve – Canadian Journal of Action Research, 2011
After administering an end of unit assessment written by the school's math program, teachers of three second grade classes in a New York City school noticed a majority of the students had not demonstrated mastery of subtracting two, two-digit numbers. The teachers worked with the school's math coach to implement an instructional unit that required…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Grade 2, Subtraction, Mathematical Logic
Common Core State Standards Initiative, 2011
For over a decade, research studies of mathematics education in high-performing countries have pointed to the conclusion that the mathematics curriculum in the United States must become substantially more focused and coherent in order to improve mathematics achievement in this country. To deliver on the promise of common standards, the standards…
Descriptors: Mathematics Curriculum, Mathematics Education, State Standards, Mathematics Achievement
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