|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
This book supports teacher educators, teachers, coaches,
administrators, math-ed faculty, and researchers in understanding
and using the Teaching for Robust Understanding (TRU) Framework to
improve instruction. Detailed case studies take readers on deep
dives into five essential dimensions of classroom practice: The
Mathematics, Cognitive Demand, Equitable Access, Agency, Ownership,
and Identity, and Formative Assessment. Three case studies form the
core of the book. Each case uses the TRU framework to pose
conversational questions to the reader on different aspects of the
lessons, focusing on the ways that students are led to engage with
mathematics and how they make sense of it. These include "What's
important in this classroom episode?," "What might students be
experiencing?," or "What might the impact of alternative teaching
decisions have been in this situation?". The book concludes with
guides for planning, observation, and reflection that readers can
use in their own work, continuing the journey toward the ambitious
and equitable instruction that each case study describes. This book
will support all mathematics educators in developing deeper
understandings of mathematics classrooms and in problematizing
their own mathematics instruction. By exploring the challenges
students face, the decisions teachers make, and the ways that
students learn, readers will experience TRU as a powerful way of
thinking about instruction - one that can shape lesson planning and
reflection and make teaching more impactful and equitable.
This book supports teacher educators, teachers, coaches,
administrators, math-ed faculty, and researchers in understanding
and using the Teaching for Robust Understanding (TRU) Framework to
improve instruction. Detailed case studies take readers on deep
dives into five essential dimensions of classroom practice: The
Mathematics, Cognitive Demand, Equitable Access, Agency, Ownership,
and Identity, and Formative Assessment. Three case studies form the
core of the book. Each case uses the TRU framework to pose
conversational questions to the reader on different aspects of the
lessons, focusing on the ways that students are led to engage with
mathematics and how they make sense of it. These include "What's
important in this classroom episode?," "What might students be
experiencing?," or "What might the impact of alternative teaching
decisions have been in this situation?". The book concludes with
guides for planning, observation, and reflection that readers can
use in their own work, continuing the journey toward the ambitious
and equitable instruction that each case study describes. This book
will support all mathematics educators in developing deeper
understandings of mathematics classrooms and in problematizing
their own mathematics instruction. By exploring the challenges
students face, the decisions teachers make, and the ways that
students learn, readers will experience TRU as a powerful way of
thinking about instruction - one that can shape lesson planning and
reflection and make teaching more impactful and equitable.
|
|