Theoretical Background

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Theoretical Background. Task Design & Use. Re-flection & Pro-flection. Content. Task. Activity. Potential. Actions. Structure of a Topic. Inner & Outer. Effectiveness of actions. Themes. Powers. 3 Only’s. Balance. Interaction. 7 phases. Teacher. Peers. 6 Modes. Roles. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Theoretical Background

1

Theoretical Background

2

Task Design & Use

7 phases

Potential

Structure of a Topic

Interaction

Effectiveness of actions

Inner & Outer

Teacher

Roles

3 Only’

s

Balance

Activity

Re-flection

&Pro-

flection

Content Task

ActionsThemesPowers

Questioning

Peers

6 Modes

3

Teacher FocusTeacher-Student

interaction

Student-Mathematics interaction

Teacher-Mathematics interaction

Cognitive Obstacles:

common errors, …

Applications & Uses

Methods & Procedures

Language/technical terms

Origins

Examples, Images & RepresentationsEnactive

Obstacles

Affective Obstacles

4

Actions

Right-multiplying by an inverse ... Making a substitution Differentiating Iterating Reading a graph Invoking a definition …

5

Themes

Doing & Undoing Invariance in the midst of change Freedom & Constraint Restricting & Extending

6

Powers

Imagining & Expressing Specialising & Generalising (Stressing &

Ignoring) Conjecturing & Convincing (Re)-Presenting in different modes Organising & Characterising

7

Inner & Outer Aspects

Outer– What task actually initiates explicitly

Inner– What mathematical concepts underpinned– What mathematical themes encountered– What mathematical powers invoked– What personal propensities brought to awareness

8

Challenge

Appropriate Challenge:– Not too great– Not too little– Scope depends on student trust of teacher– Scope depends on teacher support of mathematical

thinking not simply getting answers

9

Structure of a TopicImageryAwareness (cognition)

Will

Body (enaction)

Emotions (affect)

HabitsPractices

10

Three Only’sLanguage Patterns

& prior SkillsImagery/Sense-of/

Awareness; Connections

Different Contexts in which likely to arise;

dispositions

Techniques & Incantations

Root Questionspredispositions

Standard Confusions

& Obstacles

Only Behaviour is TrainableOnly Emotion is Harnessable

Only Awareness is Educable

Behaviour

Emotion

Aware

ness

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PhasesGetting StartedGetting InvolvedMulling

Keeping Going

Insight

Being ScepticalContemplating

Initiating

Sustaining

Concluding

12

Six Modes of Interaction

ExpoundingExplaini

ng

ExploringExaminin

g

ExercisingExpressi

ng

Initiating Sustaining Concluding

13

Initiating Activity

Silent Start Particular (to general);

General (via particular)Semi-general (via particular to general)

Worked example Use/Application/Context Specific-Unspecific Manipulating:

– Material objects (eg cards, counters, …)– Mental images (diagrams, phenomena)– Symbols (familiar & unfamiliar)

14

Sustaining Activity

Questions & Prompts Directed–Prompted–Spontaneous

Scaffolding & Fading Energising (praising-challenging) Conjecturing Sharing progress/findings

15

Concluding Activity

Conjectures with evidence Accounts that others can understand Reflecting on effective & ineffective actions

– Aspcts of inner task (dispositions, …) Imagining acting differently in the future

16

Balanced ActivityAffordances Constraints Attunements

Ends

Means

CurrentState

OuterTaskIntended

& Enactedgoals

Resources Tasks

Ends

Means

CurrentState

InnerTask Implicit

goals

Resources Tasks

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Expounding

Explaining

Exploring

Examining

Exercising

Expressing

18

Teacher

Student

ContentExpounding

Student

Content

TeacherExamining

Student

ContentTeacher

Expressing

Teacher

StudentExplaining

Content

Student

ContentTeacher

Exploring

Student

Content

TeacherExercising

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ActivityGoals, Aims,

Desires, Intentions

Tasks(as imagined,

enacted,experienced,

…)

Resources:(physical, affective cognitive, attentive)

Initial State

Affordances– Constraints–Requirements

(Gibson)

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Potential

Most it could be

What builds on it(where it is going)

Math’l & Ped’cessence

Least it can be What it builds on

(previous experiences)Affordances– Constraints–

Requirements Directed–Prompted–SpontaneousScaffolding & Fading (Brown et al)

ZPD (Vygotsky)

(Gibson)

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Thinking Mathematically CME

– Do-Talk-Record (See–Say–Record)

– See-Experience-Master– Manipulating–Getting-a-

sense-of–Artculating– Enactive–Iconic–Symbolic– Directed–Prompted–

Spontaneous– Stuck!: Use of

Mathematical Powers– Mathematical Themes

(and heuristics)– Inner & Outer Tasks

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Frameworks ( 틀 )

Doing – Talking – Recording

Enactive– Iconic– Symbolic

See – Experience – Master

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Follow-Up Designing & Using Mathematical Tasks (Tarquin/QED) Thinking Mathematically (Pearson) Developing Thinking in Algebra, Geometry, Statistics

(Sage) Fundamental Constructs in Mathematics Education

(RoutledgeFalmer) Mathematics Teaching Practice: a guide for university

and college lecturers (Horwood Publishing) Mathematics as a Constructive Activity (Erlbaum) Questions & Prompts for Mathematical Thinking (ATM) Thinkers (ATM) Learning & Doing Mathematics (Tarquin) Researching Your Own Practice Using The Discipline

Of Noticing (RoutledgeFalmer)j.h.mason @ open.ac.uk

mcs.open.ac.uk/jhm3