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Carmel Schettino Ph.D. ASG MST 2016

What Does an Inclusive Math Classroom Look Like?

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Page 1: What Does an Inclusive Math Classroom Look Like?

C a r m e l S c h e t t i n o P h . D . A S G M S T 2 0 1 6

Page 2: What Does an Inclusive Math Classroom Look Like?

INCLUSION?

1. Age 2. Class 3. Gender 4. Ethnicity 5. Sexual Orientation

6. Race 7. Religion 8. Ability

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Page 3: What Does an Inclusive Math Classroom Look Like?

High-rigor course access is not a reality across all of our nation's schools. 2013-2014 Civil Rights Data Collection Report, US Department of Education, Office for Civil Rights ocrdata.ed.gov

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Page 5: What Does an Inclusive Math Classroom Look Like?

Claudie Solar-Inclusive Mathematics Pedagogy Not “Multiculturalism” in the Classroom Stemmed from other consciousness-raising pedagogies like radical, critical

Four Dialectical Aspects: Silence vs. Speech Passivity vs. Active Participation Powerlessness vs. Empowerment Omission vs. Inclusion

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“Often, inequalities in achievement are perceived as the result of a hierarchy of competence. When the very students who have been given more opportunities to learn show higher achievement than students provided fewer opportunities to learn, they are perceived as more capable or having more aptitude. This manner of talking about achievement gaps without mentioning opportunity gaps that cause them invites a focus on deficit models to “explain” low performance in terms of factors such as cultural differences, poverty, low levels of parental education, and so on.” NCTM Principles to Action; Access & Equity, 2014

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Page 7: What Does an Inclusive Math Classroom Look Like?

Research shows:

21% classtime teachers talking to students – demo methods

48% classtime students practicing methods working individually

15% classtime teachers questioning class in whole class format (Boaler)

IRE is most commonly found in math classrooms (Cazden)

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8 F r o m A n d r e w S t a d e l , I g n i t e t a l k N C T M , 2 0 1 6

Page 9: What Does an Inclusive Math Classroom Look Like?

Students’ innate levels of ability cannot be changed by instruction

Equity is the same as equality.

Equity is only an issue for schools with significant racial & ethnic diversity

ELLs need to be in a separate “track” for math

N C T M , P r i n c i p l e s t o A c t i o n , E s s e n t i a l : A c c e s s & E q u i t y , p . 6 3 9

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N C T M , P r i n c i p l e s t o A c t i o n , E s s e n t i a l : A c c e s s & E q u i t y , p . 6 3 1 0

Math Ability is a function of opportunity, experience & effort

Equity is attained by students receiving differentiated supports

Equity needs to be addressed in all school settings

ELLs can learn math at grade level or beyond at the same time that they are learning English.

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Mathematics learning is independent of students’ culture & does not need to be considered by the teacher

Students from low-SES lack the characteristics to achieve

Tracking promotes students’ achievement by allowing students to be placed in groups to make greatest gains in learning

Only high-achieving students can reason and persevere in solving challenging math problems

N C T M , P r i n c i p l e s t o A c t i o n , E s s e n t i a l : A c c e s s & E q u i t y , p . 6 3 1 1

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N C T M , P r i n c i p l e s t o A c t i o n , E s s e n t i a l : A c c e s s & E q u i t y , p . 6 3 1 2

Effective math instruction leverages students’ culture

Effective teaching practices open up greater opportunities for higher-order thinking and raise achievement for all students including low-SES.

All students are capable of solving challenging mathematics problems.

The practice of isolating low-achieving students in low-level or slower-paced groups should be eliminated.

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http://news.yale.edu/2014/05/15/prizewinners-teaching-yale-students

http://www.matific.com/us/en-us/blog/2015/07/23/interactive-technology-fills-learning-gaps-in-an-intervention-math-

classroom/

http://www.teachthought.com/learning/blended-flipped-learning/10-pros-cons-flipped-

classroom/

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The idea of “giving” students voice, especially when it refers to students of color, only serves to reify the dynamic of paternalism that renders Black and Brown students voiceless until some salvific external force gifts them with the privilege to speak. Rather than acknowledge the systemic violences that attempt to silence the rich voices, cultures, and histories that students bring into classrooms, this orientation positions students, and by extension, the communities of students, as eternally in need of institutional sanctioning.

1 4 J a m i l a L y i s c o t t , P o s t d o c t o r a l F e l l o w , T e a c h e r s C o l l e g e , C o l u m b i a U n i v e r s i t y

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• Academics not their strength in general • Math has never made sense • It did before Algebra, sense of self worth declined • Demoralized by a standardized test • Negative messages from home • “We’re not math people” • Combatting stereotypes of math ability

A d a p t e d f r o m B l o g p o s t b y I l a n a H o r n e , P h . D . 5 / 2 0 / 1 6 1 5

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• Emphasizing competition • Assuming there is “one kind of smartness” • Devaluing their individuality • Correcting the inconsequential • Utilizing only one method of assessment • Using Cold-Calling as a discipline strategy

S o m e f r o m h t t p s : / / t e a c h i n g m a t h c u l t u r e . w o r d p r e s s . c o m / 2 0 1 6 / 0 5 / 2 0 / w h o - b e l o n g s - i n - o u r - m a t h -

c l a s s r o o m s / 1 6

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• Focusing on student ideas & valuing all perspectives • Describing mathematics with “dynamic subjectivity” • Letting students create connections • Helping students create their own mathematical identity • Authorship of Ideas/Solutions • Sharing the Authority of Mathematics

J u n e 3 0 , 2 0 1 6 A Q U A R E L L E P O W E R P O I N T

T E M P L A T E 1 7

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B l i n d s p o t , B a n a j i & G r e e n w a l d , 2 0 1 4 1 8

1. “the portion of the mind that houses hidden biases”

2. Gain awareness ->adapt behavior to outsmart the “machine”

3. Treating people differently to the extent that there are advantages and disadvantages that they experience.

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Youtube Video – Anthony Greenwald Implicit Bias

Page 20: What Does an Inclusive Math Classroom Look Like?

Belonging

Intellectual Safety

Esteem (a need to feel respected)

Self-actualization (to be the most you can be)

Y o n g , D a r r y l , E x p l a n a t o r y P o w e r o f t h e H i e r a r c h y o f S t u d e n t N e e d s , 1 / 1 6 / 1 6 2 0

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Meaning-making process

Systematic, rigorous, disciplined way of thinking

Needs to happen in community, interaction with others

Requires attitudes that value personal and intellectual growth of all

R o g e r s , C . ( 2 0 0 2 ) D e f i n i n g R e f l e c t i o n , T e a c h e r s C o l l e g e R e c o r d 2 1

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“Inclusive teaching adds to effective teaching a framework for understanding why teaching is effective, along with an intentionality of producing more equitable outcomes for students. A faculty member may teach effectively without consciously considering inclusiveness, but by being more intentional about the desired outcomes of learning and designing every aspect of the learning to address students’ needs, they could help to create even better results.”

Darryl Yong, Ph.D.

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1. Go to the Project Implicit website & take a test https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/takeatest.html

2. Follow Darryl Yong & Ilana Horne: profteacher.com or TeachingMathCulture.wordpress.com

3. Attend NAIS POCC http://pocc.nais.org/Pages/default.aspx

4. Attend White Privilege Conference http://www.whiteprivilegeconference.com/

5. Attend a http://www.bordercrossers.org/ workshop about classroom equity.

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@SchettinoPBL

TWITTER

Carmel Schettino, Ph.D.

FACEBOOK

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BLOG

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