developing mathematical knowledge for teaching through mentor-guided lesson study

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Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study Kristen Bieda, Jillian Cavanna, Xueying Ji Michigan State University PMENA 2013 Chicago This study was funded in part by MSU Lilly Teaching Fellowship awarded to the first author

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Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study. Kristen Bieda , Jillian Cavanna, Xueying Ji Michigan State University PMENA 2013 Chicago. This study was funded in part by MSU Lilly Teaching Fellowship awarded to the first author. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson

Study

Kristen Bieda, Jillian Cavanna, Xueying JiMichigan State University

PMENA 2013 Chicago

This study was funded in part by MSU Lilly Teaching Fellowship awarded to the first author

Page 2: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

The role of early field experiences in learning to teach

Early field experiences for novice teachers may involve observations, clinical interviews with students, tutoring, or leading short homework or warm-up sections of lessons (Anderson Barksdale & Hite, 2005).

Page 3: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

The role of early field experiences in learning to teach

Early field experiences for novice teachers may involve observations, clinical interviews with students, tutoring, or leading short homework or warm-up sections of lessons (Anderson Barksdale & Hite, 2005).

Provide opportunity for prospective teachers to enact practices learned in teacher preparation coursework

Understand the complexity of teaching

Understand the complexity of schooling

Examine assumptions about factors related to school and student success

Page 4: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Challenges of mentoring in early field experiences

Mentors and novices rarely get time to debrief and reflect on those experiences; mentors lack involvement [the laboratory class syndrome] (Zeichner, 2010, citing Valencia et al., 2009)

Need to get mentors and novices talking about teaching, and need for mentors’ tacit knowledge about teaching to be made explicit to novices.

)

Page 5: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Challenges of mentoring in early field experiences

Mentors and novices rarely get time to debrief and reflect on those experiences; mentors lack involvement [the laboratory class syndrome] (Zeichner, 2010, citing Valencia et al., 2009)

Need to get mentors and novices talking about teaching, and need for mentors’ tacit knowledge about teaching to be made explicit to novices.

)

“Carefully constructed field experiences that

are coordinated with campus courses are more

influential and effective in supporting student

teacher learning…”

(Zeicher, 2010, citing Darling-Hammond, 2006; Tatto, 1996)

Page 6: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Mentor-Guided Lesson Study Prospective secondary teachers (PSTs) attend placement classroom as pairs for four hours per weekIn mentor-guided lesson study, the mentor and 2 PSTs collaboratively:

Establish goals for a lesson (content and process goals based on Common Core Standards for Mathematical Practice (CCSSI, 2010))Plan a lessonTeach and Observe the enactmentReflect, Debrief, and Revise the lesson.

Page 7: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Supports for Collaborative Inquiry

5 Collaborative Learning Logs, delivered as Google Forms

Goals DevelopmentTopic StudyObservation GuideLesson ReflectionPost-Lesson Debrief

Page 8: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Lesson Reflection LogList one or two observations you would like to share with the team. Be as specific as possible about the evidence of student thinking that you observed.

What questions about students' mathematical thinking about this topic were raised for you through this observation?

In what ways did the lesson seem effective (or ineffective) in helping students understand the main mathematical ideas in the lesson?

What did you notice about how the lesson helped or hindered the team's work toward its broad lesson study goal?

Page 9: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Post-Lesson Debrief LogThe major revisions your team is making are...

Discuss how your team came to make decisions about the revisions. You will want to discuss what seemed to be the most important pieces of evidence collected about what students learned.

Discuss your impressions of how well your team collaborated during the debrief and revision process. Also mention any aspects of how you participated in the debrief process that you would like to improve upon in the next cycle.

Page 10: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Opportunities for Developing MKT

Cycle 1

1: Setting Goals * 2: Planning 3: Teaching 4: Post-Lesson Discussion

Goals Development Log

Topic Study LogObservation Guide LogMathematical Context ChartLesson Plan

Lead by MT

Post-Lesson Reflection LogPost-Lesson Debrief Log

Revised lesson planEnd-of-Cycle Reflection Paper

Cycle 2

1: Setting Goals * 2: Planning 3: Teaching 4: Post-Lesson DiscussionGoals

Development Log

Topic Study LogObservation Guide LogMathematical Context ChartLesson Plan *

Lead by PST-Ms

Post-Lesson Reflection LogPost-Lesson Debrief Log

Revised lesson planEnd-of-Cycle Reflection Paper

Page 11: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Opportunities for Developing MKT

Cycle 1

1: Setting Goals * 2: Planning 3: Teaching 4: Post-Lesson DiscussionGoals

Development Log

Topic Study LogObservation Guide LogMathematical Context ChartLesson Plan

Lead by MT

Post-Lesson Reflection LogPost-Lesson Debrief Log

Revised lesson planEnd-of-Cycle Reflection Paper

Cycle 2

1: Setting Goals * 2: Planning 3: Teaching 4: Post-Lesson DiscussionGoals

Development Log

Topic Study LogObservation Guide LogMathematical Context ChartLesson Plan *

Lead by PST-Ms

Post-Lesson Reflection LogPost-Lesson Debrief Log

Revised lesson planEnd-of-Cycle Reflection Paper

Cycle 1

1: Setting Goals * 2: Planning 3: Teaching 4: Post-Lesson Discussion

Goals Development Log

Topic Study LogObservation Guide LogMathematical Context ChartLesson Plan

Lead by MT

Post-Lesson Reflection LogPost-Lesson Debrief Log

Revised lesson planEnd-of-Cycle Reflection Paper

Cycle 2

1: Setting Goals * 2: Planning 3: Teaching 4: Post-Lesson DiscussionGoals

Development Log

Topic Study LogObservation Guide LogMathematical Context ChartLesson Plan *

Lead by PST-Ms

Post-Lesson Reflection LogPost-Lesson Debrief Log

Revised lesson planEnd-of-Cycle Reflection Paper

Page 12: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Opportunities for Developing MKT

Cycle 1

1: Setting Goals * 2: Planning 3: Teaching 4: Post-Lesson Discussion

Goals Development Log

Topic Study LogObservation Guide LogMathematical Context ChartLesson Plan

Lead by MT

Post-Lesson Reflection LogPost-Lesson Debrief Log

Revised lesson planEnd-of-Cycle Reflection Paper

Cycle 2

1: Setting Goals * 2: Planning 3: Teaching 4: Post-Lesson DiscussionGoals

Development Log

Topic Study LogObservation Guide LogMathematical Context ChartLesson Plan *

Lead by PST-Ms

Post-Lesson Reflection LogPost-Lesson Debrief Log

Revised lesson planEnd-of-Cycle Reflection Paper

Page 13: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Opportunities for Developing MKT

Cycle 1

1: Setting Goals * 2: Planning 3: Teaching 4: Post-Lesson Discussion

Goals Development Log

Topic Study LogObservation Guide LogMathematical Context ChartLesson Plan

Lead by MT

Post-Lesson Reflection LogPost-Lesson Debrief Log

Revised lesson planEnd-of-Cycle Reflection Paper

Cycle 2

1: Setting Goals * 2: Planning 3: Teaching 4: Post-Lesson DiscussionGoals

Development Log

Topic Study LogObservation Guide LogMathematical Context ChartLesson Plan *

Lead by PST-Ms

Post-Lesson Reflection LogPost-Lesson Debrief Log

Revised lesson planEnd-of-Cycle Reflection Paper

Page 14: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Opportunities for Developing MKT

Cycle 1

1: Setting Goals * 2: Planning 3: Teaching 4: Post-Lesson Discussion

Goals Development Log

Topic Study LogObservation Guide LogMathematical Context ChartLesson Plan

Lead by MT

Post-Lesson Reflection LogPost-Lesson Debrief Log

Revised lesson planEnd-of-Cycle Reflection Paper

Cycle 2

1: Setting Goals * 2: Planning 3: Teaching 4: Post-Lesson DiscussionGoals

Development Log

Topic Study LogObservation Guide LogMathematical Context ChartLesson Plan *

Lead by PST-Ms

Post-Lesson Reflection LogPost-Lesson Debrief Log

Revised lesson planEnd-of-Cycle Reflection Paper

Page 15: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Opportunities for Developing MKT

Cycle 1

1: Setting Goals * 2: Planning 3: Teaching 4: Post-Lesson Discussion

Goals Development Log

Topic Study LogObservation Guide LogMathematical Context ChartLesson Plan

Lead by MT

Post-Lesson Reflection LogPost-Lesson Debrief Log

Revised lesson planEnd-of-Cycle Reflection Paper

Cycle 2

1: Setting Goals * 2: Planning 3: Teaching 4: Post-Lesson DiscussionGoals

Development Log

Topic Study LogObservation Guide LogMathematical Context ChartLesson Plan *

Lead by PST-Ms

Post-Lesson Reflection LogPost-Lesson Debrief Log

Revised lesson planEnd-of-Cycle Reflection Paper

Page 16: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Opportunities for Developing MKT

Cycle 1

1: Setting Goals * 2: Planning 3: Teaching 4: Post-Lesson Discussion

Goals Development Log

Topic Study LogObservation Guide LogMathematical Context ChartLesson Plan

Lead by MT

Post-Lesson Reflection LogPost-Lesson Debrief Log

Revised lesson planEnd-of-Cycle Reflection Paper

Cycle 2

1: Setting Goals * 2: Planning 3: Teaching 4: Post-Lesson DiscussionGoals

Development Log

Topic Study LogObservation Guide LogMathematical Context ChartLesson Plan *

Lead by PST-Ms

Post-Lesson Reflection LogPost-Lesson Debrief Log

Revised lesson planEnd-of-Cycle Reflection Paper

Page 17: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Developing an analytic framework for measuring MKT

Began with initial open-coding of written logs to identify instances where PST-Ms attended to and discussed features of instruction pertinent to those knowledge domains

Page 18: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Developing an analytic framework for measuring MKT

Began with initial open-coding of written logs to identify instances where PST-Ms attended to and discussed features of instruction pertinent to those knowledge domains

“Students were applying their previous knowledge of patterns to their predictions, assuming the total would double.”

Page 19: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Developing an analytic framework for measuring MKT

Began with initial open-coding of written logs to identify instances where PST-Ms attended to and discussed features of instruction pertinent to those knowledge domains

“Students were applying their previous knowledge of patterns to their predictions, assuming the total would double.”

“I think the lesson was effective in helping the students understand approximating area under a function because they were able to both think on their own and collaborate with others.”

Page 20: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Developing an analytic framework for measuring MKT

Began with initial open-coding of written logs to identify instances where PST-Ms attended to and discussed features of instruction pertinent to those knowledge domains

Saw a need to relate what PST-Ms described to their opportunities to develop MKT

Page 21: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Developing an analytic framework for measuring MKT

Began with initial open-coding of written logs to identify instances where PST-Ms attended to and discussed features of instruction pertinent to those knowledge domains

Saw a need to relate what PST-Ms described to their opportunities to develop MKT

Attending to Student Thinking

Analyzing Teaching Moves

Analyzing Mathematics

Page 22: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Developing an analytic frameworkAnalyzing Mathematics Attending to Student

Thinking Analyzing Teaching Moves Analyzing mathematics related to: students’ thinking teaching moves

Observations of: students’ errors student understanding mathematical procedures students’ prior knowledge student engagement student discourse students’ ability to apply

new knowledge

Questioning/wondering about student thinking

Analyzing teaching moves related to: students’ errors students’ prior knowledge. students’ thinking students’ mathematical

procedures students’ discourse students’ engagement

“The teacher graphed both the function and inverse function on the same set of axes, but this is mathematically incorrect”.

Page 23: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Developing an analytic frameworkAnalyzing Mathematics Attending to Student

Thinking Analyzing Teaching Moves Analyzing mathematics related to: students’ thinking teaching moves

Observations of: students’ errors student understanding mathematical procedures students’ prior knowledge student engagement student discourse students’ ability to apply

new knowledge

Questioning/wondering about student thinking

Analyzing teaching moves related to: students’ errors students’ prior knowledge. students’ thinking students’ mathematical

procedures students’ discourse students’ engagement

“Students used a chart or graph to help them understand the properties of the equation.”

“I wonder how the students had the inclination that the bounce height would double if the drop height doubles.”

Page 24: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Developing an analytic frameworkAnalyzing Mathematics Attending to Student

Thinking Analyzing Teaching Moves Analyzing mathematics related to: students’ thinking teaching moves

Observations of: students’ errors student understanding mathematical procedures students’ prior knowledge student engagement student discourse students’ ability to apply

new knowledge

Questioning/wondering about student thinking

Analyzing teaching moves related to: students’ errors students’ prior knowledge. students’ thinking students’ mathematical

procedures students’ discourse students’ engagement

“My accommodations of group work and reading out loud had a positive effect with the student I included it for. For instance, he spoke up during class discussion and was talking openly during group work.”

Page 25: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Developing an analytic frameworkAnalyzing Mathematics Attending to Student

Thinking Analyzing Teaching Moves Analyzing mathematics related to: students’ thinking teaching moves

Observations of: students’ errors student understanding mathematical procedures students’ prior knowledge student engagement student discourse students’ ability to apply

new knowledge

Questioning/wondering about student thinking

Analyzing teaching moves related to: students’ errors students’ prior knowledge. students’ thinking students’ mathematical

procedures students’ discourse students’ engagement

“My accommodations of group work and reading out loud had a positive effect with the student I included it for. For instance, he spoke up during class discussion and was talking openly during group work.”

“Since students were having problems plotting points, then the lesson before should have covered how to construct a graph.”

Page 26: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Findings: To what extent does mentor-guided lesson study promote prospective teachers’ reflections on teaching related to their MKT?

Page 27: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Aspects of PSTs’ reflections across cycles

Cycle 1 Cycle 20

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

Analyzing MathAttending to Student ThinkingAttending to Teach-ing Moves

Page 28: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Changes in PSTs’ reflections across cycles

Math Procedures

Errors

Discourse

Engagement

Understanding

Apply New Knowledge

Prior Knowledge

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

Cycle 1

Page 29: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Changes in PSTs’ reflections across cycles

Math Procedures

Errors

Discourse

Engagement

Understanding

Apply New Knowledge

Prior Knowledge

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45

Page 30: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Findings: How does a mentor’s prior experience in doing lesson study contribute to the development of prospective teachers’ MKT during cycles of mentor-guided lesson study?

Page 31: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Influence of mentors’ experience on PSTs’ reflections

No Experie

nce

Some Exp

erience

Most Exp

erience

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Analyzing Math Attending to Students' ThinkingAnalyzing Teaching Moves

Page 32: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Influence of mentors’ experience on PSTs’ reflections

No Experie

nce

Some Exp

erience

Most Exp

erience

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Analyzing Math Attending to Students' ThinkingAnalyzing Teaching Moves

Page 33: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Influence of mentors’ experience on PSTs’ reflections

No Experie

nce

Some Exp

erience

Most Exp

erience

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Analyzing Math Attending to Students' ThinkingAnalyzing Teaching Moves

Page 34: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

No Experie

nce

Some Exp

erience

Most Exp

erience

0102030405060

Analyzing MathAttending to Students' Think-ingAnalyzing Teaching Moves

Cycle 2

Cycle 1

Page 35: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Nature of responses from Cycle 1 to Cycle 2

PROMPT:List one or two observations you would like to share with the team. Be as specific as possible about the evidence of student thinking that you observed.

Attending to Student Thinking

Page 36: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Nature of responses from Cycle 1 to Cycle 2MT With No Experience

Cycle 1:“Students seemed to be lost on what the worksheet was asking them to do.”

Cycle 2:“One big observation I made throughout the whole lesson was the difficulty students were having in making their own observations during the explore activity. They had a hard time figuring out what is was that they should have been noticing to be able to come up with the rules for the discriminant.”

Page 37: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Nature of responses from Cycle 1 to Cycle 2MT With Some Experience

Cycle 1:“When students were shown a positive correlation graph relating their shoe size to their height, it was interesting that students weren’t able to think of a correlation. Many students didn’t realize the concept of an outlier.”

Cycle 2:“The students seemed confused on how to make a graph off of their data since all the times were constant. Some of the students made a bar graph with a constant 30 seconds on the x-axis and how many time they jumped on the y axis. Some groups grasped what I was looking for and used the x axis as time and y axis as jumping jacks but used the three averages they found for 5,10 and 30 seconds as their points on the graph.”

Page 38: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Nature of responses from Cycle 1 to Cycle 2MT With Most Experience

Cycle 1:“I think students could see how using trapezoids was more accurate than using rectangles, so they could see that using different shapes to approximate the area under the function could make a large impact on the answer and create an under estimate or over estimate… I am not sure the students were aware that making the bases 0.5 instead of 1 to create twice the amount of rectangles or trapezoids would give them a better approximation of the area even though the mentor teacher briefly discussed the idea in class.”

Cycle 2:“I noticed students struggling with calculating the theoretical probabilities on the worksheet. Students made some really good observations on the question "How does a student make it to Box A? B?...G? How many heads or tails would they have to get? Does order matter?” Two students only listed one possibility for each and said that there are more possibilities in the middle. Another student noticed that order did not matter as long as you had a certain number of heads or tails you would end at a certain spot.”

Page 39: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

SummaryMGLS does provide an opportunity to develop MKT

MGLS heightens PSTs’ attention to student thinking

Reflection on mathematics of study lesson is minimal

Mentors’ lesson study experience correlates to higher frequencies of MKT as evident in PSTs’ reflections

Increase in responses coded as Analyzing Student Thinking in Cycle 2 is not correlated to mentors’ lesson study experience

Page 40: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Implications

More work is needed to investigate evidence of PSTs’ shift in role from Cycle 1 to Cycle 2

Mentors find MGLS beneficial: Additionally I find discussing practice with young teachers reminds me of why I do things and helps give me additional ideas. It may take some more time but I find it beneficial for all of us.

Page 41: Developing Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching through Mentor-Guided Lesson Study

Thank you!

Kristen Bieda ([email protected])Jillian Cavanna ([email protected])

Xueying Ji ([email protected])

Lilly Teaching Fellowship program