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Iris M. Riggs Kelli WassermanCSUSB Mathematics
Consultant
Orchestrating Discussion: Fractions on the Number Line
California Mathematics ConferencePalm Springs, California
November 7, 2015
Support for this work was provided by the National Science Foundation under grant Due-0962778.
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Session OutcomesParticipants will:
• Learn how to facilitate productive student-student conversations about math.
• Gain understanding of SMP 3: Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others.
• Experience a lesson on using benchmarks to order fractions that embeds SMP 3.
• Consider how to incorporate talk moves into planning for discussions in mathematics.
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Agenda• Introductions• Engage in lesson• Debrief
• What are students expected to be able to do in discussions?
• What did the teacher do?• A closer look at SMP 3
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Focus Questions• How can benchmarks help students make sense of and
reason about fractions as a quantity on the number line?• How can discussions engage students in the practices of
SMP 3?• How can productive math discussions promote math
understanding?• How can you utilize talk moves to facilitate language
development?
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The Lesson
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Rights and ResponsibilitiesEvery student has the right to... Every student has the responsibility to...
● Make a contribution to an attentive audience
● Ask questions● Be treated civilly● Have his/her ideas
discussed, not him/her
● Speak loudly enough for others to hear
● Listen for understanding● Treat others civilly at all times● Consider others’ ideas, then
explain agreement or disagreement
From Classroom Discussions, by Chapin, O’Connor and Anderson
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Today’s Discussion FocusUnderstand how other people are thinking mathematically by restating and confirming your understanding of what they said.
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Group Work• Arrange yourselves in groups of 3 or 4.• One of you will act as an observer, and report
back to the whole group your observations.• Take 2-3 minutes to look at the fractions on the
next slide, and independently devise a plan for ordering them. Record your plan. No calculators!
• Get ready to share your plan. What will you say?
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Ordering Fractions
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Share your plans.Share your initial thinking from your plans. Make sure everyone participates.How will you go about placing the fractions on the number line? Consider that you will need to try to place them as close to the point that represents their value as you can.
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Group Work—Place Your Fractions on the Number LineDistribute the post-its amongst your group members, so that
every member has an opportunity to place fractions.
Work with your group members to place the fractions on your number line. Be as accurate as you can!
As you place your fractions, think out loud to help your group understand how you decided where to place the fractions. What strategies helped you decide?
Problem adapted from Activity 13.19, page 301, Guiding Children’s Learning of Mathematics (12th Edition) by Tipps, Johnson, & Kennedy.
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Share with another GroupOnce you are satisfied with your
solution, collaborate with another group.
Next, affix your fractions (index cards) on the string provided using the clothespins.
Discussion Practice: Restate what you heard the person before you say. Ask the speaker if what you understood is correct.
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Ordering Fractions
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Gallery WalkTake a clean sheet of paper, and fold it into four sections.
Walk around and inspect the other groups’ solutions. Use a different section for each group to record comments or questions for our discussion.
Consider:
• What is similar to/different than your solution?• Are the fractions in the same order?• Are the fractions spaced similarly?• Can you identify what strategies were used?
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Our Math Discussion FocusOne speaker from each group will explain how your
group decided where to place the fractions.Listen to hear how others reasoned about their
fractions.Be ready to restate what you understood someone
else to say and then confirm if you understood correctly.
Ask questions when you don’t understand someone else’s reasoning.
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Prompts for Guiding DiscussionI understood that you placed the fraction at that
point because...Is that right?I don’t understand...Can you repeat your
explanation to help me understand?I agree that...but I’m not agreeing with…Did you consider…?
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ClosureWhat strategies were used to place the
fractions?What is a benchmark?What did we learn about the number line and
fractions?How did the repeat move work in your
discussions?How did the discussion support your
understanding of the content?
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Lesson Debrief
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Student Discourse Includes:• Ways of using language that will allow
students to engage more fully in thinking and reasoning.
• Ways of structuring interactions to support learning goals.
Classroom Discussions by Chapin, O’Connor and Anderson
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What Happened?What kinds of communication did the “students”
use?RestatementsExtensionsComparisonsAgreements/DisagreementsQuestions
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Talk Moves• Revoice• Repeat• Apply
reasoning• Extend• Wait time
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Ask students to restate someone else’s
reasoning:The teacher asks
a student to repeat or rephrase what another student has said, then follows up with the first
student to confirm. “Can you repeat what he
just said in your own words?”
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What was done by the teacher to promote student dialogue?
• Stated expectations for communication?• Modeled or gave examples of restating and
confirming• Gave verbal reminders regarding communication• Responded to individual students?• Questioned students about their communications?• Waited before calling on students or responding?
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How did this lesson support development of SMP 3?Mathematically proficient students understand and use stated assumptions, definitions, and previously established results in constructing arguments. They make conjectures and build a logical progression of statements to explore the truth of their conjectures. They are able to analyze situations by breaking them into cases, and can recognize and use counterexamples. They justify their conclusions, communicate them to others, and respond to the arguments of others. They reason inductively about data, making plausible arguments that take into account the context from which the data arose. Mathematically proficient students are also able to compare the effectiveness of two plausible arguments, distinguish correct logic or reasoning from that which is flawed, and—if there is a flaw in an argument—explain what it is. Elementary students can construct arguments using concrete referents such as objects, drawings, diagrams, and actions. Such arguments can make sense and be correct, even though they are not generalized or made formal until later grades. Later, students learn to determine domains to which an argument applies. Students at all grades can listen or read the arguments of others, decide whether they make sense, and ask useful questions to clarify or improve the arguments.
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Language Development BenefitsEnglish language learners acquire language in two phases:
Conversational languageAcademic languageHow might the Benchmark Lesson Promote Language
Development?
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Focus Questions• How can benchmarks help students make sense of and
reason about fractions as a quantity on the number line?• How can discussions engage students in the practices of
SMP 3?• How can productive math discussions promote math
understanding?• How can you utilize talk moves to facilitate language
development?
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ResourcesFraction Comparisons on a Clothesline, TCM Blog, Shelby P. Morge, October 26, 2015: http://www.nctm.org/Publications/Teaching-Children-Mathematics/Blog/Fraction-Comparisons-on-a-Clothesline/
Chapin, O’Connor, & Anderson (2009). Classroom Discussions: Using Math Talk to Help Students Learn, Grades K-6, 2nd Edition
Lisa Ann de Garcia, How to Get Students Talking: Generating Math Talk That Supports Math Learning, http://www.mathsolutions.com/documents/How_to_Get_Students_Talking.pdf
Chapin, O’Connor, Nancy Anderson (Fall 2003) Classroom Discussions: Using Math Talk in Elementary Classrooms, From Online Newsletter Issue No. 11. http://www.mathsolutions.com/documents/0-941355-53-5_L.pdf
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Thank you!Please complete
your evaluation!
Iris Riggs [email protected]
Kelli Wasserman [email protected]
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