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Concept-Based Mathematics
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Concept-Based Mathematics
Teaching for Deep Understanding in Secondary Classrooms

Foreword by H. Lynn Erickson



February 2016 | 296 pages | Corwin

Give math students the connections between what they learn and how they do math—and suddenly math makes sense

If your secondary-school students are fearful of or frustrated by math, it’s time for a new approach. When you teach concepts rather than rote processes, you show students math’s essential elegance, as well as its practicality—and help them discover their own natural mathematical abilities.

This book is a road map to retooling how you teach math in a deep, clear, and meaningful way —through a conceptual lens—helping students achieve higher-order thinking skills. Jennifer Wathall shows you how to plan units, engage students, assess understanding, incorporate technology, and even guides you through an ideal concept-based classroom. 

  • Practical tools include:
  • Examples from arithmetic to calculus
  • Inquiry tasks, unit planners, templates, and activities
  • Sample assessments with examples of student work
  • Vignettes from international educators
  • A dedicated companion website with additional resources, including a study guide, templates, exemplars, discussion questions, and other professional development activities.

Everyone has the power to understand math. By extending Erickson and Lanning’s work on Concept-Based Curriculum and Instruction specifically to math, this book helps students  achieve the deep understanding and skills called for by global standards and be prepared for the 21st century workplace. 

"Jennifer Wathall’s book is one of the most forward thinking mathematics resources on the market. While highlighting the essential tenets of Concept-Based Curriculum design, her accessible explanations and clear examples show how to move students to deeper conceptual understandings. This book ignites the mathematical mind!"  — Lois A. Lanning, Author of Designing Concept-based Curriculum for English-Language Arts, K-12

"Wathall is a master at covering all the bases here; this book is bursting with engaging assessment examples, discussion questions, research, and resources that apply specifically to mathematical topics. Any math teacher or coach would be hard-pressed to read it and not come away with scores of ideas, assessments, and lessons that she could use instantly in the classroom. As an IB Workshop Leader and instructional coach, I want this book handy on a nearby shelf for regular referral – it's a boon to any educator who wants to bring math to life for students." — Alexis Wiggins, Instructional Coach, IB Workshop Leader and Consultant

 
 

 
Preface
 
I. What is Concept-Based Curriculum and Instruction in Math? Research and Theory
 
1. Why Is It Important for My Students to Learn Conceptually?
 
2. What Are the Facts, Processes, and Concepts in Mathematics?
 
II. How to Craft Generalizations and Plan Units of Work to Ensure Deep Conceptual Understanding? A Practice Guide
 
3. How Do I Craft Generalizations for Mathematics?
 
4. How Do I Plan Units of Work for a Concept-Based Curriculum?
 
III. How Do We Engage Students Through Instructional Practice? Strategies to Engage and Assess
 
5. How Do I Captivate Students? Eight Strategies for Engaging the Hearts and Minds of Students
 
6. How Do I Know My Students Understand the Concepts? Assessment Strategies
 
7. How Do I Integrate Technology to Foster Conceptual Understanding?
 
8. What Do Ideal Concept-Based Math Classrooms Look Like?

"Secondary teachers are constantly being encouraged to change their practice but few books have addressed the topics of secondary mathematics nor given examples that secondary teachers can relate to.  This book does that.  Another strength is the connection of the content to the math processes and practices, the heart of good instruction. The figures provided to summarize big ideas are excellent. I love the potential of this book for using it as a text for middle and secondary teachers, a guide for professional development, and a place for individual reflection.  I know for sure that I would use it for my student teacher seminar class and anytime that I was instructing upper level math teachers.  I’ve been waiting for this!

Barbara Fox, Adjunct Professor, Student Teacher Supervisor
University of Massachusetts, Lesley University, Regis College

“The author provides a solid rationale, backed up by numerous practical and authentic examples to increase the quality of conceptual math classroom teaching practices so needed to develop the next generation learners. This is a must have for any secondary school’s professional library.”

Dave Nagel, Author Consultant
Corwin / NZJ Learning (LLC)

“I attended a Concepts Based Curriculum training course led by Jennifer Wathall and was really inspired by what I learned. Far too often, as teachers, we can become narrowly focused on the topics that we are covering; with concepts there is a whole new opportunity for students to understand the big ideas and the connections between different subjects. Jennifer skillfully guided us through how we can introduce students to a concept-based curriculum. I was really impressed with the method of writing principle generalizations which provide a framework for exploration. These generalizations can in fact make the focus of a lesson or series of lessons much more exciting, allowing students to break out of the constraints of a limited topic range. Ultimately, I left the course determined to try out a concepts-based model with a new unit we are developing on Human Rights. With the conceptual lens, this promises to be a much more thought-provoking unit for our students.”

John Edwards, Head of History Department
King George V School, Hong Kong

“One of the major strengths of the book is the examples and the visual diagrams that outline major topics.  The book provides rubrics that allow teachers to determine where they are in their methodology and a opportunity to decide where they can improve their teaching strategies.

Amanda McKee, High School Mathematics Instructor
Florence County School District #5

“The major strength of the book is that it addresses teaching mathematics in a way that invites students to learn and encourages not only content knowledge, but depth of knowledge, rigor, and critical thinking. Inquiry is a means of synergizing your classroom and drawing students in so that they want to learn. This is going to require a change of mindset for teachers and the administrators alike as well as training. This book provides an opportunity for both."

Pamela L. Opel, Intervention Specialist
Gulfport School District

"Jennie Wathall’s book offers a clear understanding of how complex learning of mathematics is, and how to use this understanding to create a thinking classroom. She explains, from a scientific point of view and in a very well-researched and comprehensive manner, sprinkled with plenty of practical examples, what is the interdependence between the processes and knowledge and how to plan, run and assess for a concept-based mathematics classroom. This book is a must-read for all mathematics educators, a book that should definitely be on the table in each mathematics office."

Dr. Daniela Vasile, Head of Mathematics
South Island School, Hong Kong

"Wathall is a master at covering all the bases here; this book is bursting with engaging assessment examples, discussion questions, research, and resources that apply specifically to mathematical topics. Any math teacher or coach would be hard-pressed to read it and not come away with scores of ideas, assessments, and lessons that she could use instantly in the classroom. As an IB Workshop Leader and instructional coach, I want this book handy on a nearby shelf for regular referral – it's a boon to any educator who wants to bring math to life for students the world over."

Alexis Wiggins, Instructional Coach, IB Workshop Leader and Consultant

"Jennifer Wathall’s book is one of the most forward thinking mathematics resources on the market. While highlighting the essential tenets of Concept-Based Curriculum design, her accessible explanations and clear examples show how to move students to deeper conceptual understandings. This book ignites the mathematical mind!"

Lois A. Lanning. Author
Designing Concept-based Curriculum for English-Language Arts, K-12
Key features

·  Guides teachers in helping students achieve higher-order thinking skills called for by mathematical standards around the world;

·  Helps teachers move from theory to practice through

    ·  examples across mathematical subject areas from arithmetic to calculus,

    ·  examples of different levels of inquiry tasks

    ·  templates of unit planners

    ·  examples of different types of formative assessment

    ·  practical strategies for lesson planning

    ·  suggestions for incorporating technology

For instructors

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