30 August 2013

Home Teaching

Westlake High School, 15 August 2013: professional development day.

Nothing says "Welcome home" like a table full of candy bars and a sign reading "Grab your favorite." Except perhaps a sign that actually says "Welcome home."


My transitions from substitute to student-teacher, from California to Utah, and from working a multitude of part-time jobs to fully focused on math education have all had their ups & downs thus far. This transition from summer to school-year has come upon me so quickly, I have had little time to sit down and reflect on this amazing experience.  That's part of the beauty of a full life - words hardly do it justice.  The hectic nature of a teaching career, especially at the start of a new school-year, cautions me to strive for balance with renewed (and facetiously restrained) vigor.  I do not fear that I will forget the lessons I am learning; my fear is that I will lose the perspective in which I learned them.

Teaching is more than a profession, it is a way of life.  Along with it comes a life's worth of lessons that I will want to share.  Part of the goal of critical reflection (whether self-imposed or assigned) is to give the learner a tool to process teachable moments and extract the lesson.  Later on, however, I may need to be reminded of what I learned or experienced.  Of course, these lessons may benefit my students and peers, but today I remind myself that critical reflection is not a chore; it is personal development.  It's a good thing I love to learn.

06 August 2013

Adapting Mathematics Instruction for ELLs


Misunderstanding the language-concept connection by math educators attributes to low levels of achievement among ELLs, thus widening the gap, so to speak.  This research discusses parallels between effective mathematics teaching and effective second-language teaching, as well as specific strategies that both use to make input comprehensible.

Garrison, Leslie and Mora, Jill Kerper.  Adapting Mathematics Instruction for English Language Learners: The Language-Concept Connections.  Changing the Faces of Mathematics: Perspectives on Latinos (March 1999): 35-48.