Mathematical Argumentation in Middle School-The What, Why, and How
eBook - ePub

Mathematical Argumentation in Middle School-The What, Why, and How

A Step-by-Step Guide With Activities, Games, and Lesson Planning Tools

  1. 192 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Mathematical Argumentation in Middle School-The What, Why, and How

A Step-by-Step Guide With Activities, Games, and Lesson Planning Tools

About this book

Get them talking: Your formula for bringing math concepts to life!

Want your middle schoolers to intelligently engage with mathematical ideas? Ready to help them construct and critique viable arguments that meet tough Standards for Mathematical Practice 3 standards? Look no further. This research-based gem will help you foster the critical reasoning and argumentation skills every student needs for intelligent discourse within our modern society. Learn how to bring mathematical argumentation alive in your classroom—all within a thoroughly explained four-part model that covers generating cases, conjecturing, justifying, and concluding. 

Filled with content-focused and classroom-ready games, activities, vignettes, sample tasks, and links to online tools and a rich companion website, this innovative guide will help you 

  • Immediately engage students in fun, classroom-ready argumentation activities
  • Plan lessons that foster lively, content-driven, viable argumentation
  • Help students explore mathematical ideas and take ownership of their learning
  • Facilitate deep mathematical understanding
  • Promote students' precise use of mathematical language to construct, justify, and critique mathematical ideas and mathematical statements or the arguments of others.
  • Encourage logical, clear connections between abstract ideas for enhanced 21st century skills 

This guide delivers all the tools you need to get serious about mathematical argumentation and bring well-planned, well-constructed mathematical discourse to life in your classroom today!

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Yes, you can access Mathematical Argumentation in Middle School-The What, Why, and How by Jennifer Knudsen,Harriette S. Stevens,Teresa Lara-Meloy,Hee-Joon Kim,Nicole Shechtman in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Education & Teaching Mathematics. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Corwin
Year
2017
Print ISBN
9781506376691
eBook ISBN
9781506394244
Edition
1
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Chapter 1 Mathematical Argumentation Why and What

In this chapter, you will learn
  • What argumentation is and what it is not
  • How to use a four-part model of argumentation: generating cases, conjecturing, justifying, and concluding
  • About argumentation as a social process
  • Why teaching is disciplined improvisation and how improvisation supports argumentation, norm setting, and student engagement
  • Steps for introducing argumentation in your mathematics classroom
  • About argumentation in lessons and argumentation lessons
  • How to share new ideas for teaching mathematical argumentation in working together with your colleagues

Argumentation Is Important!

There are things that we need to communicate in everyday life, especially in the society in which we find ourselves now with all kinds of complexities. If we could just step back and think critically about it, then we should be able to come up with some kind of solution to the problems we face. That’s why I just think that math argumentation is so great, not only for education, but so that you will be able to function as a human being and a citizen in this society.
—Seventh-grade mathematics teacher
That’s what a middle school mathematics teacher, one of our workshop participants, had to say about the potential for mathematical argumentation to make an impact outside of the classroom. What if students can use the same kind of reasoning to solve problems in their lives as they do to, say, establish that the sum of two odd numbers is an even number? As we consider our students’ futures, the kind of careful reasoning that they do together in classroom mathematical argumentation is an important 21st century workplace and life skill. Making logical connections among abstract ideas and interacting with others to clarify their ideas are both deemed necessary in an increasing number of good jobs (Partnership for 21st Century Skills, 2008).
And then there are current mathematics standards. You probably know about the emphasis on mathematical practices or processes in most current state standards, including the practices that students “construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others” (National Governors Association Center for Best Practices, Council of Chief State School Officers, 2010) and “justify mathematical ideas and arguments using precise mathematical language in written or oral communication” (Texas Education Agency, 2012). The ability to make sense of the story mathematics tells, construct a viable argument about that story, justify one’s reasoning, and critique the reasoning of others are essential skills in almost every line of work and in citizen participation.
In addition to these practical considerations, we believe that the practice of mathematical argumentation is the most important of the mathematical practices because it is the fundamental way in which mathematicians communicate with each other. The search for mathematical truth is ongoing, as mathematicians create new ideas and justify them and as students reason together in a classroom.
Furthermore, access to mathematical argumentation is an equity issue. Every student should have access to this high-level disciplinary practice. Providing this access in elementary and middle school puts students on a path to higher level mathematics in high school and college. Current research indicates that about a third of the difference in mathematics achievement between students of color and white students, and between students from low- and high-income families, is attributable to the opportunity to learn high-level mathematics that they are given in class (Schmidt, Burroughs, Zoido, & Houang, 2015). The techniques in this book provide practices that support equitable access to high-level mathematics.
Although argumentation is serious business, it’s also true that engaging in argumentation can make your mathematics classroom more joyful. Students get to play with mathematical ideas and take ownership of them in a way that often delights them. You’ll most likely feel a boost yourself. One participant in our early workshops proclaimed that every Friday was argumentation day, and her class eagerly looked forward to it. While we advocate including argumentation most days, not just Fridays, we appreciated the spirit of her designation and found it a positive step in her own professional development.
The approach, techniques, and activities in this book were developed while working with teachers in a variety of settings. We have worked, in particular, with teachers in urban schools with high proportions of youth of color and students from low-income families. We have also worked in schools in more affluent communities. Teachers in all of these settings have used these methods to bring argumentation to their classrooms. Additionally, we have worked with teachers of students who receive special education services and students who are English Language Learners, and they have found that their students, too, can participate in mathematical argumentation. The vignettes and examples we present are informed by what we learned from these teachers but do not represent any one teacher.

What Argumentation Is—and Is Not

To understand what mathematical argumentation is, it is important to understand what it is not. We can contrast it with other mathematical practices and processes. Take, for example, a graph of distance as a function of time, as shown in Figure 1.1. It can be the starting place for lessons on problem solving, modeling, or argumentation, depending on the prompt that goes with the graph. A problem-solving prompt, for example, is “Create a trip with three segments that ends at 200 feet.” It calls for a solution, carefully reasoned but not necessarily an argument. On the other hand, a prompt that calls for argumentation goes like this: “Raj says that if one line is steeper than another, then it represents a faster motion. Is this always true?” Notice the question, “Is this always true?” In this book, we help you develop a repertoire of ways to use that simple question, among others, to engage your students in building arguments throughout the school year.
Figure 1.1 Time Versus Position Graph
Figure 1.1
A second question asks for argumentation: “How do we know it is true?” In this question, the focus is on a public demonstration of why a statement is true or false. The onus is on students to come up with an argument that is convincing to others. This press for truth is key in fostering argumentation that takes place among students so that students not only construct arguments but also critique each other’s reasoning.
This approach to argumentation positions it as a social practice—what we engage in to find out the truth together (Thurston, 1998). For example, you can tell students that the area of a parallelogram is calculated by multiplying the lengths of the base and height. What if students multiply the base, height, and the other side length to find the area? You could simply tell them this is wrong. But it is more powerful for students to explain to each other why multiplying these three numbers together does not make sense, calling on the concept of area as a measure of two-dimensional space.
Students will likely also need help understanding what argumentation is and what it is not. They may bring their own notions of what an argument is—for example, a fight—and it will take some work to help them develop a new way of thinking about argumentation as a mathematical practice, as a way of reasoning together about the truth. We’ll have more to say about classroom norms for argumentation in the following chapters, but this may be the most fundamental norm of all: We are finding out the truth together.

A Four-Part Model of Argumentation

Our model of argumentation is based on what mathematicians do and what philosophers and educators have posited as parts of argumentation. We distilled the experts’ (e.g., Harel & Sowder, 1998, 2007; Krummheuer, 1995; Lakatos, 1976) views on argumentation into a structure that works for teachers and students just beginning with argumentation as well as for those with more experience. The model has four parts:
  • Generating cases—creating something to argue about
  • Conjecturing—making bold claims
  • Justifying—building a...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Endorsements
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright Page
  5. Contents
  6. Preface
  7. Acknowledgements
  8. Contributors
  9. Chapter 1 Mathematical Argumentation Why and What
  10. Chapter 2 Generating Cases
  11. Chapter 3 Conjecturing
  12. Chapter 4 Justifying
  13. Chapter 5 Representations in Justifications
  14. Chapter 6 Levels of Justification
  15. Chapter 7 Concluding
  16. Chapter 8 Planning
  17. Glossary
  18. References
  19. Index
  20. Advertisement