Planning For Mathematics (NEW)

Elementary Mathematics Planning For Mathematics

student writingPlanning for mathematics is much more complex than selecting materials for centers, identifying homework, and determining where the manipulatives for the lesson are stored. Planning for mathematics should focus on what students will learn and what they will do. It should focus on how students will engage with the mathematics. For many of us, planning for mathematics (or any other content) has been writing down a collection of steps and procedures that identify what we will do. Mathematics is not done to someone. It is done with someone. These planning recommendations are shared with that in mind. 

planning template page 1Planning for mathematics has many parts. The lesson planning templates provided below are recommended but not required. The template aligns with the concepts of Understanding by Design in that we plan with the end in mind. The template also helps teachers think about what students might do during the mathematics lesson and plan for questions to react to student thinking and guide the discussion. The electronic version can be copied into your Google account and completed there.

Daily Planning Organizer Links to an external site. (electronic version)

Daily Planning Organizer Links to an external site. (print version)

 

 

This template focuses on the planning of the mathematics. It is not the traditional "teacher-centered" form. Instead, it asks for us to think about intended outcomes, assessment of those outcomes, task selection, and anticipation of student understanding. It also asks for teachers to select both a routine and a structure for the class that day. The upper righthand section of the template prompts for "teacher moves." Those actions are general academic strategies or approaches for introducing, managing, or engaging students in the task or discussion. Some moves are listed below. Not all are intended to be recorded. Teachers should highlight the big ideas that need to be kept in mind. The moves include:

student listeningTeacher Moves:

How will I

  • Give directions or introduce the task?
  • Scaffold student support?
  • Monitor student thinking during the task?
  • Work or visit with small groups during the task?
  • Facilitate discussion?
  • Record or chart ideas?
  • Sequence student work?

Talk Moves:

How will I use

  • Think, Pair, Share?
  • Turn and Talk?
  • Use wait time?
  • Whole group or small-group discussion?
  • Partner talk?
  • Revoicing (“So you’re saying that it’s an odd number”)?
  • Student revoicing (students revoicing ideas of classmates)?
  • Prompt for further participation or discussion. (“Would someone like to add on?”)

 

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