Episodes

  • Season 3 | Episode 16 - Assessment as a Shared Journey: Cultivating Partnerships with Families and Caregivers - Guest: Tisha Jones
    Apr 17 2025
    Tisha Jones, Assessment as a Shared Journey: Cultivating Partnerships with Families & Caregivers ROUNDING UP: SEASON 3 | EPISODE 16 Families and caregivers play an essential role in students’ success in school and in shaping their identities as learners. Therefore, establishing strong partnerships with families and caregivers is crucial for equitable teaching and learning. This episode is designed to help educators explore the importance of collaborating with families and caregivers and learn strategies for shifting to asset-based communication. BIOGRAPHY Tisha Jones is the senior manager of assessment at The Math Learning Center. Previously, Tisha taught math to elementary and middle school students as well as undergraduate and graduate math methods courses at Georgia State University. TRANSCRIPT Mike Wallus: As educators, we know that families and caregivers play an essential role in our students’ success at school. With that in mind, what are some of the ways we can establish strong partnerships with caregivers and communicate about students' progress in asset-based ways? We'll explore these questions with MLC’s [senior] assessment manager, Tisha Jones, on this episode of Rounding Up. Welcome back to the podcast, Tisha. I think you are our first guest to appear three times. We're really excited to talk to you about assessment and families and caregivers. Tisha Jones: I am always happy to talk to you, Mike, and I really love getting to share new ideas with people on your podcast. Mike: So, we've titled this episode “Assessment as a Shared Journey with Families & Caregivers,” and I feel like that title—especially the words “shared journey”—say a lot about how you hope educators approach this part of their practice. Tisha: Absolutely. Mike: So, I want to start by being explicit about how we at The Math Learning Center think about the purpose of assessment because I think a lot of the ideas and the practices and the suggestions that you're about to offer flow out of that way that we think about the purpose. Tisha: When we think about the purpose of assessment at The Math Learning Center, what sums it up best to me is that all assessment is formative, even if it's summative, which is a belief that you'll find in our Assessment Guide. And what that means is that assessment really is to drive learning. It's for the purpose of learning. So, it's not just to capture, “What did they learn?,” but it's, “What do they need?,” “How can we support kids?,” “How can we build on what they're learning?” over and over and over again. And so, there's no point where we're like, “OK, we've assessed it and now the learning of that is in the past.” We're always trying to build on what they're doing, what they've learned so far. Mike: You know, I've also heard you talk about the importance of an asset-focused approach to assessment. So, for folks who haven't heard us talk about this in the past, what does that mean, Tisha? Tisha: So that means starting with finding the things that the kids know how to do and what they understand instead of the alternative, which is looking for what they don't know, looking for the deficits in their thinking. We're looking at, “OK, here's the evidence for all the things that they can do,” and then we're looking to think about, “OK, what are their opportunities for growth?” Mike: That sounds subtle, but it is so profound a shift in thinking about what is happening when we're assessing and what we're seeing from students. How do you think that change in perspective shifts the work of assessing, but also the work of teaching? Tisha: When I think about approaching assessment from an asset-based perspective—finding the things that kids know how to do, the things that kids understand—one, I am now on a mission to find their brilliance. I am just this brilliance detective. I'm always looking for, “What is that thing that this kid can shine at?” That's one, and a different way of thinking about it just to start with. And then I think the other thing, too, is, I feel like when you find the things that they're doing, I can think about, “OK, what do I need to know? What can I do for them next to support them in that next step of growth?” Mike: I think that sounds fairly simple, but there's something very different about thinking about building from something versus, say, looking for what's broken. Tisha: For sure. And it also helps build relationships, right? If you approach any relationship from a deficit perspective, you're always focusing on the things that are wrong. And so, if we're talking about building stronger relationships with kids, coming from an asset-based perspective helps in that area too. Mike: That's a great pivot point because if we take this notion that the purpose of assessment is to inform the ways that we support student learning, it really seems like that has a major set of implications for how ...
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    20 mins
  • Season 3 | Episode 15 – What If I Don’t Understand Their Thinking? - Guest: Ryan Flessner
    Apr 3 2025
    Ryan Flessner, What If I Don’t Understand Their Thinking? ROUNDING UP: SEASON 3 | EPISODE 15 “What do I do if I don’t understand my student’s strategy?” This is a question teachers grapple with constantly, particularly when conferring with students during class. How educators respond in moments like these can have a profound impact on students’ learning and their mathematical identities. In this episode, we talk with Ryan Flessner from Butler University about what educators can say or do when faced with this situation. BIOGRAPHY Ryan Flessner is a professor of teacher education in the College of Education at Butler University in Indianapolis, Indiana. He holds a PhD in curriculum and instruction with an emphasis in teacher education from the University of Wisconsin–Madison; a master of arts in curriculum and teaching from Teachers College, Columbia University; and a bachelor of science in elementary education from Butler University. Prior to his time at the university level, he taught grades 3–7 in Indianapolis; New York City; and Madison, Wisconsin. RESOURCES Nearpod Pear Deck GeoGebra Magma Math TRANSCRIPT Mike Wallus: “What do I do if I don't understand my student’s strategy?” This is a question teachers grapple with constantly, particularly when conferring with students during class. How we respond in moments like these can have a profound impact on our students' learning and their mathematical identities. Today we'll talk with Ryan Flessner from Butler University about what educators can say or do when faced with this very common situation. Welcome to the podcast, Ryan. Really excited to talk to you today. Ryan Flessner: Thanks, Mike. I'm flattered to be here. Thank you so much for the invitation. Mike: So, this experience of working with a student and not being able to make sense of their solution feels like something that almost every teacher has had. And I'll speak for myself and say that when it happens to me, I feel a lot of anxiety. And I just want to start by asking, what would you say to educators who are feeling apprehensive or unsure about what to do when they encounter a situation like this? Ryan: Yeah, so I think that everybody has that experience. I think the problem that we have is that teachers often feel the need to have all of the answers and to know everything and to be the expert in the room. But as an educator, I learned really quickly that I didn't have all the answers. And to pretend like I did put a lot of pressure on me and made me feel a lot of stress and would leave me answering children by saying, “Let me get back to you on that.” And then I would scurry and try and find all the answers so I could come back with a knowledgeable idea. And it was just so much more work than to just simply say, “I don't know. Let's investigate that together.” Or to ask kids, “That's something interesting that I'm seeing you do. I've never seen a student do that before. Can you talk to me a little bit about that?” And just having that ability to free myself from having to have all the answers and using that Reggio-inspired practice—for those who know early childhood education—to follow the child, to listen to what he or she or they say to us and try to see. I can usually keep up with a 7- or an 8-year-old as they're explaining math to me. I just may never have seen them notate something the way they did. So, trying to ask that question about, “Show me what you know. Teach me something new.” The idea that a teacher could be a learner at the same time I think is novel to kids, and I think they respond really well to that idea. Mike: So, before we dig in a little bit more deeply about how teachers respond to student strategies if they don't understand, I just want to linger and think about the assumptions that many educators, myself included, might bring to this situation. Assumptions about their role, assumptions about what it would mean for a student if they don't know the answer right away. How do you think about some of the assumptions that are causing some of that anxiety for us? Ryan: Yeah. When the new generation of standards came out, especially in the field of math, teachers were all of a sudden asked to teach in a way that they themselves didn't learn. And so, if you have that idea that you have to have all the answers and you have to know everything, that puts you in a really vulnerable spot because how are we supposed to just magically teach things we've never learned ourselves? And so, trying to figure out ways that we can back up and try and make sense of the work that we're doing with kids, for me that was really helpful in understanding what I wanted from my students. I wanted them to make sense of the learning. So, if I hadn't made sense of it yet, how in the world could I teach them to make sense of it? And so we have to have that humility to say, “I don't know how to do this. I need to continue my learning trajectory and to keep...
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    22 mins
  • Season 3 | Episode 14 – Supporting Neurodiverse Students in Elementary Mathematics Classrooms - Guest: Dr. Cathery Yeh
    Mar 20 2025
    Dr. Cathery Yeh, Supporting Neurodiverse Students in Elementary Mathematics Classrooms ROUNDING UP: SEASON 3 | EPISODE 14 What meaning does the term neurodiverse convey and how might it impact a student’s learning experience? And how can educators think about the work of designing environments and experiences that support neurodiverse students learning mathematics? In this episode, we discuss these questions with Dr. Cathery Yeh, a professor in STEM education from the University of Texas at Austin. BIOGRAPHY Dr. Cathery Yeh is an assistant professor in STEM education and a core faculty member in the Center for Asian American Studies from the University of Texas at Austin. Her research examines the intersections of race, language, and disability to provide a nuanced analysis of the constructions of ability in mathematics classrooms and education systems. TRANSCRIPT Mike Wallus: What meaning does the term neurodiverse convey and how might that language impact a student's learning experience? In this episode, we'll explore those questions. And we'll think about ways that educators can design learning environments that support all of their students. Joining us for this conversation is Dr. Cathery Yeh, a professor in STEM education from the University of Texas at Austin. Welcome to the podcast, Cathery. It's really exciting to have you with us today. Cathery Yeh: Thank you, Mike. Honored to be invited. Mike: So, I wonder if we can start by offering listeners a common understanding of language that we'll use from time to time throughout the episode. How do you think about the meaning of neurodiversity? Cathery: Thank you for this thoughtful question. Language matters a lot. For me, neurodiversity refers to the natural variation in our human brains and our neurocognition, challenging this idea that there's a normal brain. I always think of… In Texas, we just had a snow day two days ago. And I think of, just as, there's no two snowflakes that are the same, there's no two brains that are exactly the same, too. I also think of its meaning from a personal perspective. I am not a special educator. I was a bilingual teacher and taught in inclusive settings. And my first exposure to the meaning of neurodiversity came from my own child, who—she openly blogs about it—as a Chinese-American girl, it was actually really hard for her to be diagnosed. Asian Americans, 1 out of 10 are diagnosed—that's the lowest of any ethnic racial group. And I'll often think about when… She's proud of her disabled identity. It is who she is. But what she noticed that when she tells people about her disabled identity, what do you think is the first thing people say when she says, “I'm neurodivergent. I have ADHD. I have autism.” What do you think folks usually say to her? The most common response? Mike: I'm going to guess that they express some level of surprise, and it might be associated with her ethnic background or racial identity. Cathery: She doesn't get that as much. The first thing people say is, they apologize to her. They say, “I'm sorry.” Mike: Wow. Cathery: And that happens quite a lot. And I say that because–and then I connected back to the term neurodiversity—because I think it's important to know its origins. It came about by Judy Singer. She's a sociologist. And about 30 years ago, she coined the term neurodiversity as an opposition to the medical model of understanding people and human difference as deficits. And her understanding is that difference is beautiful. All of us think and learn and process differently, and that's part of human diversity. So that original definition of neurodiversity was tied to the autism rights movement. But now, when we think about the term, it's expanded to include folks with ADHD, dyslexia, dyscalculia, mental health, conditions like depression, anxiety, and other neuro minorities like Tourette syndrome, and even memory loss. I wanted to name out all these things because sometimes we're looking for a really clean definition, and definitions are messy. There's a personal one. There's a societal one of how we position neurodiversity as something that's deficit, that needs to be fixed. But it's part of who one is. But it's also socially constructed. Because how do you decide when a difference becomes a difference that counts where you qualify as being neurodiverse, right? So, I think there's a lot to consider around that. Mike: You know, the answer that you shared is really a good segue because the question I was going to ask you involves something that I suspect you hear quite often is people asking you, “What are the best ways that I can support my neurodiverse students?” And it occurs to me that part of the challenge of that question is it assumes that there's this narrow range of things that you do for this narrow range of students who are different. The way that you just talked about the meaning of neurodiversity probably means that you have a different ...
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    26 mins
  • Season 3 | Episode 13 – Assessment in the Early Years - Guest: Shelly Scheafer
    Mar 6 2025
    Assessment in the Early Years Guest: Shelly Scheafer ROUNDING UP: SEASON 3 | EPISODE 13 Mike (00:09.127) Welcome to the podcast Shelley. Thank you so much for joining us today. Shelly (00:12.956) Thank you, Mike, for having me. Mike (00:16.078) So I'd like to start with this question. What makes the work of assessing younger children, particularly students in grades K through two, different from assessing students in upper elementary grades or even beyond? Shelly (00:30.3) There's a lot to that question, Mike. I think there's some obvious things. So effective assessment of our youngest learners is different because obviously our pre-K, first, even our second grade students are developmentally different from fourth and fifth graders. So when we think about assessing these early primary students, we need to use appropriate assessment methods that match their stage of development. For example, when we think of typical paper pencil assessments and how we often ask students to show their thinking with pictures, numbers and words, our youngest learners are just starting to connect symbolic representations to mathematical ideas, let alone, you know, put letters together to make words. So When we think of these assessments, we need to take into consideration that primary students are in the early stages of development with respect to their language, their reading, and their writing skills. And this in itself makes it challenging for them to fully articulate, write, sketch any of their mathematical thinking. So we often find that with young children in reviews, you know, individual interviews can be really helpful. But even then, there's some drawbacks. Some children find it challenging, you know, to be put on the spot, to show in the moment, you know, on demand, you know, what they know. Others, you know, just aren't fully engaged or interested because you've called them over from something that they're busy doing. Or maybe, you know, they're not yet comfortable with the setting or even the person doing the interview. So when we work with young children, we need to recognize all of these little peculiarities that come with working with that age. We also need to understand that their mathematical development is fluid, it's continually evolving. And this is why Shelly (02:47.42) they often or some may respond differently to the same proper question, especially if the setting or the context is changed. We may find that a kindergarten student who counts to 29 on Monday may count to 69 or even 100 later in the week, kind of depending on what's going on in their mind at the time. So this means that assessment with young children needs to be frequent. informative and ongoing. So we're not necessarily waiting for the end of the unit to see, aha, did they get this? You know, what do we do? You know, we're looking at their work all of the time. And fortunately, some of the best assessments on young children are the observations in their natural setting, like times when maybe they're playing a math game or working with a center activity or even during just your classroom routines. And it's these authentic situations that we can look at as assessments to help us capture a more accurate picture of their abilities because we not only get to hear what they say or see what they write on paper, we get to watch them in action. We get to see what they do when they're engaged in small group activities or playing games with friends. Mike (04:11.832) So I wanna go back to something you said and even in particular the way that you said it. You were talking about watching or noticing what students can do and you really emphasize the words do. Talk a little bit about what you were trying to convey with that, Shelley. Shelly (04:27.548) So young children are doers. When they work on a math task, they show their thinking and their actions with finger formations and objects. And we can see if a student has one-to-one correspondence when they're counting, if they group their objects, how they line them up, do they tag them, do they move them as they count them. They may not always have the verbal skills to articulate their thinking, but we can also attend to things like head nodding, finger counting, and even how they cluster or match objects. So I'm going to give you an example. So let's say that I'm watching some early first graders, and they're solving the expression 6 plus 7. And the first student picks up a number rack or a rec and rec. And if you're not familiar with a number rack, it's a tool with two rows of beads. And on the first row, there are five red beads and five white beads. And on the second row, there's five red beads and five white beads. And the student solving six plus seven begins by pushing over five red beads in one push and then one more bead on the top row. And then they do the same thing for the seven. They push over five red beads and two white beads. And they haven't said a word to me. I'm just watching their...
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    30 mins
  • Season 3 | Episode 12 – Inside Out: Examining the Meaning and Purpose of our Questions - Guest: Dr. Victoria Jacobs
    Feb 20 2025
    Dr. Victoria Jacobs, Examining the Meaning and Purpose of our Questions ROUNDING UP: SEASON 3 | EPISODE 12 Mike (00:03): The questions educators ask their students matter. They can have a profound impact on students' thinking and the shape of their mathematical identities. Today we're examining different types of questions, their purpose and the meaning students make of them. Joining us for this conversation is Dr. Vicki Jacobs from the University of North Carolina Greensboro. Welcome to the podcast, Vicki. I'm really excited to talk with you today. Vicki (00:33): Thanks so much for having me. I'm excited to be here. Mike (00:36): So you've been examining the ways that educators use questioning to explore the details of students' thinking. And I wonder if we could start by having you share what drew you to the topic. Vicki (00:47): For me, it all starts with children's thinking because it's absolutely fascinating, but it's also mathematically rich. And so a core part of good math instruction is when teachers elicit children's ideas and then build instruction based on that. And so questioning obviously plays a big role in that, but it's hard. It's hard to do that well in the moment. So I found questioning to explore children's thinking to be a worthwhile thing to spend time thinking about and working on. Mike (01:17): Well, let's dig into the ideas that have emerged from that work. How can teachers think about the types of questions that they might ask their students? Vicki (01:24): Happy to share. But before I talk about what I've learned about questioning, I really need to acknowledge some of the many people that have helped me learn about questioning over the years. And I want to give a particular shout out to the teachers and researchers in the wonderful cognitively guided instruction or CGI community as well as my long-term research collaborators at San Diego State University. And more recently, Susan Sen. This work isn't done alone, but what have we learned about teacher questioning across a variety of projects? I'll share two big ideas and the first relates to the goals of questioning and the second addresses more directly the types of questions teachers might ask. So let's start with the goals of questioning because there are lots of reasons teachers might ask questions in math classrooms. And one common way to think about the goal of questioning is that we need to direct children to particular strategies during problem solving. (02:23): So if children are stuck or they're headed down a wrong path, we can use questions to redirect them so that they can get to correct answers with particular strategies. Sometimes that may be okay, but when we only do that, we're missing a big opportunity to tap into children's sense-making. Another way to think about the goal of questioning is that we're trying to explore children's thinking during problem solving. So think about a math task where multiple strategies are encouraged and children can approach problem solving in any way that makes sense to. So we can then ask questions that are designed to reveal how children are thinking about the problem solving, not just how well they're executing our strategies. And we can ask these questions when children are stuck, but also when they solve problems correctly. So this shift in the purpose of questioning is huge. And I want to share a quote from a teacher that I think captures the enormity of this shift. (03:26): She's a fifth grade teacher, and what she said was the biggest thing I learned from the professional development was not asking questions to get them to the answers so that I could move them up a strategy, but to understand their thinking. That literally changed my world. It changed everything. So I love this quote because it shows how transformative this shift can be because when teachers become curious about how children are thinking about problem solving, they give children more space to problem solve in multiple ways, and then they can question to understand and support children's ideas. And these types of questions are great because they increase learning opportunities for both children and teachers. So children get more opportunities to learn how to talk math in a way that's meaningful to them because they're talking about their own ideas and they also get to clarify what they did think more about important math that's embedded in their strategies and sometimes to even self-correct. And then as teachers, these types of questions give us a window into children's understandings, and that helps us determine our next steps. Questioning can have a different and powerful purpose when we shift from directing children toward particular strategies to exploring their mathematical thinking. Mike (04:54): I keep going back to the quote that you shared, and I think the details of the why and kind of the difference in the experience for students really jump out. But I'm really compelled by what that teacher ...
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    23 mins
  • Season 3 | Episode 11 – Affirming Students’ Mathematics Identities - Guest: Dr. Karisma Morton
    Feb 6 2025
    Dr. Karisma Morton, Understanding and Supporting Math Identity ROUNDING UP: SEASON 3 | EPISODE 11 In this episode, we will explore the connection between identity and mathematics learning. We’ll examine the factors that may have shaped our own identities and those of our students. We’ll also discuss ways to practice affirming students' identities in mathematics instruction. BIOGRAPHIES Dr. Karisma Morton is an assistant professor of mathematics education at the University of North Texas. Her research explores elementary preservice teachers’ ability to teach mathematics in equitable ways, particularly through the development of their critical racial consciousness. Findings from her research have been published in the Journal for Research in Mathematics Education and Educational Researcher. ​ RESOURCES The Impact of Identity in K–8 Mathematics: Rethinking Equity-Based Practices by Julia Aguirre, Karen Mayfield-Ingram, and Danny Martin Rough Draft Math: Revising to Learn by Amanda Jansen Olga Torres' “Rights of the Learner” framework Cultivating Mathematical Hearts: Culturally Responsive Mathematics Teaching in Elementary Classrooms by Maria del Rosario Zavala and Julia Maria Aguirre TRANSCRIPT Mike Wallus: If someone asked you if you were good at math, what would you say, and what justification would you provide for your answer? Regardless of whether you said yes or no, there are some big assumptions baked into this question. In this episode, we're talking with Dr. Karisma Morton about the ways the mathematics identities we formed in childhood impact our instructional practices as adults and how we can support students' mathematical identity formation in the here and now. Welcome to the podcast, Karisma. I am really excited to be talking with you about affirming our students’ mathematics identities. Karisma: Oh, I am really, really excited to be here, Mike. Thank you so much for the invitation to come speak to your audience about this. Mike: As we were preparing for this podcast, one of the things that you mentioned was the need to move away from this idea that there are math people and nonmath people. While it may seem obvious to some folks, I'm wondering if you can talk about why is this such an important thing and what type of stance educators might adopt in its place? Karisma: So, the thing is, there is no such thing as a math person, right? We are all math people. And so, if we want to move away from this idea, it means moving away from the belief that people are inherently good or bad at math. The truth is, we all engage in mathematical activity every single day, whether we realize it or not. We are all mathematicians. And so, the key is, as math teachers, we want to remove that barrier in our classrooms that says that only some students are math capable. In the math classroom, we can begin doing that by leveraging what students know mathematically, how they experience mathematics in their daily life. And then we as educators can then incorporate some of those types of activities into the everyday learning of math in our classrooms. So, the idea is to get students to realize they are capable math doers, that they are math people. And you're showing them the evidence that they are by bringing in what they're already doing. And not just that they are math doers, but that those peers that are also engaged in the classroom with them are capable math doers. And so, breaking down those barriers that say that some students are and some students aren't is really key. So, we are all math people. Mike: I love that sentiment. You know, I've seen you facilitate an activity with educators that I'm hoping that we could replicate on the podcast. You asked educators to sort themselves into one of four groups that best describe their experience when they were a learner of mathematics. And I'm wondering if you could read the categories aloud and then I'm going to ask our listeners to think about the description that best describes their own experiences. Karisma: OK, great. So, there are four groups. And so, if you believe that your experience is one where you dreaded math and you had an overall bad experience with it, then you would choose group 1. If you believe that math was difficult but you could solve problems with tutoring or help, then you would select group 2. If you found that math was easy because you were able to memorize and follow procedures but you had to practice a lot, then you'd be in group 3. And finally, if you had very few difficulties with math or you were kind of considered a math whiz, then you would select group 4. Mike: I had such a strong reaction when I participated in this activity for the first time. So, I have had my own reckoning with this experience, but I wonder what impact you've seen this have on educators. Why do it? What's the impact that you hope it has for someone who's participating? Karisma: Yeah. So, I would say that a key part of promoting that ...
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    19 mins
  • Season 3 | Episode 10 – Building Productive Partnerships - Guests: Sue Kim and Myuriel von Aspen
    Jan 23 2025
    Sue Kim and Myuriel Von Aspen, Building Productive Partnerships ROUNDING UP: SEASON 3 | EPISODE 10 In this episode, we examine the practice of building productive student partnerships. We’ll talk about ways educators can cultivate joyful and productive partnerships and the role the educator plays once students are engaged with their partner. BIOGRAPHIES Sue Kim is an advocate for children’s thinking and providing them a voice in learning mathematics. She received her teaching credential and master of education from Biola University in Southern California. She has been an educator for 15 years and has taught and coached across TK–5th grade classrooms including Los Angeles Unified School District and El Segundo Unified School District as well as several other Orange County, California, school districts. Myuriel von Aspen believes in fostering collaborative partnerships with teachers with the goal of advancing equitable, high-quality learning opportunities for all children. Myuriel earned a master of arts in teaching and a master of business administration from the University of California, Irvine and a bachelor of science in computer science from Florida International University. She currently serves as a math coordinator of the Teaching, Learning, and Instructional Leadership Collaborative. ​ RESOURCES Catalyzing Change in Early Childhood and Elementary Mathematics by National Council of Teachers of Mathematics Purposeful Play by Kristine Mraz, Alison Porcelli, and Cheryl Tyler Hands Down, Speak Out: Listening and Talking Across Literacy and Math K–5 by Kassia Omohundro Wedekind and Christy Hermann Thompson TRANSCRIPT Mike Wallus: What are the keys to establishing productive student partnerships in an elementary classroom? And how can educators leverage the learning that happens in partnerships for the benefit of the entire class? We'll explore these and other questions with Sue Kim and Myuriel von Aspen from the Orange County Office of Education on this episode of Rounding Up. Well, hi, Sue and Myuriel. Welcome to the podcast. Myuriel von Aspen: Hi, Mike. Sue Kim: Thanks for having us. Mike: Thrilled to have you both. So, I first heard you two talk about the power of student partnerships in a context that involved counting collections. And during that presentation, you all said a few things that I have been thinking about ever since. The first thing that you said was that neuroscience shows that you can't really separate emotions from the way that we learn. And I wonder what do you mean when you say that and why do you think it's important when we're thinking about student partnerships? Myuriel: Yes, absolutely. So, this idea comes directly from neuroscience research, the idea that we cannot build memories without emotions. I'm going to read to you a short quote from the NCTM [National Council of Teachers of Mathematics] publication Catalyzing Change in Early Childhood and Elementary Mathematics that says, “Emerging evidence from neuroscience strongly shows that one cannot separate the learning of mathematics content from children's views and feelings toward mathematics.” So, to me, what that says is that how children feel has a huge influence on their ability to learn math and also on how they feel about themselves as learners of math. So, depending on how they feel, they might be willing to engage in the content or not. And so, as they're engaging in counting collections and they're enjoying counting and they feel joyful and they're doing this with friends, they will learn better because they enjoy it, and they care about what they're doing and what they're learning. Mike: You know, this is a nice segue to the other thing that has been on my mind since I heard you all talk about this because I remember you said that students don't think about a task like counting collections as work, that they see it as play. And I wonder what you think the ramifications of that are for how we approach student partnership? Sue: Yeah, you know, I've been in so many classrooms across TK through fifth [grade], and when I watch kids count collections, we see joy, we see engagement in these ways. But I've also been thinking about this idea of how play is even defined, in a way, since you asked that question that they think of it as play. Kristine Mraz, teacher, author, and a consultant, has [coauthored] a book called Purposeful Play. And I remember this was the first time I hear about this reference about Vivian Paley, an American early childhood educator and researcher, stress through her career, the importance of play for children when she discovered in her work that play’s actually a very complex activity and that it is indeed hard work. It's the work of kids. It's the work of what children do. That's their life, in a sense. And so, something I've been thinking about is how kids perceive play is different than how adults perceive play. And so, they take it with seriousness. There...
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    34 mins
  • Season 3 | Episode 9 – Breaking the Cycle of Math Trauma - Guest: Dr. Kasi Allen
    Jan 9 2025
    Dr. Kasi Allen, Breaking the Cycle of Math Trauma ROUNDING UP: SEASON 3 | EPISODE 9 If you are an educator, you’ve likely heard people say things like “I’m a math person.” While this may make you cringe, if you dig a bit deeper, many people can identify specific experiences that convinced them that this was true. In fact, some of you might secretly wonder if you are a math person as well. Today we’re talking with Dr. Kasi Allen about math trauma: what it is and how educators can take steps to address it. BIOGRAPHY Kasi Allen serves as the vice president of learning and impact at The Ford Family Foundation. She holds a PhD degree in educational policy and a bachelor’s degree in mathematics and its history, both from Stanford University. RESOURCES “Jo Boaler Wants Everyone to Love Math” — Stanford Magazine R-RIGHTS Learning to Love Math by Judy Willis TRANSCRIPT Mike Wallus: If you're an educator, I'm almost certain you've heard people say things like, “I am not a math person.” While this may make you cringe, if you dig a bit deeper, many of those folks can identify specific experiences that convinced them that this was true. In fact, some of you might secretly wonder if you're actually a math person. Today we're talking with Dr. Kasi Allen about math trauma: what it is and how educators can take steps to address it. Well, hello, Kasi. Welcome to the podcast. Kasi Allen: Hi, Mike. Thanks for having me. Great to be here. Mike: I wonder if we could start by talking about what drew you to the topic of math trauma in the first place? Kasi: Really good question. You know, I've been curious about this topic for almost as long as I can remember, especially about how people's different relationships with math seem to affect their lives and how that starts at a very early age. I think it was around fourth grade for me probably, that I became aware of how much I liked math and how much my best friend and my sister had an absolutely opposite relationship with it—even though we were attending the same school, same teachers, and so on. And I really wanted to understand why that was happening. And honestly, I think that's what made me want to become a high school math teacher. I was convinced I could do it in a way that maybe wouldn't hurt people as much. Or it might even make them like it and feel like they could do anything that they wanted to do. But it wasn't until many years later, as a professor of education, when I was teaching teachers how to teach math, that this topic really resurfaced for me [in] a whole new way among my family, among my friends. And if you're somebody who's taught math, you're the math emergency person. And so, I had collected over the years stories of people's not-so-awesome experiences with math. But it was when I was asked to teach an algebra for elementary teachers course, that was actually the students’ idea. And the idea of this course was that we'd help preservice elementary teachers get a better window into how the math they were teaching was planting the seeds for how people might access algebra later. On the very first day, the first year I taught this class, there were three sections. I passed out the syllabus; in all three sections, the same thing happened. Somebody either started crying in a way that needed consoling by another peer, or they got up and left, or both. And I was just pretty dismayed. I hadn't spoken a word. The syllabi were just sitting on the table. And it really made me want to go after this in a new way. I mean, something—it just made me feel like something different was happening here. This was not the math anxiety that everybody talked about when I was younger. This was definitely different, and it became my passion project: trying to figure how we disrupt that cycle. Mike: Well, I think that's a good segue because I've heard you say that the term “math anxiety” centers this as a problem that's within the person. And that in fact, this isn't about the person. Instead, it's about the experience, something that's happened to people that's causing this type of reaction. Do I have that right, Kasi? Kasi: One hundred percent. And I think this is really important. When I grew up and when I became a teacher, I think that was an era when there was a lot of focus on math anxiety, the prevalence of math anxiety. Sheila Tobias wrote the famous book Overcoming Math Anxiety. This was especially a problem among women. There were dozens of books. And there were a number of problems with that work at the time, and that most of the research people were citing was taking place outside of math education. The work was all really before the field of neuroscience was actually a thing. Lots of deficit thinking that something is wrong with the person who is suffering this anxiety. And most of these books were very self-helpy. And so, not only is there something wrong with you, but you need to fix it yourself. So, it really centers all ...
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