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A Guide to the
8 Mathematical Practice Standards
in Mathematics
RAFAEL F. MAMANSAG JR.
Resource Speaker
What is Common Core
Standards in Mathematical
Practices?
• It is a way to approach teaching so
that students develop a
mathematical mindset and see
math in the world around them.
• is a guide to good math instruction.
#1 Make sense of problems and
persevere in solving them.
What it means:
• Understand the problem, find a way to
attack it, and work until it is done.
• Basically, you will find practice
standard #1 in every math problem,
every day.
• The hardest part is pushing students
to solve tough problems by applying
what they already know and to
monitor themselves when problem-
solving.
#1 Make sense of problems and
persevere in solving them.
Own it:
• Give students tough tasks and let them
work through them.
• Allow wait time for yourself and your
students.
• Work for progress and “aha” moments.
• The math becomes about the process
and not about the one right answer.
• Lead with questions, but don’t pick up a
pencil.
• Have students make headway in the
task themselves.
#2 Reason abstractly and
quantitatively.
What it means:
• Get ready for the
words contextualize and decontextualize.
• If students have a problem, they should
be able to break it apart and show it
symbolically, with pictures, or in any way
other than the standard algorithm.
• Conversely, if students are working a
problem, they should be able to apply the
“math work” to the situation.
#2 Reason abstractly and
quantitatively.
Own It:
• Have students draw representations of
problems.
• Break out the manipulatives.
• Let students figure out what to do with
data themselves instead of boxing them
into one type of organization.
• Ask questions that lead students to
understanding.
• Have students draw their thinking, with
and without traditional number sentences.
#3 Construct viable arguments
and critique the reasoning of
others
Own it:
• Post mathematical vocabulary and make
your students use it — not just in math
class, either!
• Use "talk moves" to encourage discourse.
• Work on your classroom environment
from day one so that it is a safe place to
discuss ideas.
#4 Model with mathematics
What it means:
• Use math to solve real-world problems,
organize data, and understand the world
around you.
#4 Model with mathematics
Own it:
• Math limited to math class is worthless.
• Have students use math in science, art,
music, and even reading.
• Use real graphics, articles, and data from
the newspaper or other sources to make
math relevant and real.
• Have students create real-world problems
using their mathematical knowledge.
#5 Use appropriate tools
strategically
What it means:
• Students can select the appropriate math
tool to use and use it correctly to solve
problems.
• In the real world, no one tells you that it is
time to use the meter stick instead of the
protractor.
#5 Use appropriate tools
strategically
Own it:
• Don’t tell students what tool to use.
• Try to leave the decision open ended and then
discuss what worked best and why. For
example, I wanted my students to find their
height. They had measuring tapes, rulers, and
meter sticks among their math tools. Once
everyone found their height, we discussed which
tools worked best and why.
• Leave math tools accessible and resist the urge
to tell students what must be used for the task.
• Let them decide; they might surprise you!
#6 Attend to precision
What it means:
Students speak and solve
mathematics with
exactness and
meticulousness.
#6 Attend to precision
Own it:
• Push students to use precise and exact
language in math.
• Measurements should be exact, numbers
should be precise, and explanations must
be detailed. One change I’ve made is not
allowing the phrase, “I don’t get it.”
• Students have to explain exactly what
they do and do not understand and where
their understanding falls apart.
#7 Look for and make use of
structure
What it means:
• Find patterns and repeated reasoning
that can help solve more complex
problems.
• For young students this might be
recognizing fact families, inverses, or the
distributive property.
• As students get older, they can break
apart problems and numbers into familiar
relationships.
#7 Look for and make use of
structure
Own It:
• Help students identify multiple strategies and
then select the best one.
• Repeatedly break apart numbers and problems
into different parts.
• Use what you know is true to solve a new
problem.
• Prove solutions without relying on the algorithm.
For example, my students are changing mixed
numbers into improper fractions. They have to
prove to me that they have the right answer
without using the “steps.”
#8 Look for and express
regularity in repeated reasoning
What it means:
• Keep an eye on the big picture while
working out the details of the
problem.
• You don’t want kids that can solve
the one problem you’ve given them;
you want students who can
generalize their thinking.
#8 Look for and express
regularity in repeated reasoning
Own it:
• I heard Greg Tang speak a couple of
years ago and he gave some advice I
think fits this standard perfectly. He said
to show students how the problem works.
As soon as they “get it,” start making
them generalize to a variety of problems.
• Don’t work fifty of the same problem; take
your mathematical reasoning and apply it
to other situations.

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A Guide to the Mathematical Practice Standards in Mathematics.ppt

  • 1. A Guide to the 8 Mathematical Practice Standards in Mathematics RAFAEL F. MAMANSAG JR. Resource Speaker
  • 2. What is Common Core Standards in Mathematical Practices? • It is a way to approach teaching so that students develop a mathematical mindset and see math in the world around them. • is a guide to good math instruction.
  • 3. #1 Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them. What it means: • Understand the problem, find a way to attack it, and work until it is done. • Basically, you will find practice standard #1 in every math problem, every day. • The hardest part is pushing students to solve tough problems by applying what they already know and to monitor themselves when problem- solving.
  • 4. #1 Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them. Own it: • Give students tough tasks and let them work through them. • Allow wait time for yourself and your students. • Work for progress and “aha” moments. • The math becomes about the process and not about the one right answer. • Lead with questions, but don’t pick up a pencil. • Have students make headway in the task themselves.
  • 5. #2 Reason abstractly and quantitatively. What it means: • Get ready for the words contextualize and decontextualize. • If students have a problem, they should be able to break it apart and show it symbolically, with pictures, or in any way other than the standard algorithm. • Conversely, if students are working a problem, they should be able to apply the “math work” to the situation.
  • 6. #2 Reason abstractly and quantitatively. Own It: • Have students draw representations of problems. • Break out the manipulatives. • Let students figure out what to do with data themselves instead of boxing them into one type of organization. • Ask questions that lead students to understanding. • Have students draw their thinking, with and without traditional number sentences.
  • 7. #3 Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others Own it: • Post mathematical vocabulary and make your students use it — not just in math class, either! • Use "talk moves" to encourage discourse. • Work on your classroom environment from day one so that it is a safe place to discuss ideas.
  • 8. #4 Model with mathematics What it means: • Use math to solve real-world problems, organize data, and understand the world around you.
  • 9. #4 Model with mathematics Own it: • Math limited to math class is worthless. • Have students use math in science, art, music, and even reading. • Use real graphics, articles, and data from the newspaper or other sources to make math relevant and real. • Have students create real-world problems using their mathematical knowledge.
  • 10. #5 Use appropriate tools strategically What it means: • Students can select the appropriate math tool to use and use it correctly to solve problems. • In the real world, no one tells you that it is time to use the meter stick instead of the protractor.
  • 11. #5 Use appropriate tools strategically Own it: • Don’t tell students what tool to use. • Try to leave the decision open ended and then discuss what worked best and why. For example, I wanted my students to find their height. They had measuring tapes, rulers, and meter sticks among their math tools. Once everyone found their height, we discussed which tools worked best and why. • Leave math tools accessible and resist the urge to tell students what must be used for the task. • Let them decide; they might surprise you!
  • 12. #6 Attend to precision What it means: Students speak and solve mathematics with exactness and meticulousness.
  • 13. #6 Attend to precision Own it: • Push students to use precise and exact language in math. • Measurements should be exact, numbers should be precise, and explanations must be detailed. One change I’ve made is not allowing the phrase, “I don’t get it.” • Students have to explain exactly what they do and do not understand and where their understanding falls apart.
  • 14. #7 Look for and make use of structure What it means: • Find patterns and repeated reasoning that can help solve more complex problems. • For young students this might be recognizing fact families, inverses, or the distributive property. • As students get older, they can break apart problems and numbers into familiar relationships.
  • 15. #7 Look for and make use of structure Own It: • Help students identify multiple strategies and then select the best one. • Repeatedly break apart numbers and problems into different parts. • Use what you know is true to solve a new problem. • Prove solutions without relying on the algorithm. For example, my students are changing mixed numbers into improper fractions. They have to prove to me that they have the right answer without using the “steps.”
  • 16. #8 Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning What it means: • Keep an eye on the big picture while working out the details of the problem. • You don’t want kids that can solve the one problem you’ve given them; you want students who can generalize their thinking.
  • 17. #8 Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning Own it: • I heard Greg Tang speak a couple of years ago and he gave some advice I think fits this standard perfectly. He said to show students how the problem works. As soon as they “get it,” start making them generalize to a variety of problems. • Don’t work fifty of the same problem; take your mathematical reasoning and apply it to other situations.