Saturday, September 18, 2010

Summary and Synthesis

Over the past several classes, I have learned numerous things about teaching math. Before, I thought math was just taught by the traditional "here is a problem, here is how you solve it, now you do it on your own," type of way. Now I know that if I want to teach math in such a way that my students will benefit from it, I have to teach them different strategies to approach mathematics. The strategies that were taught in class were somewhat new to me. I have heard and used some of them when I was in high school math class. I had a teacher that was very great at helping students learn new strategies on how to solve a problem, but not necessarily give them the answers or routes in which they should take. Math takes skill and strategies and in order for students to understand mathematics completely, we, as teachers, have to help them get there. We have to help them develop the skills so that they can find a strategy that works for them. That doesn't mean that we give them the strategy to use, it means that we guide them in the right direction. We teach them the problem solving process which is to first understand the problem completely, then to devise a plan to solve the problem, next, carry out the plan you chose, and lastly, take a look back at the strategy used and the route taken to get the answer. Teaching students valuable strategies and skills will help them to be better at math, it will show them the importance on figuring out situations and problems without having someone to hold their hand.

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