So far, this math course has been really great for learning about how to act as a teacher. Last year we focused more on instructional strategies and engaging activities, which was beneficial in our first year. I think focusing on our attitudes and actions this year is a good extension. Many people believe that teaching is just telling students how to do things, but it is so much more than that. It starts with our attitude, which I touched on last week.
This week we talked more in depth about having a growth mindset, which basically means being open-minded and overcoming challenges that occur. It is important to have a growth mindset when doing math because there are many challenges that make the subject frustrating. Both teachers and students need to be open-minded about the problems and be okay with making mistakes. With a growth mindset, making mistakes is a good thing, because we learn from these mistakes and become better. As teachers we need to help our students to have a growth mindset by having one ourselves. We need to model a positive attitude towards the subject, which will hopefully rub off onto our students.
This video from this week's sessions describes the importance of having a positive attitude about our student's performances.
I will take this important message to heart in my teaching practice. I will encourage my students to succeed. Not only do I have to have a positive attitude about math itself, but towards my students. If I tell them that they won't do well in math class, then they will become discouraged and fail. It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy, which is not good in this context. Instead, I need to be encouraging and believe in my students, even when they seem to have given up on themselves. If a student becomes discouraged about a math problem because they found an incorrect answer, I need to change this negative perspective by asking myself and my students how we can take whats right in an incorrect answer. Using a growth mindset I can use the incorrect answer to explain the problem. As a teacher I will accept all answers to further the lesson to make students successful. This will show my students how mistakes are a good lesson for learning and show them how having a positive attitude is beneficial. Hopefully if I believe in them and continue to encourage them to succeed, they will do well.
For example, in class we were posed with this math problem:
We had to find the which finger we would land on if we counted on our fingers to 1000. It was a challenging question for a few of us, but others figured it out right away. We started by counting to 10 on our hands.
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| Woolley, E. © 2016 |

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