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Going back to the video clip in the first part of this
example, reflect on students' knowledge, understanding,
and use of mathematics content using the following questions:
- What does David appear to be thinking? What does he
possibly understand? What is your evidence?
- What can you not tell about what he is thinking? What
is your evidence?
- What does the teacher do with David's explanation?
What could be a mathematical reason for this move? A
pedagogical reason? What is your evidence?
- What are some alternative possible moves that the
teacher could have made and why?
Using the video clip in the second part of this example,
consider the following questions:
- What new evidence do you have about David's possible
understanding based on this clip?
- What does David appear to be doing to find the volume
of the large cube? What appears to be his way of solving
the problem?
- When the teacher says: "See how you're, what you're
thinking. Now you have heard all those different explanations.
What do you think?" What could be her reasons for asking
this question? How might that relate to her mathematical
learning goal? What could be the teacher's reason for
getting many different explanations out for discussion?
What could be a reason for not?
- What appears to be the mathematical logic in Eddie's
explanation and thinking? What does she appear to understand?
What does she appear to be struggling with? What does
the teacher do with Eddie's explanation? What could
be possible reasons for this move both mathematical
and pedagogical? What are some possible alternative
moves and why?
- What does Kevin appear to be thinking? What is his
strategy for solving the problem? What is your evidence
of this?
- What possible misconceptions did these students bring
to the problem? What is your evidence? What other possible
misconceptions might students bring to this problem?
What possible teaching strategies might you employ with
these misconceptions and why?
- Are there ways of categorizing possible ways of thinking
about this problem? How might the teacher utilize this
knowledge in using a variety of ways of thinking about
the problem? Are there more efficient ways? Less efficient
ways? Problematic ways? What would be a reason to use
this in relation to the mathematical learning goals?
- What homework might the teacher give? What would the
next day's lesson look like in building on this lesson?
- What might be the larger mathematical point over time?
Why is it important?
References and
Credits
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