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Special Issue Article:
A Look at Technology's Role in
Professional Development
of Mathematics Teachers at the Middle School
Level
by Ihor Charischak
Web version of article that
appeared in School
Science
and Mathematics (November, 2000)
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IIn last month's issue of School
Science
and Mathematics,
Glenda Lappan wrote about the dilemma of supporting
teachers in
continuing
to grow professionally by learning more mathematics
content, improving
their pedagogical and assessment skills, and
adapting the curriculum to
the needs of their students. Though it is clear that
this kind of
learning
is best done in the context of what is going on in
the classroom,
teacher's
schedules and other problems make it difficult to
implement a coherent
classroom based professional development program. In
this article, the
author adds two more knowledge domains to this mix:
the ability to use
and teach with technology. Since learning and
teaching is a dynamic
process,
he envisions the classroom as a laboratory where
teachers get to
practice
and improve in these six areas and get feedback from
an audience of
their
peers. His reflections are based on a current
project he is working on
in Paterson, NJ where he helps middle school
teachers use computer
software
to improve mathematics teaching and learning.
The technology wizards, pundits, and
even
ordinary people
love to reflect on and predict what the future will
hold as a result of
new and emerging technologies. The designers of the
1939 World's Fair
were
no exception when they predicted that by 1969 we would
have smart cars
that would keep a safe distance from other cars by
radio control (PBS,
1997). That goal was not reached (though cars were
somewhat safer in
'69),
but the U.S. did manage to land a man on the moon. So
that begs the
question:
Why were scientists not able to do something as
straight forward as
designing
cars that can manage to avoid each other if they were
able to do
something
as complex as a moon landing? Predicting all the
political and social
minefields
that can delay or derail a project is almost
impossible.
Behind the 1939 vision was a belief
that
technology could
eventually solve most if not all our problems. In the
early '80s, the
National
Educational Computer Conferences were gathering places
for educators
touting
technology's promise for education. Education, of
course, is not immune
to similar social and political issues that automakers
had in producing
safe cars.
As a high school student I was thrilled
to be
chosen as
one of the few students who got to take algebra in the
eighth grade. At
the time, my teachers and administrators did not look
ahead to what we
might do as seniors after we finished the usual 12th
grade program in
the
11th year. Fortunately for them, serendipity stepped
in and a new
technological
innovation called "programmed learning" appeared which
with much
fan-fare
I helped pioneer. It was a lot quieter the following
December when our
teachers realized that though we got all the
programmed questions right
(you could not turn the page if you did not answer
correctly) we could
not pass the tests and did not have a clue as to what
we were
learning.
Despite the fact that the historical
educational technology
landscape is littered with expensive by-products of
best intentions,
the
new millennium begins with schools investing heavily
in technology,
getting
wired for and connected to the Internet, etc. as if
the ghost of
programmed
learning was not lingering in the background waiting
for its next
victim.
But today's technologies are fundamentally different
in that they are
more
highly integrated into the culture and fabric of
society. That does not
automatically mean that schools will fully take
advantage of it for
teaching
and learning. A course needs to be charted that will
refocus school's
attention
on the ultimate prize, which is student's authentic
learning. The ideas
in this paper have to do with the kind of professional
staff
development
that would use technology as a catalyst for helping
teachers learn
mathematics
in an interesting, engaging way and employ effective
strategies in the
classroom that promote student learning.
I joined the computer educational
technology
bandwagon
when I discovered firsthand in the late '70s that
microcomputers in the
hands of students can make a difference in their
approach to learning.
The computer created a context in which some of my
students actually
wanted
to learn the mathematics, because it was now "cool" to
learn it! I knew
that I had stumbled onto something fundamentally
different and
potentially
more rewarding than any resource I had ever used
before.
Though I had seen the light and I acted
on it
during my
teaching days, the light blinded me from seeing the
difficulties other
teachers would encounter using this technology
effectively. As I gained
computer experience, I began to share it with my
colleagues. A few took
to it, but most them ignored it. It was frustrating. I
started gaining
some perspective on this problem after I learned of
some pioneer
research
that examined why so many innovations were not making
an impact on
schools.
David Dockterman, an educational software developer at
Tom Snyder
Productions,
told me about a Rand Study (Berman & McLaughlin,
1978) examining a
host of various technologies in the schools and
reporting on the
problems
these innovations had in taking root in the
classroom.
[The Rand Study said] that any
time you
inject an innovation
into a school without taking into account the
complex social nature and
workings of the institution, that innovation will
failÖ.
Youíll
(also) fail unless that technology directly
benefits one or more adults
who are central to the institution. It is not
enough to improve people
or make them more efficient. They have got to like
the new technology
better
than what they had before; itís got to feel
better to them in
some
way. (Snyder, 1994)
I began to realize that technology in
schools is
not driven
by the latest and greatest gizmo, no matter how good it
was, but rather
what fits best into the school's current structure.
Judith Newman put
it
this way: "We choose tools based on what we believe
about learning in
the
first placeÖ all the important questions are really
about
curriculum
and instruction" (Newman, 2000).
Newman's view echoes the new Principals
and
Standards
for School Mathematics (National Council of Teachers
of Mathematics,
2000)
technology principle, in which technology's role is
said to amplify and
enhance mathematics curriculum and instruction and not
be the answer
(as
some of the vendors would like for us to believe) for
all our "math
woes."
With this new understanding, I
approached my
staff development
duties by first asking teachers how I could help them
achieve their
goals,
rather than do something I decided was good for them.
The challenge was
to see how I could incorporate my vision of technology
in education in
ways that the teachers could buy into and
support.
The Paterson Experience
Two years ago Paterson, an urban school
district
in New
Jersey, and Stevens Institute of Technology 's Center
for Improved
Engineering
& Science Education (better known as CIESE) joined
in a partnership
for a 3 year period in an initiative called
"Integrating Mathematics
and
Technology Teacher Training" (IMATTT). The goal was to
help 39 teachers
in six different buildings integrate computer software
into the
teaching
of sixth, seventh, and eighth grade mathematics. In
addition to the
math
teachers involved, a computer teacher was included as
a part of the
school
teams. Two of my colleagues (retired former math
teachers) and I
embarked
on a course of workshops (summer and after school) and
academic year
classroom
visitations, with the objective being to help the
teachers teach
computer-related
lessons. During my visits and observations, I noticed
that I can view
the
lesson from different perspectives or levels
(Charischak, 1994). At
first
glance I was aware of how the teacher handled
classroom management. I
watched
to see what the teacher was doing to achieve his or
her goals. I looked
to the students to give me clues. Did they appear to
be acting
responsibly?
Were they listening? Were they doing their
assignments? Looking a bit
closer
and deeper, I gauged the student's level of
engagement. Were the
students
really interested in what the teacher had proposed?
Was it consistent
with
the goals? Were they engaged with other students in
doing things that
support
(aid and abet) the teacher's agenda? Then I looked
even deeper --- at
the
third level --- the level of learning. What were the
students actually
learning as they did the activity? Did their
conversations yield clues
as they worked toward a solution to a problem? Were
they listening
intently
and asking questions to clarify the ideas presented?
Did they leave at
the end of the class still talking about the activity?
This third level
was not easy to gauge because students can be good at
looking like they
are learning. (I know, because I was one of those
students.) Asking the
students some questions about the activity revealed
good clues. What I
discover is that many students were just going through
the motions,
motivated
only by extrinsic rewards such as grades and
completing required
assignments.
This lack of engagement at the learning level could be
one of the more
significant problems (Steinberg, 1996). Students seem
to have made some
covert agreements (or compromises) with their teacher
as to how they
shall
define achievement in the class. The agreement might
be that if the
student
can answer correctly on average 70% of the questions
on the tests, then
the teacher and the student will agree that the
student knows the
material
well enough to pass the course. Howard Gardner called
this the
"correct-answer
compromise," which takes the teacher and the student
off the hook for
really
making sure that learning happens (Gardner, 1991.) If
educators are to
make inroads at this third, "rubber meets the road"
level then student
engagement must be more than just passing tests and
following teacher's
prescriptions. The classroom needs to be place where
both teachers and
students play hard at learning together.
In the October 2000 issue of SSM,
Glenda
Lappan stated,
If it takes the view that
teaching of
mathematics (or
science) that our [as teachers] is to support
learning by aiding and
abetting
students through an animated conversation on the
subject we have to ask
ourselves what does the teacher need to know to in
order to do this
well?
Lappan identified four domains of
knowledge as
important
areas to know about in the teaching of mathematics:
content for
teaching,
pedagogy, learning, and evaluation. Two more domains may
be added that
help in successfully implementing technology in the
classroom: (1)
knowledge
of technological resources and how to use them and (2)
knowledge of how
to create and use technology-based learning
environments.
These six domains will be reviewed in
the
context of the
mission of my project at Paterson, which is to help
teachers integrate
computer software into the teaching of mathematics.
Teachers' knowledge
in each of these domains guides me in best helping
them in my visits
and
workshops.
Ability to use and access resources such as
computers,
software,
calculators, hand-held devices, and the Internet.
This is the part that teachers like the
best, not
only
because it offers them a knowledge base of what they
can do with
students,
but it also enhances their personal and professional
understanding of
important
aspects of our modern world. Becoming e-mail
proficient offers
opportunities
for gaining confidence in using the technology, while
the World Wide
Web
offers unlimited possibilities for classroom
resources.
Creating Technology- oriented Learning
Environments.
Teachers need to plan ahead to adapt
their
classroom
environment to accommodate new resources and teaching
strategies. Some
strategic approaches that teachers need to become
familiar with include:
- Using a projection device and a
one computer
station to lead
a whole class discussion or activity involving
multi-teams.
- Organizing a small number of
computers in the
classroom for
individual or group activities or projects.
- How to take advantage of a
computer lab (if
available) where
there is a one-to-one (or one-to-two) ratio of
computers to students.
There is a strong need for the teachers to
use
and develop
a repertoire of effective activities for teaching in
these kinds of
setups.
Appropriate lessons are needed. In the Paterson IMATTT
project, we have
put together a curriculum guidebook (a work in
progress), which
includes
such examples. With the convergence of handheld and
desktop
technologies,
these computer model distinctions are slowly fading,
because applying
the
models depends on what device the students can have in
front of them.
For
example, a classroom set of graphing calculators can
turn a standard
classroom
into a computer lab. Software programs that were once
only available on
stand-alone desktop computers can now be run on
calculators and PDAs
(personal
digital assistants).
Mathematical Background and Attitude Toward Learning
Mathematics.
In the IMATTT workshops, teachers learn
to use
various
software programs. They also work on developing a
deeper understanding
of the topics they are teaching. For example, a
spreadsheet program is
an excellent vehicle for getting teachers to work on a
question in
which
coming up with a conjecture depends on collected data,
analyzed with a
graphical display. But what kind of graph should be
used and why? The
spreadsheet
offers an array of choices, not answers. I have seen
some school
hallways
adorned with colorful graphs that are not clear as to
what story is
being
told. One of the IMATTT workshops this past year was
devoted to a
discussion
of graphs that were dealing with the United States
Census that were
hanging
in the hallway. The teachers planned to improve that
lesson this coming
year. A more detailed discussion of this activity and
others can be
found
at the IMATTT website (http://www.ciese.org/imattt).
Pedagogical Strategies and Discourse.
The new Principles and Standards stated
that
students
should work on problems that are embedded in a context
that they
understand
and that the solutions yield insights into the details
of mathematics,
how it works and the power of abstraction. (See, for
example, the Jinx
problem.) I had hopes that after I modeled the
lesson others would
try it (with my help.) Not many did. I assumed they
could go make the
transition.
Since the teachers were still not completely
comfortable with using
technology,
having someone (no matter how friendly and supportive)
makes them
uneasy.
Also, I realized they needed lots of practice in doing
group
activities,
as well as adopting a new style of teaching.
Personalizing the Curriculum.
Since the textbook usually defines the
curriculum
most
teachers look to the teacher's guide for ideas to help
them teach a
particular
lesson more effectively. Unfortunately, the guides are
not very helpful
when it comes to technology. The activities tend to be
generic and need
modifications in order for them to be useful. The
IMATTT curriculum
provides
more interesting technology and standards-based
activities. By
integrating
these activities into their curriculum, teachers are
taking a more
active
role in modifying, learning about and personalizing
the mathematics
lessons
they teach.
Assessment Strategies.
There was a teacher I worked with who
passed away
a few
years ago, and I attended her wake. The place was full
of students
mourning
the loss of this teacher. Of the six domains
identified in this
article,
her strongest was assessment. She made it a point to
make sure she
touched
every student in her class in some way every day. At
the beginning of
class
she would stand at the door and make sure that every
student was ready
to participate in the lesson of the day. She made sure
students had a
pencil,
book or whatever was needed. (She had an endless
supply of pencils.)
After
the activity and the assignment, she would take three
or four students
aside and talk them about the lesson just completed.
Those students
left
knowing that the assessment and pep talk that they
just received would
be repeated over and over again throughout the year. A
key to
successful
assessment is being personal, caring and consistent.
Putting the Six Domains of Knowledge Together: "A
Scene
from a Dynamic
Classroom"
The first three areas - resources,
teacherís knowledge
and interest in math, and the way the room is set up
for classroom
activities
- is the "background" for the classroom event that
will take place. The
school offers a script - either very specific or in
broad strokes -
that
suggests to the teacher what is important to teach.
The curriculum may
offer suggestions as to the kind of discourse that
students have with
their
teachers and each other. It may include guidelines for
assessment to
determine
whether the mission of the school is being carried
out. The resources,
teacherís math knowledge, and the learning
environment set the
stage,
while the dynamics of the curriculum (context), the
discourse
(engagement
in the activity), and assessment (reflection)
determine the success of
the lesson or activity.
But how do I as a staff development
educator
help teachers
to grow in these six areas so that they can put
together what I call a
dynamic classroom? The traditional method of college
courses in these
areas
does not seem to be working very well. Stein, Smith,
& Silver
(1999)
suggest that what is needed is a new way of looking
and addressing the
teaching of teachers for the 21st century. In The
Development of
Professional
Developers: Learning To Assist Teachers In New
Settings In New Ways,
the
authors "describe the challenges that practicing
teacher educators and
professional developers would encounter as they design
and implement
new
programs to help teachers learn new paradigms of
teaching and learning
amidst current educational reforms." (Stein, Smith,
& Silver 1999).
The model they suggest is very similar to what I am
trying to
accomplish
in Paterson, but the reality is that the vision is
elusive. According
to
the authors the new paradigm has these features: (The
features are
theirs;
the commentary is mine.)
Teacher assistance embedded in or directly related
to the
work of
teaching.
Most teachers like to be helped in the
classroom,
be
assisted in planning more effective lessons and help
with carrying out
the lessons especially when the lesson involves the
use of technology.
This is at the heart of what it means to work towards
getting schools
to
support the kinds of classroom activity that
meaningfully goes after
success
at the learning level. The challenge for staff
developers is how best
to
do this given that each school has similar, but unique
set of
circumstances
and obstacles that prevent them from operating more
fully at this
higher
level of pedagogy.
Teacher assistance grounded in the content of
Teaching
& Learning
This feature suggests that the teachers
need to
learn
mathematics content in the context of the curriculum
they are teaching.
Many of the textbooks assume that the teacher has a
good background in
mathematics and do little with helping the teacher
understand the
underlying
mathematics and only superficially how to effectively
teach it. This
can
be a problem even with the very best of curriculums.
So staff
development
needs to focus on personalizing the curriculum for
each teacher giving
them a sense of ownership of the curriculum by
engaging them in
activities
that allows them to contribute and learn from each
other while being
guided
by the staff developer.
Development of Teacher Communities of Professional
Practice.
In Paterson we have after school
workshops open
to any
IMATTT teacher interested in the topic of the
workshop. Other workshops
are scheduled individually at each school for the
teachers that teach
at
that school to work on specific activities. Also, we
encourage teachers
to contribute to the on-going development of the
curriculum that
improves
from year to year. Unfortunately, there are so many
other competing
important
and urgent matters that need to be handled that
focusing on
professional
practice does not get the attention it deserves.
Collaboration with Experts Outside the Teaching
Community.
As someone connected to the professional
world of
teacher
education, I keep in touch with developing ideas and
share these ideas
with the teachers in workshops, newsletters, and
through the IMATTT
website.
The teachers are invited to participate in local
conferences. For
example,
one of the IMATTT sixth grade teachers, Saundra
Generals and I led a
workshop
session at this year's annual NCTM meeting in Chicago.
This fall she
will
lead a similar workshop at a state level mathematics
teacher's
conference
in New Jersey. This kind of activity empowers teachers
to grow and
become
leaders in their school communities. This can also be
a problem for an
individual school when a teacher becomes so skilled
(in this case,
technology)
that she transfers to another school within the
district to become a
technology
teacher.
Consideration of Organizational Content.
There is agreement that teachers need
regular on
going
staff development in order to improve the quality of
their teaching and
learning through a variety of workshops, courses and
trainings.
However,
if these activities though worthwhile and stimulating
for the teacher
are
not well coordinated, they will not necessarily make
any significant
difference
in the teacher's classroom habits. For that reason
Susan
Loucks-Horsley,
Peter Hewson, Nancy Lowe, and Katherine Stiles (1998)
believe that
teacher
assistance should be a design process "not about
importing models or
following
formulas, but rather about thoughtful, conscious
decisionmaking."
(Stein,
Smith, & Silver 1999). This translates into many
classroom visits
and
adjustments of the game plan in order to be responsive
in a constantly
changing environment, while at the same time not
losing perspective on
the real goal which is student's learning.
As I look back at my previous and on
going
efforts in
Paterson and reflect on the future what comes to mind
is what Seymour
Papert
wrote in his seminal book Mindstorms (Papert, 1980 p.
101) about "bugs"
and "debugging",
One does not expect anything to
work at the
first try.
One does not judge by standards like "right-you get
a good grade" and
"wrong-you
get a bad grade." Rather one asks the question: "How
can I fix it?" and
to fix it one has first to understand what happened
on its own terms.
Only
then can we make it happen on our terms.
All I can say is that we are not there
yet, but
we are working
on it. The vision keeps us going.
References.
Berman, P., & McLaughlin, M. W.
(1978).
Federal programs
supporting educational change. Vol. VIII: Implementing
and sustaining
innovations.
Santa Monica, CA: Rand Corporation.
Charischak, I. (1994) Levels of looking
at
pedagogy: reflections
on learning and teaching with technology. Paper
presented at the Spring
Association of Mathematics Teachers of New Jersey
Regional Conference,
Rowan College, Rowan, NJ.
Dockterman, D. (1997). Great teaching
in the
one computer
classroom. (Tom Snyder Productions: Watertown, MA.)
Gardner, H. (1991). The Unschooled
Mind: How
Children
Think and How Schools Should Teach. New York, NY.
Basic Books.
Lappan, G. (2000). A Vision of Learning
to
Teach for the
21st Century. School Science and Mathematics.
100(6)
Loucks-Horsley, S., Hewson, P., Love,
N. &
Stiles,
K. E. (1998). Designing professional development for
teachers of
science
and mathematics. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.
National Council of Teachers of
Mathematics,
(2000) Principals
and Standards for School Mathematics. Reston, VA.
National Council of
Teachers
of Mathematics, Inc.
Newman, J.M. (2000) Following the
yellow brick
road. Phi
Delta Kappan, 81(10), 774
PBS Online Newshour. (1997, August 8).
Automating automobiles.
Transcript [Online] Available: (http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/transportation/august97/smartcars_8-8.html)
Papert, S.
(1980)
Mindstorms:
Children, Computers, and Powerful Ideas. New York, NY.
Basic Books.
Snyder, T. (1994) Blinded by science.
The
Executive Educator,
16(3), 36-40
Stein, M. K. Smith, M. S. Silver, E. A.
(1999)
The development
of professional developers: learning to assist
teachers in new settings
in new ways. Harvard Educational Review, 69, (3),
237-269.
Steinberg, L. (1996). Beyond the
classroom:Why
school
reform has failed and what parents need to do. New
York: Simon &
Schuster.
Ihor Charischak
Stevens Institute of Technology
Center for Improved Engineering &
Science
Education
Castle Point on the Hudson
Hoboken, New Jersey 07030
201-216-5076
icharisc@stevens-tech.edu
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