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Exploring Relationships Between Setting Up Complex Tasks and Opportunities to Learn in Concluding Whole-Class Discussions in Middle-Grades Mathematics Instruction
171
Citations
38
References
2013
Year
Mathematics CurriculumComplex TasksEducationCognitive DemandTeaching MethodElementary EducationTeacher EducationMathematics EducationWhole-class DiscussionsStudent LearningClassroom PracticeWhole-class DiscussionCognitive ScienceEmpirical StudyLearning SciencesStudent-centered LearningClassroom InstructionSecondary Mathematics EducationMiddle-grades Mathematics InstructionMathematics Teacher Education
This article specifies how the setup, or introduction, of cognitively demanding tasks is a crucial phase of middle-grades mathematics instruction. We report on an empirical study of 165 middle-grades mathematics teachers' instruction that focused on how they introduced tasks and the relationship between how they introduced tasks and the nature of students' opportunities to learn mathematics in the concluding whole-class discussion. Findings suggest that in lessons in which (a) the setup supported students to develop common language to describe contextual features and mathematical relationships specific to the task and (b) the cognitive demand of the task was maintained in the setup, concluding whole-class discussions were characterized by higher quality opportunities to learn.
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