Monday, May 4, 2009

Finding our way through math

I'm following the provincial math curriculum with Nature Girl and feeling my way through what works best for her. It appears to get past her strict adherence to external rules - regardless of whether they actually help her learn something or not - the best route is to find a real life way for her to use the information first, let her figure out her own way around managing the information, and then give her the workbook stuff on it after she's done the investigation herself.

We are working with data management and probability right now. The workbook exercises are all about venn diagrams, and different ways of visually representing data. She is getting excited about doing these things herself BEFORE they show up in the "book" and as a result we can discuss why they work - tally sheets with ticks, or visual representations of objects, or a venn diagram, whatever the case may be.

I think she's successfully making math meaningful.

This would be really difficult in a classroom setting. As soon as she "invents" a tally system I can go with it and find an example it works really well with and I can pull out the worksheets that relate to it while it is still fresh in her mind. I can then tweak my examples so that she needs to figure out a more substantial way of managing the data - for example - using division. I can monitor things very closely to make sure she never reaches her frustration threshold while still pulling her through the various examples the curriculum wants us to explore.

1 comment:

Oma said...

What you seem to be doing is acting like a "guide at the side" as she learns the "grammar" of math. It seems to be very much like language learning (the kind all humans do long before they go to school). The adults and other teachers in their baby lives guide them when they need help, but nobody "teaches" them ... they learn themselves by observing the language around them and making sense of it.

Most math teaching and some language teaching is much more teacher-directed and overt ... and seldom as efficient.

I think it has to do with control. Imagine trying to control talking! And yet we try to control reading, writing, math understanding and its rules.

I have found a sweet book for your read aloud time, by the way ... for Nature Girl and Wild Thing.