The EduProtocol Field Guide Math Edition: 15 Student-Centered Lesson Frames for Math Mastery
By Lisa Nowakowski and Jeremiah Ruesch
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The EduProtocol Field Guide Math Edition - Lisa Nowakowski
I
Mathematics through the Looking Glass
Stay
is a charming word in a friend’s vocabulary.
Amos Bronson Alcott, Concord Days
1
How Lisa and Jeremiah Got Here
Our story begins with Lisa sitting in a conference session led by Jon Corippo on the eight parts of speech. Instead of the prototypical one piece at a time
approach (a focus on nouns for one week, proper nouns the next, then on to plurals, etc.), he introduced all eight parts of speech at once using the 8 p*ARTS EduProtocol. Lisa was intrigued: it made intuitive sense to show students how all the parts fit together in one place , and she loved it on sight. Her immediate thought was, I need something like this for math!
And that’s where this book got its start.
Do you want to do one thing a week for eight weeks or eight things a week for four weeks? Do the math!
Jon
Jon and Lisa were on to something. Instead of assuming that the individual parts mattered, they focused on the relationships among the parts. Instead of asking students to work through the individual concepts of each part, their insight was to have students work through all the iterations of the relationships of parts so they see and feel
the connections from one part to the next.
Lisa wrote about the Place Value MathReps in August 2016. In October, Lisa ran into Jon at the annual fall conference of CUE, our local statewide technology organization. He told Lisa how great he thought the idea was and had her explain it to another educator. Since that time, Jon and Marlena have been MathReps advocates, even putting the MathReps EduProtocol into their first book. You can learn more about MathReps below in section 2: Remixed and Revised EduProtocols.
I remember teaching kindergarten students to measure using unit blocks to measure the length of an object. In first grade, to an inch; in second grade, to the half inch, and on through the grades. By high school, Mr. Hebern (Marlena’s woodshop teacher husband) would complain that his students could not measure to the sixteenth inch. Why? They never learned to put it all together!
Marlena
During one of Jon’s sessions at a training event in Jeremiah’s district, Jon shared a progression of the 8 p*ARTS EduProtocol that he used in the classroom with his sixth graders. He mentioned that a fifth-grade teacher, Lisa, had adapted the 8 p*ARTS EduProtocol to math. Armed with this new information, Jeremiah sought out Lisa to see what she had created, as he wanted to try it with his own students. Lisa had designed several examples for different elementary grade levels, so Jeremiah asked a few teachers in his district if they would let him try her MathReps in their classes, and they were happy to let him experiment. As Jon and Marlena explain in chapter 3, although students were confused at first, by the end of the session they were able to fluidly navigate the MathReps materials and begin mastering the content.
Once students master the conceptual understanding, they need more practice moving through the connected skills and iterations: for example, fraction bars to fractions to decimals and back again with fluidity.
Jeremiah
Jeremiah’s initial success with MathReps opened the doors for him to see new possibilities for using EduProtocols. He started thinking about applications for upper grades and got his chance to try them out when one of his district’s AP calculus teachers left on maternity leave. The idea of creating MathReps EduProtocols for a calculus class seemed a natural marriage: students needed tools to develop the skills necessary to access the content, which would allow them to explore the conceptual side of calculus during class time. Starting with limits, Jeremiah created a sequence of MathReps that showed all of the multiple ways to represent limits. Students went from not recognizing the various forms of a limit to being able to recognize when limits will fail visually and analytically—all because of the MathReps EduProtocol.
In Jeremiah’s class, kids completed his MathReps in five minutes—the result of conceptual understanding and practice.
Jon
The skill practice of the MathReps extended to differentiation, and integration reinforced the conceptual development students received from their instruction, giving them a tool to make the connection between theory and practice. Later that spring, Lisa found herself sitting in the front row of Jeremiah’s Math EduProtocols session at a conference. Soon they got to talking about the value of EduProtocols and shortly thereafter they joined forces to become MathReps EduProtocol champions.
Our Professional Learning Networks can bring us together in unexpected ways to make us better educators. Reach out to us at @nowatechie, @mathkaveli, @mhebern, @jcorippo, and #EduProtocols and #MathReps! We’d love to connect with you!
The following year Jeremiah and Lisa were approached by Jon and Marlena with the idea of writing an EduProtocols book focused on math. Um, yes, please!
They had both been using MathReps and adapting existing EduProtocols to fit the needs of their students. The timing was perfect, as both Jeremiah and Lisa were going to be at the same conference later that same month. There they were able to sit down and discuss their ideas. The conversation covered the gamut of their experiences and settled on the central idea of a systematic way to provide mathematical access for kids. It was also important to both that all the Common Core Mathematical Practices were well represented throughout. Lisa and Jeremiah began exploring and expanding on what they had been using in order to assemble a variety of Math EduProtocols.
When they first began adapting EduProtocols in math, they found several they were comfortable with, such as Frayer Model (chapter 8) or Iron Chef (which they adapted to become Sous Chef, chapter 9). In each of these, Lisa and Jeremiah saw the potential to connect, or bridge, ideas and concepts. Each of these could easily be adapted to allow students to see and practice the different methods of a concept, such as adding fractions. Having students represent a problem using the area model, number line, tape diagram, and algorithm all at once allowed them to naturally make the connections between them and the why of how it all works. Jeremiah and Lisa were after the deeper understanding.
Creating new Math EduProtocols allowed the authors to explore their creative sides. Many of the new ones were inspired by proven pedagogy: Write Bytes (chapter 17) was inspired by Number Talks, short number exercises to help students develop number fluency. In Number Talks, students explore how to break down a problem, or image into understandable parts. For example, to calculate 45 + 87, a student would break it down to add 40 + 80 and then add 5 + 7. With Number Talks, there can be more than one way to break down the problem, and students, as a group, explore the different options.
This allows students to see problems through various lenses. In Write Bytes, the same concept is applied with a twist. Comic Strip Math (chapter 16) was inspired by a group of students obsessed with comic books. Convince Me That (chapter 19) focuses on a student’s ability to communicate understanding rather than solve a problem simply in order to obtain an answer.
After many conversations, and a lot of hard work, the vision transformed into a reality they call Math EduProtocols. Now, they are ready to release these amazing mind-set shifts to teachers worldwide!
In this book, you will find seven of the original EduProtocols adapted beautifully for math and eight brand-new EduProtocols created just for math that span the grades from kindergarten through high school! Enjoy!
2
Cyber Sandwich
It’s magic,
the chief cook concluded, in awe. No, not magic,
the ship’s doctor replied. It’s much more. It’s mathematics.
David Brin, Glory Season
What are Math EduProtocols? Math EduProtocols are lesson frames that can be used with a wide variety of math curriculums. They are designed to allow students to engage in discussions, practice thinking with agility, and develop creativity as they show what they know. Math EduProtocols are tools for teachers to use in their curriculum to teach skills and the process of thinking and analysis.
Before delving further into the philosophy on which EduProtocols are built, we think it’s a good idea to show an EduProtocol in action. Seeing is believing, and we think it’s important to provide a baseline to refer to as we explore how EduProtocols function in the classroom. The Cyber Sandwich EduProtocol is a useful one to present, as it has appeared in both EduProtocol Field Guides—but not in a mathematical context. If you are already familiar with Cyber Sandwich, this section will serve to refresh yourself with its elements, remixed and reformulated for mathematics. And don’t worry—we have plenty of new protocols later in the book!
As you read through this first math protocol, think about its core features. How is an EduProtocol different from a worksheet? How might an EduProtocol help students learn how to think creatively and with agility? How might students work with their peers to deepen their understanding of the material presented? And, most importantly, how does an EduProtocol make learning fun?
This Cyber Sandwich EduProtocol features paired collaboration: students compare their understanding of the topic with a partner without simply copying the work of their partner. This simple yet powerful structure provides support for students and English language learners through a rhythm of working alone, then working together, and finally working alone again as they construct their final understanding of the content. Use this protocol to examine and deconstruct word problems and conceptual math content.
This is a comprehension protocol. Give students a moment to stop and think about the content before