Teaching practices for differentiating mathematics instruction for middle school students

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Date

2020-02-27

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Mathematical Thinking and Learning

Abstract

Three iterative, 18-episode design experiments were conducted after school with groups of 6–9 middle school students to understand how to differentiate mathematics instruction. Prior research on differentiating instruction (DI) and hypothetical learning trajectories guided the instruction. As the experiments proceeded, this definition of DI emerged: proactively tailoring instruction to students’ mathematical thinking while developing a cohesive classroom community. Analysis of 10 episodes across experiments yielded five teaching practices that facilitated DI: using research-based knowledge of students’ mathematical thinking, providing purposeful choices and different pathways, inquiring responsively during group work, attending to small group functioning, and conducting whole class discussions across different thinkers. The latter three practices, at times, impeded DI. This study is a case of using second-order models of students’ mathematical thinking to differentiate instruction, and it reveals that inquiring into research-based knowledge and inquiring responsively into students’ thinking are at the heart of differentiating mathematics instruction.

Description

This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Mathematical Thinking and Learning on 27 February, 2020.

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Citation

Hackenberg, A. J., Creager, M. & Eker, A. (2020). Teaching practices for differentiating instruction. Mathematical Thinking and Learning. doi: 10.1080/10986065.2020.1731656

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This work is under a CC-BY-NC license. You are free to copy and redistribute the material in any format, as well as remix, transform, and build upon the material as long as you give appropriate credit to the original creator, provide a link to the license, and indicate any changes made. You may not use this work for commercial purpose.

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Article