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Showing posts from November, 2017

�I�m Worried About My Grade.� How to Pre-empt the End of Semester Panic

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By Julie M. Phelps , Contributing Editor, Valencia College As the end of the semester nears, educators brace for the inevitable student questions about their final grades. If you are anything like me, this can be distracting from my goal of the class: to teach mathematics and make a difference in student lives. Sometimes I find myself dreading the last couple weeks because many students are stressed and solely focused on the final grade, not on learning ways to utilize mathematics in their major. This year I decided to try something new and pre-empt student questions about their grades by having them reflect on their class work and engagement. To do so, I showed a YouTube video called � I am worried about my grade � to my College Algebra students at the beginning of the semester (just before the first test). While very basic, the video goes over the many ways we educators evaluate student performance, and how we make time for students to approach us outside of class. After showing the...

The Role of Failure and Struggle in the Mathematics Classroom

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By Dana Ernst , Contributing Editor, Northern Arizona University The purpose of this post is to generate discussion and to get us thinking deeply about our teaching practices. This post introduces teaching concepts that researchers and educators developed to promote student success. In an attempt to understand who is successful and why, psychologist Angela Duckworth has spent years studying groups of people in a variety of challenging situations. Over and over again, one characteristic surfaced as a significant predictor of success: grit. According to Duckworth , grit is passion and perseverance for long-term goals. One of the big open questions in cognitive psychology is how to develop grit. Growth Mindset Research suggests that one of the key ingredients to fostering grit is adopting a growth mindset . Psychologist Carol Dweck defines growth mindset as the view that intelligence and abilities can be developed with effort. In contrast, a fixed mindset is the belief that one's ...