Mary A. Castillo See if you can...
Mary A. Castillo
See if you can remember homework problems like the following:
“Four times the number, increased by two, is the same as twice the
number, increased by 10. Find the number.”
Laguna math teachers spent an entire day re-learning how to teach
those kinds of problems at a “Hands-On” algebra workshop sponsored by
the Laguna Beach Unified School District. The methodology, developed
by Henry Borenson, demystifies algebra for students with a simple
t-scale, numbered blocks and blue pawns. The class was part of the
district’s professional development program that began this summer.
“This class has helped remove the mystery,” said Gloria Howell,
who will begin her first year of teaching special education students
at Top of the World. “This is will be valuable for special-needs kids
who require the visual and tactile methods to learn math.”
The class brought home some simple facts.
“Algebra isn’t something separate from every day life,” said
instructor Kim Lansdowne. “We use algebra every day regardless of our
profession.”
Lansdowne has been leading workshops with Hands-On Equations since
1989 and is currently the coordinator of gifted services with the
Scottsdale Unified School District.
She stressed to the class of teachers that the Hands-On method
works for students who learn through concrete, visual teaching
methods as well as for more abstract thinkers.
Using everyday situations children can relate to, from trick or
treating to ordering French fries, allows them to picture the
problem, she added.
“The methodology honors every ability level by taking the concepts
of algebra and making them concrete,” she explained. “I’ve seen a lot
of success and when kids know algebra it increases their
self-esteem.”
The workshop is particularly important for the district because of
the state’s explicit standards for math. Algebra is a minimal math
requirement and the district plans to get teachers trained to help
their young charges step up to the challenge.
However, teaching teachers is a challenge unto itself.
“I ask them to forget what they have learned and to look at
algebra from the perspective of a student who has never seen algebra
before,” she said. “That can be challenging for them.”
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