The Hills Hub Stage 3 and 4 Mathematics Threshold Concept Project 2010 Model Farms HS Jaspe r Road PS Winst on Heigh ts PS Winst on Hills PS Mark Grady 9 November 2010
Jan 17, 2016
The Hills Hub Stage 3 and 4 Mathematics Threshold Concept
Project 2010
Model Farms HS
Jasper Road PS
Winston Heights
PS
Winston Hills PS
Mark Grady 9 November 2010
A quick bit about me
My role
My Background
And a personal interest
An outline of this afternoon
What are Threshold Concepts?
What do we know?
Why are we here today?
How will we go about it?
Why are we here today?
This Hills Hub has had great success in transition programs – DG award winning
LMC has run a Science Stage 4 Threshold Project in Biology across 9 schools including Model Farms.
Combining the partnership within this hub, and the knowledge of how Thresholds can support students, it just made sense to pull these 2 aspects together.
What are Threshold Concepts?
Jan Meyer
Threshold concepts have been described as a portal or gateway because once acquired, they lead to a new way of thinking and understanding in the discipline.
Because understanding of conceptually difficult ideas are enhanced by explicit teaching of threshold concepts, student learning outcomes are improved.
They are understood to possess the following characteristics:
Transformative - once acquired it shifts
perception of the subject
Irreversible - once learners have come to see the world in terms of the threshold concept they cannot return to their former, more primitive, view
Integrative - acquisition of the threshold concept illuminates the underlying inter-relatedness of aspects of the subject
Troublesome - a threshold concept may be counterintuitive and initially very difficult for learners to accept. In grasping a threshold concept the learner moves to a new perception of the world that may be in conflict with previously held perceptions.
Considering the previous 2 slides, what area/areas of number that you teach do you feel could be described as a Threshold Concept?
Is there current Threshold research on Middle Years Mathematics?
But this is not a bad thing
We could leave it and do nothing
But by working smarter, not harder, this could have a major positive impact on student learning and buy us “teaching time” in the classroom
What do we currently know?
Evidence (NAPLAN and teacher feedback) suggests students struggle with fractions, and this impacts on a range of skills in stages 3,4, 5 and 6.
WHPS, WHPS and JRPS are feeder schools to Model Farms. Best practice at the 3 feeder schools not only benefits the Stage 3 students, but has a positive flow on effect to Model Farms.
Peter Gould (Manager Mathematics Curriculum K-12 Directorate DET) (5:24 – 9:20)
A Sample From NAPLAN 2009 Why 2009? This is only 1 question,
however, it is = 2nd compared to Hills Group showing greatest difference in successful response.
Hills Comparison – be careful
What fraction is halfway between 5/7 and 6/7?
However, another question And the question referred to
by Peter Gould
Although these concepts are taught within the Primary and Secondary context, a significant component of students struggle with retaining and reproducing these concepts. MFHS and the 3 feeder are not alone here!
What aspect of fractions do you feel your students have difficulty with? What
challenges does this create in the next stage of learning?
Discuss this in groups of 4 as per the colour card you have.
Each group should roughly have a member of JRPS, WHPS, WHPS and MFHS
Group feedback
So what can we do?
Use research (Threshold concepts) and proven successful practices within the framework of a “Rich Task” to develop a teaching unit that:
Is engaging, fun and hands on
Has “aha” moments Supports student
understanding Is part of a Stage 3 & 4
continuum Brings together our expertise
How do we go about it?
A process and timeline• How and when we will develop and implement
Human resources • Carmel Coady, Damian Wanstall and Michael Cavanagh • YOU• Me
A sample of other resources • Rich Tasks used at MFHS• Curriculum Directorate Resources (e.g. Pikelets and Lamingtons)• Count Me In Too• ICT interactives
Communication• PD Workshops• Wiki? A sample 1• Our Hills hub Maths wiki• Yammer?
Questions and discussion
Process
Collaboratively determine the aspect of fractions to address
Collaboratively develop fun and engaging teaching units relevant to YOUR students
Pre test the students Implement the unit Post test the students Evaluate/data crunch Celebrate our success!
9 November 2010 – Project Briefing
18 November 2010 – Leadership team meet to plan 2011 dates
23 November 2010 – Relevant AP’s, HT Maths, MG meet to determine aspect of fractions to address
16 December 2010 (11:30am – 3pm) AP’S HT Maths and teaching staff and MG develop the teaching units
2011 – Teaching units implemented