In today's education debates, many experts call for school vouchers, smaller classes, more standardized testing, or rigorous teacher accrediting as the key to improving student performance. Remarkably, none of these approaches addresses what actually goes on in the classroom. In this book an experienced classroom teacher and noted researcher on teaching takes us into her fifthgrade math class through the course of a year. Magdalene Lampert shows how classroom dynamics--the complex relationship of teacher, student, and content--are critical in the process of bringing each student to a deeper understanding of mathematics, or any other subject. She offers valuable insights into students and teaching for all who are concerned about improving the learning that happens in the classroom. Lampert considers the teacher's and students' work from many different angles, in views large and small. She analyzes her own practice in a particular classroom, student by student and moment by moment. She also investigates the particular kind of teaching that aims at engaging elementary school students in learning fundamentally important ideas and skills by working on problems. Finally, she looks at the common problems of teaching that occur regardless of the individuals, subject matter, or kinds of practice involved. Lampert arrives at an original model of teaching practice that casts new light on the complexity in teachers' work and on the ways teachers can successfully deal with teaching problems.
This was a great book for all math teachers. Lampert talks about how she teaches math and all of the different things teachers have to keep in mind while they are teaching: whole group instruction, assessment, diversity, covering the curriculum, and teaching students how to be successful in her classroom and in school in general. Her writing is professional and helpful without being overly prescriptive. She includes transcripts from individual lessons and "zooms in" on specific moments with specific students. Such an interesting read; I am very motivated by her writing, and I hope to organize my math classroom more like hers in the future.
Very useful if you work in the fields of curriculum development, coaching, administration, or teaching of math. Lampert is really good at taking these firm edges we’ve defined of what school/learning means, what makes a good teacher, what school is about, and blurring them. She talks a lot about intellectual courage and who her students are as people, which I now see the crucial-ness of. Most of all I appreciate how Lampert is able to take this vague notion of what teaching is, and complicate the hell out of it.
Is it possible to teach students mathematics through problems while also teaching to the standards and teaching a variety of skills? It is possible and a lot of work to undertake in order to make this successful.
6/7/11 ** I've read 3 chapters and believe this book will be very useful. The author draws on her knowledge as a 5th grade math teacher and a university researcher to present a model of math instruction based on the students' exploration of problems - an inquiry-driven approach in which the instruction of basic algorithms and concepts is embedded. While there is probably too much 'research jargon' for most teachers, I find that much of that can be skimmed over, if desired. The description of the math lessons is fascinating.
This book was recommended to me at the Discourse Analysis conference that I went to several weeks ago. I thought that it would help me learn more about teaching math through an inquiry perspective. Lampert positions herself as a teacher-researcher and had the enormous advantage of only teaching math with the students in this class. She gathered a tremendous amount of data over the course of the year and this book is the result of the analysis.
I picked up this book, because it was recommended on the Boston Teacher Residency blog. It turned out to be much more dense and less generalizable than I expected. Instead of coming away with broad principles or practices to try, I learned the most from small vignettes that showed student-teacher interactions or how Lampert chose to write comments on students' work. The process of reading felt more like a classroom observation than a lecture.