Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started QUESTIONS OF THE DAY There are...

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Early Childhood Math Professional Development

Transcript of Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started QUESTIONS OF THE DAY There are...

Page 1: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

Early Childhood MathProfessional Development

Page 2: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

Getting Started QUESTIONS OF THE DAY

There are three questions posted in the front of the room. For the yes or no question: Place a check

mark in the appropriate column. For comfort level place a tally mark next to

the appropriate column For more information place a post it note in

the correct column like a bar graph.

Page 3: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

Goals For Today Gain knowledge about what research says regarding

the importance of mathematics in early childhood, as well as research about what components of math should be in an early childhood setting.

Identify and explain the standards developed for early childhood math and what those look like in a preschool classroom.

Identify and plan for mathematics as a part of everyday language, concepts, and activities in the classroom.

Build upon what you already know and do to make mathematics an intentional concept for you and your students.

Page 4: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

You tube video Life of dad interview

Page 5: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

Research Behind Teaching Math in Early Childhood

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The Importance of Early Childhood Mathematics The Early Childhood Longitudinal Study

The math knowledge children have when they enter kindergarten can have a significant impact on their later school success.

There is a significant math gap at kindergarten entry for low income children (Denton & West, 2002)

Early math skills in kindergarten predicted 5th grade achievement in math and reading (Claessens, Duncan, & Engel, 2006)

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Millions of young children are in child care or other early education settings where they can have significant early mathematical experiences.

Accumulating research on children’s capacities and learning in the first six years of life confirms that early experiences have long-lasting outcomes

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The Bottom Line…

EARLY MATH IS CRITICAL!!

Page 9: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

Taking A Look At Where We Stand Review our posters for questions of the

day Looking at the graphs, what kinds of

questions can be made and answered? What picture does it paint for us?

Page 10: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

I Want to Know (pg. 285)Mathematics: The Creative Curriculum Approach Objectives:

26. Applies knowledge or experience to a new context

28. Compares/measures 33. Uses one-to-one correspondence 34. Uses numbers and counting

Other Concepts Asks Questions Learns various ways to gather data Describes and compares data

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Standards for Early Childhood Mathematics

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NAEYC Position Statement NAEYC Position Statement

A joint position statement of the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC) and the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM). Adopted in 2002. Updated in 2010.

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The Position NCTM (National Council of Teachers of

Mathematics) and NAEYC affirm:

high-quality, challenging, and accessible mathematics education for 3- to 6-year-old children is a vital foundation for future mathematics learning.

Page 14: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

In every early childhood setting, children should: experience effective, research-based

curriculum and teaching practices.

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Position Statement Activity There are 10 researched-based

recommendations to achieve high-quality mathematics education for 3- to 6-year-old children

After receiving your number: Read the explanation that accompanies each

recommendation Discuss what it means Brainstorm and record on the chart paper ideas of

what this looks like within your classroom. Share Out

Page 16: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

Breaking Back In You will find math manipulatives at your

table. Take a minute to play with them. Look at what you did and be prepared to tell your elbow partner what you did, and what domain of math it represented.

Page 17: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

The National Council of Teachers Of Mathematics Content Standards Number and Operations Geometry and Spatial Sense Measurement Patterns Data Analysis

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Numbers and Operations The most easily identified content in early childhood

classrooms. At the preschool level number and operations involve

nine different ideas: 1. Counting 2. Quantity (sense of number) 3. Comparisons (more-fewer or more-less) 4. Order 5. Numerals 6. Combining Operations (adding) 7. Separating Operations (subtracting) 8. Sharing Operations (dividing) 9. Set-Making Operations (multiplying)

Page 19: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

The Research On Numbers Children develop counting skills at a very young

age. The easiest collections for a three year old to

count are in a straight line. Three-and-four year old children can often solve

subtraction problems before they can solve addition problems.

Children often do not understand mathematical words in a problem situation and require modeling with concrete objects and words to develop an “operation sense” (743)

Page 20: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

Geometry and Spatial Sense Young children find geometry an

exciting topic! In preschool, there are four important

geometry concepts young children need to explore or understand: Shape Space Transformations Visualization

Page 21: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

The Research Says Children do not develop their ideas about shapes

from simply looking at them. They must manipulate, draw, or represent the shapes in a variety of ways.

With experience, preschool children can develop visualization. They can observe a shape picture using five shapes, remember it by visualizing what they just saw, and then make the picture accurately using the appropriate shapes in the correct relationship to each other.

Visualization and spatial reasoning are improved with interaction with computer animations and in other technological settings. (750)

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Measurement

Children naturally use the language of measurement and comparison to discuss their surroundings and their relationships to other children.

Children begin to model measurement behaviors and frequently experiment with both standard and nonstandard tools.

Three measurement topics to be explored; Measurement attributes Comparing and ordering Measurement behaviors and processes

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What Does Research Say Young children know that attributes of length,

weight, capacity, and time exist, but they do not know how to reason about them or measure them accurately

Children’s initial ideas about the size of an object are based on perception. They judge that one object is bigger than another because it looks bigger.

Current thinking and research suggests that children can benefit from using rulers along with concrete models of units, even during beginning activities with measurement. (759)

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Patterns (Algebra) Algebraic concepts are key to a good

basic understanding of mathematics. The recognition, creation, and extension

of patterns and the analysis of change are important pre-algebraic concepts for preschool children.

Two specific aspects for preschoolers Patterns Change

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What the Research Says Young children can determine the unit of a

repeating pattern and can use this skill to determine that two perceptually different patterns actually have the same structure.

From the earliest age, children can be learning the basic rudiments of algebra, particularly its representational aspects. When both patterns and representations are emphasized, the basic ideas of algebra are introduced.

As young children extend patterns, they are making conjectures that are logical and make sense from their perspective.

Page 26: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

Data Analysis Graphs and pictures of data collected by

children are important tools for data analysis and, if used appropriately, can facilitate children’s mathematical understanding.

Three important ideas involve concepts of data analysis for preschool children include: Sorting and classifying Representing data Describing Data

Page 27: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

What Does the Research Say? Initially, children sort before they count

the number of items in each group. Children sort objects into groups before

they can describe them with a label. The normal developmental progression

of graphic representation is concrete (using physical objects), to symbolic (letters to represent the color of toys) (773)

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What Teachers Can Do Action Patterns (pg. 265)

Mathematics: The Creative Curriculum Approach

Objective30. Recognizes patterns and can

repeat them

Page 29: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

What Teachers Can DoActivity

Locate the five headings on each table in color Locate the five pages of recommendations for

teachers Read the recommendations for teachers and

place them underneath the appropriate heading

Check your work Discuss two things that you do in one of the

components and discuss one thing that you can take back from each component

Page 30: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.
Page 31: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

Practical Application of Mathin Every Day Play Young children need a multitude of

experiences to develop an understanding of math concepts.

Mathematical ideas are in children’s play and everyday experiences

Young children develop some math concepts through self guided discoveries.

Page 32: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

Video Overview What specific actions do teachers take

to guide children’ learning in each component area?

What did children do that shows they are learning in the component area?

Page 33: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

The Toys and Games Area as the Hub of Mathematics Learning

Why?Through playful manipulation of objects, they discover many mathematical relationships on their own.

Page 34: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

Toys and Game Examples Numbers and Operations

If you put two more buttons in the box, how many buttons will there be? How many would you have if you took one out?

Geometry and Spatial Sense Tell me about the shape of the buttons? How would you describe

them? Measurement

Which is the biggest, smallest, tallest? How do you know? Algebra

Can you finish this pattern? Red button, blue button, red button…what comes next?

Data Analysis How could we sort these button? Is there another way to sort

these button?

Page 35: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

Blocks Numbers and Operations

That’s a tall tower How many blocks did you use to build it? How many would be there be if you added two more blocks to the top?

Geometry and Spatial Sense It doesn’t look like there are any more of the longest rectangles.

What other blocks could you use to finish your building? Measurement

I think this tower is even taller than the one you built yesterday. What do you think?

Algebra I see you’ve place one block up, one block flat, one block up, and

another block flat. That’s a pattern! What will go next? Data Analysis

Can you make another tower that is just as tall by using blocks of different sizes?

Page 36: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

Art Area Number and Operations

You’ve punched many holes in your clay. Shall we count them? Geometry and Spatial Sense

Can you make your play dough into the shape of a ball? What will happen if you flatten it into a pancake? Is the same amount of play dough in the ball and the pancake?

Measurement Your play dough snake is long. Mine is shorter and fatter. What can I do

to make mine as long as yours? How ill we know when they are the same?

Algebra (Patterns) I see you put a pattern on your snake just like the one we saw in the

photo. Can you read it? Data Analysis

Did you make a shape the same as this with your play dough? What shape did you make that is different than this?

Page 37: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

You TryFor the next activity, you are going to be asked to try to think of examples of how math can be easily integrated into everyday play areas for children.

Choose a card and keep it face down. When I say the number you check to see if your

number matches. All together we will clap the number You will go to a space with your group and complete

the activity We will share out our thinking.

Page 38: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

Secret Numbers (pg. 198)Mathematics: The Creative Curriculum Approach Objectives:

33. Uses one-to-one correspondence 34. Uses numbers and counting

Other Concepts Understands Quantity

Page 39: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

You Try Activity You have one area placed in front of you

with each of the math components listed.

Discuss as a group what are some activities, items, or conversations that could be placed in this area that would intentionally draw children to think and explore mathematical concepts.

Share out as a large group.

Page 40: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

Planning for Math The goal for math planning is that children

develop mathematical concepts all day long. In planning for children’s mathematics

learning, teachers must decide what to teach, how to teach it, and when to teach it. Key factors to think about include: What preschool children should know and do The goals and objectives that you are using The strengths, needs, and interests of

individual children.

Page 41: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

Planning for Math Planning for math begins with:

our own understanding and comfort level of math

intentional organizing, planning, and incorporation of math

creating a math-rich physical environment

developing opportunities for assessment of math

Page 42: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

Things To Do Tomorrow Take inventory of your classroom language,

environment, and activities. Decide where you are strong in math and where you can purposefully add more.

Look at the components of math and chose one that will be a focus mini lesson for every day of the week (small group, large group, individual child)

Make a plan to make math an every day occurrences within the context of each area of the classroom.

Page 43: Early Childhood Math Professional Development. Getting Started  QUESTIONS OF THE DAY  There are three questions posted in the front of the room.  For.

Take Aways From Today Turn to your neighbor and identify three

things that you will take away from your discussions today that will strengthen the way you intentionally teach and plan for mathematics in your classroom.