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E-grāmata: Imperfect and Unfinished Math Teacher [ Grades K-12]: A Journey to Reclaim Our Professional Growth

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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Corwin Mathematics Series
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Feb-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Corwin Press Inc
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781071841570
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Corwin Mathematics Series
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Feb-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Corwin Press Inc
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781071841570

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The system wont do it for us. But we have each other.

In The Imperfect and Unfinished Math Teacher: A Journey to Reclaim Our Professional Growth, master storyteller Chase Orton offers a vulnerable and courageous grassroots guide that leads K-12 math teachers through a journey to cultivate a more equitable, inclusive, and cohesive culture of professionalism for themselveswhat he calls professional flourishment. The book builds from two bold premises. First, that as educators, we are all naturally imperfect and unfinished, and growth should be our constant goal. Second, that the last 40 years of top-down PD efforts in mathematics have rarely supplied teachers with what they need to equitably grow their practice and foster classrooms that are likewise empowered, inclusive, and cohesive.

With gentle humanity, this book inspires teachers to break down silos, observe each others classrooms, interrogate their own biases, and put students at the center of everything they do in the math classroom. This book:





Weaves raw and authentic storiesboth personal and those from other educatorsinto a relatable and validating narrative Offers interactive opportunities to self-reflect, build relationships, seek new vantage on our teaching by observing others classrooms and students, and share and listen to others stories and experiences Asks teachers to give and accept grace as they work collaboratively to better themselves and the system from within, so that they can truly serve each of their students authentically and equitably

Implementing the beliefs and actions in this book will position teachers to become more active partners in each others professional growth so that they can navigate the obstacles in their professional landscape with renewed focus and a greater sense of individual and collective efficacy. It equips teachersand by extension, their studentsto chart their own course and author their own equitable and joyful mathematical and professional stories.

Recenzijas

Id love to see every math teacher take the kind of thoughtful and professional approach to their journey of learning that Chase Orton invites us to. Chase invites us to disrupt the status quo of professional development. He asks teachers to see past the top-down barriers and systemic constraintspolitics, high-stakes tests, yo-yo administrative decisions, and all kinds of compliance and evaluation measuresto take charge of our own professional learning. Chase calls on us to see our practice through the eyes of our students, and at the same time to reflect on our practice and to collaborate with colleagues in genuine ways for mutual growth. Grounded in real stories of students experiences and teachers journeys, he offers concrete, interactive strategies teachers can use to continually move closer to being the teachers we want to bethose who are always focused on our goal of more and more effectively helping every one of our students become curious mathematical thinkers who embrace the power of mathematics and see themselves as math people. -- Cathy Seeley * McDade, TX * As one of the most reflective, insightful, and thoughtful educators Ive ever worked with in my 30 years of math education, Chase Orton delivers an emotive call to action for teachers to reclaim control over their professional growth. The Imperfect and Unfinished Math Teacher takes the most impactful components of lesson study and packages them in a way that accommodates the chaotic realities of day-to-day life as classroom teachers. Join Chase on a journey to empower yourself and each other by learning how to be active partners in each others professional growth. -- Mark Goldstein * Redondo Beach, CA * The vast majority of teacher professional development doesnt make a lasting difference, and its time for us to disrupt the status quo. The Imperfect and Unfinished Math Teacher empowers all math educators to take control of their professional learning by laying out what needs to change, why its so important, and how to get started. If you and your colleagues are seeking a more fulfilling and rewarding approach to improving your teaching craft, this is the book for you. -- Robert Kaplinsky * Long Beach, CA * The Unfinished and Imperfect Math Teacher is a clarion call to disarming, dismantling, and disrupting the math classroom that is loud enough to compete with a stack of Marshall amplifiers at any rock concert. The title takes the historical narrative of mathematics  slow failure  and shines a warm and illuminating light on it, inviting a collective of a new generation of teachers to be messy humans dabbling in equally messy mathematics. Written with unflinching vulnerability, compassion, and love, this book allows all readers to find and share their courage of satisfying incompleteness with an infectious purpose and energy. Chase Ortons humble manifesto for a soulful examination of our inner voice and outer intentions is the inflection point math education has been yearning for decades. -- Sunil Singh What is your math story? Likewise, what are your students math stories? Chase Orton, still an imperfect and unfinished teacher, will not answer these questions for you. Instead, he challenges you to take on a culture of professional development that helps you and your colleagues to "flourish" and to do so from your students vantage point. For too long, PD is done to us and not for us, thus we come away feeling we will never get that precious time back. Its long overdue that we take back PD through deliberate practice and honest conversations. Chase guides us in this journey, promising us nothing unless we put in the work and give ourselves grace. He asks of us what he asks of himself to be unafraid, to be vulnerable, and to refuse to play the blame game in shaping the kind of PD that nourishes our teaching soul and sharpens our teaching craft. And for what? For our students to write their own math stories-- those that are imperfect and unfinished--so they may continue to be curious and thoughtful as learners of mathematics beyond our classroom walls. -- Fawn Nguyen * Oxnard, CA *

Foreword xiv
Steve Leinwand
Acknowledgments xv
About the Author xvii
Introduction: Grace And The Art Of Not Knowing 1(10)
A Book of Stories
1(1)
Stories Help Us Test Our Beliefs and Question Our Actions
2(1)
Stones Share Authority and Position Us All as Capable Learners
3(2)
Two Opposing and Unproductive Models of Professional Development
5(1)
Effective Math Teaching Is a Craft Worthy of Study
6(2)
This Book in a Paragraph
8(3)
PART 1 AN INVITATION TO A JOURNEY
11(46)
1 The Need For A New Culture Of Professionalism
12(14)
Learning to See With New Eyes
12(2)
Our Cultural Math Story
14(1)
Steering Clear of the Blame Game: Hard on Systems, Soft on People
15(2)
Professional Development Is Neither Professional Nor Does It Develop
17(1)
The Beacons: The Guiding Principles for Our Culture of Professionalism
18(1)
Our Journey Is a Disruptive Act
19(1)
Is This Journey for You?
20(1)
Interlude 1 More Details About the Journey Ahead
21(1)
Mission and Vision
21(1)
Outline of This Book
22(1)
Frequently Asked Questions
23(3)
2 Professional Flourishment
26(16)
A Window
27(1)
Building Equity for Ourselves by Looking Through Windows
28(1)
Looking Through the Window: We All Crave a Sense of Professional Flourishment
29(2)
Defining Professional Flourishment
31(1)
The Headwinds That Erode Our Professional Flourishment
31(3)
Striving for Equity Requires a Little Bit of Sisu
34(2)
Flourishment, the First Beacon, and Staying Unfinished
36(2)
Interlude 2 The Structured Activities on Our Journey
38(1)
Lighthouse Reflections
38(1)
Seek Vantage
39(1)
Campfire Gathering
39(1)
Planning Ahead
40(2)
3 Expanding Our Potential With Deliberate Practice
42(15)
How Did Timur Get That Good?
43(1)
Our Current Potential Is Always an Expandable Vessel
43(1)
Looking Through the Window: The Core Elements of Deliberate Practice
44(5)
What We Believe Affects What We See
49(1)
Language and the Core Elements of Deliberate Practice
50(1)
The Island of Practice
51(2)
I Call It a Tree; You May See It Differently
53(2)
Interlude 3 Your Vision of Equity
55(1)
Your Vision of Equity
55(2)
PART 2 BUILDING OUR NEW CULTURE OF PROFESSIONALISM
57(70)
4 Creating Vantage To Test Beliefs
58(20)
A Window: Lillian's Classroom
59(1)
Looking Through the Window: Lillian's Stuck but She Doesn't See It---Yet
60(2)
What's Next for Lillian?
62(1)
Lillian's Journey at the Headwinds School
63(3)
Lillian's Journey at the Beacons School
66(2)
What If Lillian Was on the Journey With Us?
68(1)
Usis: It's What You Get When You Spell Sisu Backward
68(1)
In Our Own Way, We Are All Lillians
69(1)
Expanding Our Potential Means Pruning Our Tree
70(2)
Interlude 4 What Is Your Teaching Story?
72(1)
Lighthouse Reflection 1 What Is Your Teaching Story?
72(1)
Seek Vantage 1 New Eyes on Your Island of Practice
73(1)
A Few Words About Campfire Gatherings
74(2)
Campfire Gathering Agenda 1 Share Your Teaching Stories
76(2)
5 Teaching is a Cultural Activity
78(14)
My Math Story
79(3)
Looking Through the Window: What I Learned After 10 Years of Math Class
82(3)
My Math Story Continued
85(2)
From a Math Story to a Teaching Story
87(2)
Interlude 5 What Is Your Math Story?
89(1)
Lighthouse Reflection 2 What Is Your Math Story?
89(1)
Seek Vantage 2 New Eyes on Our Actions
90(1)
Campfire Gathering Agenda 2 Share Your Math Stories
91(1)
6 Craving Nourishment
92(18)
Talking About My Tree
92(1)
It's Hard to See Yourself When You're Moving at the Speed of School
93(2)
Effective Teaching Requires Authenticity
95(1)
Our Trees Crave Nourishment
96(1)
Lighthouse Reflection 3 What Is Your Passion Profile?
97(4)
My Tree Actively Craves Nourishment
101(3)
Wholeness in Our Relationships
104(2)
Interlude 6 How Do Your Students See You?
106(1)
Seek Vantage 3 New Eyes on Your Tree
106(2)
Campfire Gathering Agenda 3: Share Your Passion Profiles
108(2)
7 The Steep Price Of A Divided Life
110(17)
A Moment of Vantage That Split My Biased Tree in Two
111(2)
Looking Through the Window: The Steep Price of a Divided Life
113(2)
What Would We Say If We Were All Positioned in the Room Together?
115(3)
Looking Through the Window: It's Not What You Tell Them, It's What You Show Them
118(2)
We Are Stewards of Our Cultural Math Story
120(3)
Interlude 7 Why Is Math Class Not Working for Some Students?
123(1)
Lighthouse Reflection 4 Your Bests and Worsts
124(1)
Seek Vantage 4 New Eyes on Your Dump
125(1)
Campfire Gathering Agenda 4 Share Your Bests and Worsts
126(1)
PART 3 CHANGING OUR CULTURAL MATH STORY
127(39)
8 A Window Into A Story-Focused Math Class
128(24)
Setting the Stage for Part 3
129(4)
Anne and Carol
133(1)
Stepping Out of the Textbook
134(4)
More Than 33, but Less Than 34
138(2)
What Do You Need to See to Change Your Mind?
140(3)
Interlude 8 Actions to Position Learners as Capable
143(1)
Lighthouse Reflection 5 An Invitation to Reflect on How You Position Your Students
143(4)
Questions to Focus Your Thinking
147(1)
Positioning Your Students as Capable
147(1)
Actions to Position Your Students as Capable
148(2)
Seek Vantage 5 New Eyes on How Your Students Are Positioned
150(1)
Campfire Gathering 5 Agendas to Further Your Craft of Positioning Students as Capable
150(2)
9 Four Equity Actions For The Story-Focused Teacher
152(14)
Why We Haven't Defined Equity
153(1)
Words Are Stories: Their Meaning Transcends Their Definitions
154(3)
We Must Let Our Meanings of Words Evolve
157(2)
Equity Achieved Is an Unfinished Math Story of Flourishment
159(1)
Four Equity Actions That Have Emerged From Our Journey Together
159(2)
What We Gain in a Story-Focused Garden
161(2)
It All Comes Back to the Headwinds and the Beacons
163(1)
These Words May Not Be "Sandwich" Words, but They Must Become "Phone" Words
164(2)
Interlude 9 Actions to Share Authority
166(1)
Lighthouse Reflection 6 Reflect on How Authority Is Shared in Your Classroom
166(1)
Actions to Share Authority in the Classroom 166
Chase Ortons unique career path has been guided by his passion for creating productive and inspired math classrooms that are engaging and fulfilling for both students and their teachers.

After graduating from Wheaton College in Norton, MA, he embarked on a 12-year journey as a math teacher at three different schools: The Forman School in Litchfield, CT; The Eagle Rock School and Professional Development Center in Estes Park, CO; and Environmental Charter High School in Lawndale, CA. In 2012, Chase founded Mobius Educational Consulting and ventured out as an independent collaborator with different non-profits and school districts in California. Hes worked as an instructional coach for Los Angeles Education Partnership and the Partnership for Los Angeles Schools. He partnered with the Center for Mathematics and Teaching as lead author of MathLinks, a comprehensive middle school math curriculum. He is a Desmos Fellow and a Certified Facilitator for Illustrative Mathematics.

As an accomplished facilitator of lesson study for K-12 math teachers, Chase currently invests his professional time partnering with districts who are interested in taking a teacher-centered, teacher-directed approach to professional development. The Imperfect and Unfinished Teacher of Mathematics is his first book.

An aspiring storyteller, Chase lives on the road and is currently collecting stories from math teachers all over the country. Interested in having Chase come visit you? He would love to hear from you. You can follow Chase on Twitter (@mathgeek76) and online at www.chaseorton.com. He shares his stories from the road on Instagram (@TheTravelingStoop).