Supporting prospective teachers to notice and name student language resources as mathematical strengths

被引:0
|
作者
Sandra Crespo
Diana Bowen
Tarik Buli
Nicole Bannister
Crystal Kalinec-Craig
机构
[1] Michigan State University,
[2] University of the Virgin Islands,undefined
[3] University of Maryland,undefined
[4] Clemson University,undefined
[5] University of Texas at San Antonio,undefined
来源
关键词
Language resources; Mathematical strengths; Multilingual students; Teacher noticing;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Deficit discourse and framing of multilingual students and their academic potential is a persistent challenge in mathematics education research and practice. It is a challenge for teachers of all experience levels to learn how to use asset-based language when working with students who are learning mathematics in a non-dominant language. This article reports on a study that explored how prospective teachers (PTs) position multilingual students and their primary language when learning mathematics. The participants are elementary and secondary PTs who were introduced to and had the opportunity to practice asset-based discourse to describe students’ mathematical strengths. Findings illustrate that after these learning opportunities PTs’ positioning of multilingual students shifted from using deficit and uncommitted discourse to asset-based. A closer look, however, showed no explicit mention of the value of the student’s primary language for learning mathematics. Only a few PTs did so implicitly. This study shows it is possible for PTs to shift deficit language, but that more explicit support is needed to help them communicate the value of language/linguistic diversity in the learning of mathematics.
引用
收藏
页码:461 / 473
页数:12
相关论文
共 20 条
  • [1] Supporting prospective teachers to notice and name student language resources as mathematical strengths
    Crespo, Sandra
    Bowen, Diana
    Buli, Tarik
    Bannister, Nicole
    Kalinec-Craig, Crystal
    [J]. ZDM-MATHEMATICS EDUCATION, 2021, 53 (02): : 461 - 473
  • [3] Shifting the ways prospective teachers frame and notice student mathematical thinking: from deficits to strengths
    Thorsten Scheiner
    [J]. Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2023, 114 : 35 - 61
  • [4] “It was smart when:” Supporting prospective teachers’ noticing of students’ mathematical strengths
    Crystal A. Kalinec-Craig
    Nicole Bannister
    Diana Bowen
    Lorraine A. Jacques
    Sandra Crespo
    [J]. Journal of Mathematics Teacher Education, 2021, 24 : 375 - 398
  • [5] "It was smart when:" Supporting prospective teachers' noticing of students' mathematical strengths
    Kalinec-Craig, Crystal A.
    Bannister, Nicole
    Bowen, Diana
    Jacques, Lorraine A.
    Crespo, Sandra
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MATHEMATICS TEACHER EDUCATION, 2021, 24 (04) : 375 - 398
  • [6] ASSESSMENT IN THE LANGUAGE CLASSROOM: TEACHERS SUPPORTING STUDENT LEARNING
    Nevisi, Reza Bagheri
    Hosseinpur, Rasoul Mohammad
    [J]. APPLIED LINGUISTICS, 2019, 40 (04) : 717 - 720
  • [7] Assessment in the Language Classroom: Teachers Supporting Student Learning
    May, Lyn
    [J]. PAPERS IN LANGUAGE TESTING AND ASSESSMENT, 2018, 7 (01): : 87 - 88
  • [8] Assessment in the Language Classroom: Teachers Supporting Student Learning
    Nematizadeh, Shahin
    [J]. LANGUAGE TESTING, 2019, 36 (04) : 638 - 639
  • [9] Assessment in the Language Classroom: Teachers Supporting Student Learning
    Min, Shangchao
    Xiong, Lidi
    [J]. SYSTEM, 2018, 72 : 243 - 245
  • [10] Primary teachers notice the impact of language on children's mathematical reasoning
    Bragg, Leicha A.
    Herbert, Sandra
    Loong, Esther Yoon-Kin
    Vale, Colleen
    Widjaja, Wanty
    [J]. MATHEMATICS EDUCATION RESEARCH JOURNAL, 2016, 28 (04) : 523 - 544