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El. knyga: How to Recognise and Support Mathematical Mastery in Young Children's Play: Learning from the 'Talk for Maths Mastery' Initiative

Edited by (WatchMeGrow and the Development Map)
  • Formatas: 264 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 12-Jul-2021
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780429652035
  • Formatas: 264 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 12-Jul-2021
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780429652035

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This exciting book explores young children’s fascination with all things mathematical. Drawing on the Talk for Maths Mastery project, it helps practitioners to understand early mathematical development and recognise the maths taking place in children’s play.



This exciting book explores young children’s fascination with all things mathematical. Drawing on the Talk for Maths Mastery project, it helps practitioners to understand early mathematical development and recognise the maths taking place in children’s play. Emphasising the importance of starting from children’s existing mathematical interests, it shows how adults can build on these starting points to gradually introduce new concepts and address misconceptions as they arise.

The book considers how mathematical development and learning is embedded within children’s dispositions and mindsets. Including case studies, links to practice and reflective questions, the chapters reveal what mastery orientation looks like from the children’s perspective in their learning and covers:

  • children’s serve and return conversational talk
  • mathematical babies and their developmental momentum
  • schematic patterns of thinking
  • mathematical mark-making
  • child-led play
  • problem solving
  • creative and critical thinking
  • how adults can support children’s mathematical talk, thinking and mastery

Featuring children’s learning stories and full-colour photographs throughout to illustrate practice, this book is essential reading for all early years practitioners and teachers working with children throughout the EYFS and KS1 as well as students on early years courses.

Recenzijos

"With an excellent layout and indexing, appendices of ready to use practical tools, real life learning stories, and full colour photographs, this is essential reading for early years practitioners looking to develop mathematical mastery in their work with the youngest students.

I particularly liked the concept of the Maths is everywhere audit, encouraging adults to see that maths can happen anywhere, at any time. This book would make an excellent addition to the Continuing Professional Development library of any primary school." - Helen Emery, The School Librarian

Introduction 1(2)
Contributors 3(2)
Acknowledgements 5(2)
The children
5(1)
The Talk for Maths Mastery partners
6(1)
Notes
6(1)
1 What is Talk for Maths Mastery?
7(20)
Di Chilvers
What is Talk for Maths Mastery?
7(1)
What is an extended professional development initiative?
8(3)
How to get started with Talk for Maths Mastery
11(1)
How to use the Talk for Maths Mastery tools and strategies in practice
12(1)
Observation using narrative learning stories
13(2)
Maths Is Everywhere review
15(2)
Hot and Cold Spot audit
17(1)
Mathematical learning environment audit
18(1)
Action planning
19(1)
Timelines
19(1)
What should you do with your research findings? What do they tell you about practice?
20(1)
Talk for Maths Mastery -- our story
21(1)
An even bigger question!
22(1)
The principles underpinning continuous provision
23(1)
Bringing our themes and questions together
24(2)
Summary
26(1)
2 Maintaining the momentum of children's mathematical development
27(28)
Di Chilvers
What do we mean by `learning momentum'?
28(1)
The number line discussion -- the transition of pedagogy
29(3)
Helpful number line tips
32(1)
Maintaining momentum, a mathematical journey
32(1)
Mathematical babies -- developmental momentum
33(1)
Mathematical toddlers -- developmental momentum
34(2)
Mathematical young children -- developmental momentum
36(2)
Mathematical talk -- maintaining the momentum
38(1)
Talking and thinking
39(1)
Schema and mathematical development
40(1)
What are schema?
40(2)
What are figurative schema?
42(6)
What do schemas tell us about young children's mathematical thinking?
48(1)
What should adults do?
48(1)
How do schemas underpin children's mathematical concepts?
48(1)
What are concepts?
48(4)
Embodied learning and mathematical development
52(1)
What is spatial reasoning?
53(1)
Summary
54(1)
3 What does mathematical mastery mean for young children?
55(26)
Di Chilvers
Reflecting on this chapter's question
55(2)
What is mastery orientation?
57(8)
What is mathematical mastery?
65(3)
Seeing children's mastery orientation -- a way of looking
68(4)
Children's conversational talk -- serve and return
72(1)
Child-led play and activities
73(1)
Sustained shared thinking
74(3)
Characteristics of effective learning
77(1)
Self-regulation and meta-cognition
78(1)
Children's agency and self-belief
79(1)
Summary
80(1)
4 Documenting children's mathematical talking and thinking through observation, learning stories and floor books
81(28)
Katie Hulme
Key questions
81(1)
Why is documentation important, and how can we use it effectively to support mathematical talking, thinking and mastery?
82(1)
What is documentation?
82(1)
Documentation through learning stories and floor books
82(2)
The process of using floor books
84(3)
Seeing mathematical mastery in the documentation?
87(1)
Problem solving
87(1)
Fluency
87(1)
Reasoning
88(4)
How can children's serve and return interactions support their learning?
92(4)
How language deepens understanding -- the role of the adult
96(1)
How talk and play can reveal misconceptions
96(1)
Case study: only big things are heavy (children aged 3 and 4)
97(1)
How do we address children's misconceptions?
98(1)
How do we follow children's mathematical interests?
99(1)
What is an interest?
99(1)
How does children's schematic thinking and learning support their early mathematical development?
100(3)
Planning for children's interests
103(1)
Mastery and meta-cognition
104(3)
Summary
107(2)
5 Building mathematical thinking through whole-class child-led learning
109(28)
Amy Parker
Key questions
109(1)
1 What is the place of play in developing mathematical mastery?
110(9)
The Ofsted definition of teaching
113(4)
Maths Is Everywhere
117(2)
2 How do we follow children's interests and build mathematical thinking and mastery?
119(2)
How do we teach?
119(1)
How many whole-class sessions do we teach?
120(1)
How much child-led time is there?
120(1)
3 What does mathematical mastery through whole-class, child-led learning look like in practice?
121(13)
Love Monster -- a whole-class learning story
121(2)
Problem solving is a key disposition and skill in mathematical mastery
123(1)
What is sustained shared thinking?
123(1)
Creating a maths mastery enabling environment
124(1)
Reflection and meta-cognition
125(2)
Authentic contextual experiences
127(5)
Reflecting on our mathematical thinking and learning
132(2)
Why whole-class learning stories?
134(1)
Summary
135(2)
6 Making their mathematical mark: understanding and supporting children's mathematical mark-making and thinking
137(32)
David Yates
Building on early mark-making experiences from birth to 3
138(1)
Continuous provision and the under-threes
139(1)
Continuing learning at home
140(2)
The developmental progression of mathematical mark-making
142(1)
Peyton -- mark-making at 2 years old
142(3)
Extending thinking for mark-making
145(1)
Mathematical mark-making with 3- to 4-year-olds
146(2)
Children's mathematical conversations
148(1)
Sensitive adult interactions
148(1)
What adults do to support children's mathematical mark-making is vital in building sensitively upon their developing interests and experiences
149(1)
Building on the enabling environment
150(3)
The influence of the wider environment on mathematical mark-mating
153(1)
Maths in `real-life' contexts
153(1)
Mathematical mark-making at 3--4 years old: Meryam
153(3)
Mathematical mark-making with 4--5 year olds
156(1)
Mathematical mark-making at 4--5 years old: Aadam
156(3)
Boys and mark-making
159(1)
Mathematical mark-making at 4--5 years old: Meryam
159(2)
Mathematical mark-making at 4--5 years old: Aadam and Farhaad
161(2)
Mathematical mark-making into Year 1 (5+ years old)
163(4)
Summary
167(2)
7 How do adults support children's mathematical talk, thinking and mastery?
169(29)
Kath Priestley
What do young children need to support their mathematical thinking and learning?
169(2)
My maths story
171(1)
So why am I writing a chapter in a book about maths mastery?
171(1)
The role of the adult: "My mathematical thinking is supported by ..."
172(10)
1 Adults who can identify children's mathematical thinking and see the potential for mathematical opportunities in many different situations
173(4)
2 Adults who allow children time to explore, develop and revisit their own problem solving and pursue their own interests and fascinations
177(4)
3 Adults who provide an appropriate combination of child-initiated and adult-focused teaching and learning to get the balance right
181(1)
Example 1
182(1)
Example 2
183(11)
4 Adults who value and create opportunities for children's talk
186(5)
5 Adults who have a secure knowledge of child development and how children learn
191(1)
6 Adults who know how to observe
192(2)
Through observation
194(3)
Summary
197(1)
8 Maintaining children's mathematical momentum into Year 1 -- a case study
198(23)
Natalie Reilly
David Yates
1 Having a strong overall vision
199(3)
2 Implementing the vision into Year 1
202(5)
3 What were the challenges?
207(1)
4 What about the role of the adult in Year 1?
208(2)
5 How are children's interests followed?
210(4)
6 Continuing continuous provision
214(1)
7 Partnership between home and school
215(1)
The Early Years Foundation Stage meets the National Curriculum
215(5)
Summary
220(1)
Final thoughts 221(2)
Appendices 223(11)
List of figures 234(3)
References 237(10)
Index 247
Di Chilvers is an advisory consultant, author and trainer at WatchMeGrow and the Development Map, UK.