Developing Fluency in Mathematics
Mary T. Treanor, Valparaiso University
The ability to discuss mathematics is crucial for mathematics
majors and for students from across the campus whom we meet in service
courses. This talk will address the concerns
of both sets of students; there are higher expectations for majors, but many of
the same strategies can be used or easily modified for science, business, or
engineering majors. While most students
will readily agree that the ability to communicate with colleagues, others in
their profession, and clients will be crucial to their success in the future,
fewer students expect to develop and exercise these skills now in their
mathematics classes.
Before I can expect students to discuss mathematics orally or in
writing, I need to encourage them to read their text and to provide other
selected materials as well; no one is comfortable expressing ideas—or asking
questions--when the terms, idioms, and conventions of a topic are foreign. Mathematics is a language, but too often
majors lack confidence in their ability to speak clearly. Students from other majors often seem to
assume that mathematics will always be foreign, a language that they will never
know. They often concentrate only on
the “boxed” portions of their text; they seem surprised by my expectation that
they will understand if they read. And
initially all students may be puzzled when I ask them to explain, to use words,
to do more than use an algorithm to solve a problem, and to care about understanding
the solution instead of focusing only on a correct answer. (Certainly, English
professors expect that students listen to, read, and analyze good literature in
order to improve their ability to express themselves well, and I think that the
analogy holds as well in mathematics.)
Small collaborative groups can be a good setting for speaking
about mathematical ideas and for thrashing out an explanation of a solution
that will be presented either orally or in written form. In small groups, the discussion will be
lively. Errors and questions can be
more easily raised and addressed by either students or by the instructor in
this non-judgmental setting, and students experience control and build
confidence in their ability to speak and to listen in mathematically accurate
ways.
The materials for these groups can be very varied: questions about text that they have already
read, a problem to solve with directions that the solution be written up
specifically to be helpful to a student who was absent for the introduction of
the topic, a problem whose solution requires them to make finer distinctions
about material with which they are already somewhat familiar, their creation of
an original problem and its solution, True-False questions. There is always a written report sheet,
unless each group will report orally.
Almost all of the materials are also suitable for students to use
individually.
I find that students often develop confidence in their ability
to articulate their thinking when they are responding to well-formulated
True-False questions. Students are
directed to label each statement correctly, and, if the statement is False,
they are to give a counterexample and to explain why their example is appropriate. Deciding which statements are True or False
and then, for a False statement, responding to each of the other two parts will
often stimulate discussion, raise clarifying questions, and lead to a careful
articulation of the group’s insights. Explanations for true statements are
optional, but students often tackle the challenges that such explanations pose.
Students’ questions, whether posed by an individual or arising
in a group who can’t resolve the issue for themselves, sometimes trigger my
ideas for new materials that will stimulate student discussion and
writing. Problems that lead students to
make clear distinctions between ideas that are easily confused are particularly
valuable.
It is my experience that an emphasis on articulating mathematical understanding encourages everyone in class to listen more thoughtfully, to speak and write more clearly, and to understand more thoroughly—and that includes the instructor. In this talk, I will share strategies and materials that I have found helpful in my classes; examples from courses for majors and from service courses will be included.