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Final report
Executive Summary
Principal Investigators:
Marta Civil University of Arizona
Rosi Andrade University of Arizona
Norma González University of Utah
Introduction
Mathematics in school and mathematics outside school
are different and often unconnected to one another. For example, people
may be competent in dealing with mathematical tasks that they view as
personally relevant, but this contrasts dramatically with their low performance
in school-like situations. What is the gap between one and the other,
and what can be done to bridge it? This study (referred to as BRIDGE--
Linking Home and School: A Bridge to the Many Faces of Mathematics)
examined such questions as they applied to language and cultural minority
students. This study emphasized mathematics teaching that stressed students'
own construction of meaning and connections to their world outside school,
in the home. This approach to teaching, we claim, is important for all
students, but in particular for economically underprivileged and language
/ culture minority students, since they are still being left behind in
the academic journey, and more specifically in mathematics.
Over the course of the project, the study took us to
six elementary and two middle schools, within two major school districts
in Tucson, Arizona. One of the schools was in a working-class to middle-class
neighborhood; all the other schools were in working-class neighborhoods.
The general population of students that the project worked with were 75%
Latino, 5% Native American, 10% African American, and 10% European American.
Overall, 17 teachers took part in the project. In terms of students impacted,
this is harder to assess but, for example, in one given year, the three
teachers we had in the middle school developed curriculum projects that
involved approximately 170 students.
Research Design
This study investigated four questions:1) What are the
effects of mathematical study groups on teachers' professional development
and pedagogical practices? 2) What is the mathematical potential of students'
households and activities outside school? 3) How do we take familial knowledge
to an abstract level with potential for academic use? 4) What is the role
of parents in changing teaching practices? To address these questions
we relied on a four-component model: a) Household Ethnographic Analysis;
b) Teacher-Researcher Study Groups; c) Classroom Implementation; d) Parents
as Intellectual Resources. Our research design is essentially qualitative
with a strong ethnographic component (see pp. 3-4). This summary presents
implications of the study within the framework of each of the four components.
Household Ethnographic Analysis
Despite our better sense to do otherwise, somewhere,
sometime during formal and informal education, myths and stereotypes about
parents and especially language minority and working class families are
woven and reinforced time and time again. The very nature of the ethnographic
experience and later analysis of the data collected, coupled with the
ongoing teacher-researcher study groups, served to challenge and transform
counterproductive and misguided perceptions which have otherwise served
to limit the ebb and flow of knowledge and experiences between home and
classroom. Teachers received ethnographic training along similar lines
as in the Funds of Knowledge for Teaching Project. They then went into
the homes as learners, with a specific focus on the mathematical potential
in the households. We include here a brief glimpse at an example of how
powerful this experience was for one of the teachers. During a study group
meeting this teacher vividly described her home visit. She shared that
though the family was materially speaking not wealthy, there was a wealth
of love, respect and discipline. This, suggested the teacher, was a family
for us all to learn from this family had taught her a great deal
about respecting families and about a family's own resilience during difficult
periods. This is the nature of experiences that are shared by teacher-researchers
following household visits; other household knowledge and experiences
begin to build on this foundation. We have learned that before we can
begin discussing the academic potential for household knowledge, it is
necessary to cull out, like this teacher did, the social, cultural and
historical contexts of each family in order to appreciate the struggles
they face. At the same time, in sharing the stories of a family, it is
inevitable to bring one's own experiences and knowledge to the table,
and in this way, teachers themselves are exploring their own funds of
knowledge. (See pp. 4-6)
Teacher-Researcher Study Groups
Every two to three weeks, we came together to "play with
mathematics," address pedagogical issues, debrief household visits, and
read and discuss relevant articles. The significance of the study-group
is that it is first a forum for the process of consciousness about pedagogy,
curriculum and knowledge in the teaching and learning of mathematics,
then a vehicle for forging the links between home and school knowledge
and experience in the creation of innovative curriculum and pedagogy in
mathematics. It would be all too easy to answer some of the questions
raised within the Study Group sessions by quickly dismissing what some
do as mathematics by validating formal application over informal practices.
But, we have the burden to understand the social and cultural practices
in which mathematics is embedded. We do, however, agree that mathematics
often serves as a gatekeeper. In doing so, we have begun to realize the
ways in which we often measure others' knowledge of mathematics to the
yardstick of testing, which values certain knowledge and experiences as
superior, while qualifying as inferior other less palpable expressions
of mathematical knowledge. Interestingly, but not surprisingly, for example,
we have also found that some of these perceptions were closely related
to gender and class specific knowledge and experiences of individuals.
That mathematics is not gender or culturally or socially neutral as a
subject should be of no surprise, but we are usually taught that it is
not and presented with it as a neutral subject. This was an area that
we continued to explore and delve into as we pursued the activities of
the study group. (See pp. 6-7)
Classroom Implementation
The knowledge gained from the household visits was to
serve as a building block towards the development of curriculum themes
that would link home mathematics and school mathematics. Thus, for example,
one of the teachers used his household visits and his informal interviewing
of many of this middle school students to develop a sophisticated curriculum
plan around the idea of "build your dream home." Through this project,
students learned many of the required mathematical skills and concepts
in a familiar contextthat of house construction. Furthermore, several
of their family members were involved in the final projects, the making
of a model for their dream home. Another teacher, knowing that her students'
families were quite knowledgeable about gardening, developed a theme centered
on this topic. This theme allowed her to explore in depth topics in measurement,
geometry, and graphing, that while they are grade-appropriate, they are
often barely touched on. This is one key aspect we want to point out.
By providing teachers with a supportive yet challenging environment to
become learners of mathematics, they, in turn, expanded the array of topics
and pedagogical approaches in their own teaching of mathematics. (See
pp. 7-9)
Parents as Intellectual Resources
In our continuous challenge of the deficit view towards
working class and language minority families, in this project we pushed
forward the idea of parents as intellectual resources. The knowledge gained
from the household visits was a step in this direction. But, a stronger
step, we think, was the development of mathematics workshops for a core
group of mothers. With these Mexican immigrant women we began a two-way
dialogue that encompassed explorations of mathematics as adult learners
as well as conversations about educational issues, in particular those
related to the teaching and learning of mathematics in schools. These
workshops centered on the premise that we were all learners. The content
of the workshops was jointly negotiated and, as in the teachers' study
group sessions, often brought to light the social and cultural aspects
of mathematics instruction and how our values color our perceptions. We
firmly believe that if we wish to have parents involved in different and
meaningful ways in the education of their children, then we should facilitate
that transition as we do for teachers, through workshops and other opportunities
for their professional development. (See pp. 9-11)
Conclusions
Of the many implications from our work (see pp. 11-14),
some have direct application to how schools are structured and the roles
of teachers and parents within the current framework of home-school collaborations.
We believe in the importance of this work, however, there are limitations
to how we can extend our findings if schools as institutions, and preservice
teacher training and teacher professional development, continue to look
to the individual as the problem without reforming their own ranks and
institutions. When we choose to engage teachers in meaningful reflective
practice, and parents as intellectuals interested in the pursuit of knowledge
and activities that extend beyond home activities, then we can begin the
work of integrating these pursuits in authentic collaboration for the
benefit of students.
As the Funds of Knowledge concept has evolved in our
work, the approach to ethnographic training has shifted as we have learned
more about what works and what does not. What works is that the more the
participants can engage and identify with the topic matter, the more interest
and motivation are generated. What does not work is a top/down classroom
style approach, for example, in which teacher-researcher participants
can learn methodological techniques, but which strips away the multidimensionality
of a personal ethnographic encounter. In other words, we learn ethnography
by doing ethnography. Similarly, we learn mathematics by doing mathematics.
It is this engagement of the teachers and the parents (and of the children
in the teachers' classrooms) as active doers of mathematics, and the supported
reflection that goes along with the activity, that hold promise in the
work towards establishing bridges between everyday experiences and school
mathematics.
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