• Title/Summary/Keyword: mathematics teacher noticing

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A Study on Teacher's Pre-Noticing and Actual Noticing in Mathematics Classroom (교사의 사전 주목하기와 수학수업에서 실제 주목하기에 대한 연구)

  • Lee, Eun Jung;Lee, Kyeong-Hwa
    • School Mathematics
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    • v.18 no.4
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    • pp.773-791
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    • 2016
  • Teacher noticing ability has been considered as one of important elements influencing a quality of teaching. Noticing is closely related to teachers' in the moment decision making in a class, and teachers notice things as they create and interact with their classroom setting. Mathematics teachers as an expert should notice students' mathematics learning during a class. The aim of this study was to analyze how mathematics teacher's pre-noticing activity that the teacher anticipated students' typical strategies and difficulties in learning targeted mathematics knowledge and prepared appropriate responses worked in practice. As a result, the teacher conducted three types of noticing in her classes: noticing shaping students' understanding by using students' misconceptions or errors; noticing creating students' learning opportunities based on their prior knowledge; noticing improving students' informal reasoning. This study concluded with discussion about the positive effect of teacher's pre-noticing activity on her actual noticing in practice, as well as implications for teacher education.

The Understanding on the Noticing in Mathematics Education (수학 교과에서의 주목하기(Noticing)에 관한 이해)

  • Kim, Seul Bi;Hwang, Hye Jeang
    • East Asian mathematical journal
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    • v.37 no.4
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    • pp.461-480
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    • 2021
  • There have been gradually a few studies on Noticing in the domestic and international area. For the purpose of increasing the concern on teacher noticing and pursuing the affluent studies on the noticing, this study tried to explore and understand the background, the meaning, and the properties of the teacher noticing while summing up the views of the various researchers. As a result, the teacher noticing could be defined as a cognitive process which is focused on mathematical objects, students' mathematical thinking, students' emotions, teaching strategies, classroom environment and interprets them to determine how to react. From this, noticing might be cognitive process which is a combined form of the objects and cognitive behavior, while the objects whom teachers notice covers up the mathematical objects and the teaching objects. Eventually, this study expects to serve as a basis to foster the in-depth understanding of teacher noticing and to derive the follow-up studies.

Teacher Noticing on Students' Reasoning of Statistical Variability (학생의 통계적 변이성 이해에 대한 수학 교사의 노티싱 변화 양상 사례연구)

  • Han, Chaereen;Kim, Hee-jeong;Kwon, Oh Nam
    • Journal of the Korean School Mathematics Society
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    • v.21 no.2
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    • pp.183-206
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    • 2018
  • It arises that teachers' professional competence should be considered not only with a cognitive perspective but also with a situative perspective. In this study, we considered mathematics teacher noticing as situational professional competencies of a mathematics teacher, and explored how mathematics teachers noticing on children's development of reasoning about variability in a video club has changed with the situative perspective. Findings illustrate that the 'interpreting' component among the three components of noticing-attending, interpreting, and deciding how to respond-was critically decisive for the change of the participant teachers' noticing. We also discussed how the video club intervention(the framework of children's development of reasoning about variability) can support the development of teacher noticing as a professional competence. This study has implications on the design of a video club to improve mathematics teacher noticing.

Mathematics Teacher Educators' Collective Noticing on Microteaching

  • Na Young Kwon;Jung Colen;Sheunghyun Yeo;Hoyun Cho;Jinho Kim
    • Research in Mathematical Education
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    • v.26 no.4
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    • pp.311-331
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    • 2023
  • This article explores how mathematics teacher educators (MTEs) engaged in collaborative inquiry into the microteaching experiences of preservice teachers (PSTs), ultimately developing a noticing framework through collective MTE inquiry. We delve into the specifics of what MTEs notice focusing on three emerging categories of noticing on PST's microteaching videos-lesson structure, task quality, and teaching practices. Each category, along with MTEs' noticing within these components, is elaborated through vignettes. This approach positions MTEs' noticing as a crucial element in the overarching vision to enhance the teaching practices of PSTs.

Trends and Issues in Research on Noticing in Mathematics Education (수학 교육에서 노티싱(Noticing) 연구의 동향과 과제)

  • Pang, JeongSuk;Kwon, MinSung;SunWoo, Jin
    • School Mathematics
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    • v.19 no.4
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    • pp.795-817
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    • 2017
  • Whereas noticing with relation to teacher expertise has been steadily studied in international contexts, there have been very few studies in Korea in this area. Given this, this paper reviewed the meanings of noticing based on Sherin and van Es as well as Jacobs et al. who provided foundational work and then analyzed recent studies on teacher noticing. A review of literature showed that recent international studies on noticing tend to elaborate the theoretical framework of noticing, diversify the methods of research on noticing, and extend to the range of noticing. This paper also included an analysis of domestic studies dealing with noticing either explicitly or implicitly. This paper is expected to serve as a basis to foster conceptual understanding of teacher noticing and to derive follow-up studies in Korea.

The Understanding on the Teacher and Student's Noticing in Mathematics Education (수학 교과에서의 교사와 학생 상호 주목하기(Noticing)에 관한 이해)

  • Kim, Seul Bi;Hwang, Hye Jeang
    • East Asian mathematical journal
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    • v.38 no.4
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    • pp.397-414
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    • 2022
  • This study tried to explore and understand the meaning, and the properties of noticing. The result of this study were first, the difference in mathematical noticing is distinguished in either the object which is paid attention is different or the object is same but differently interpreted or react. The cause of each difference could be described as mathematical objects such as conceptual objects and perceptual features. Second, teachers' teaching strategies, which narrow the gap in attention and play a key role in the formation of mathematical meaning, appeared in various places. This teaching strategy was implemented to distract students' attention. This study confirmed that the mathematical attention of teachers and students in math classes will differ depending on the object to which they pay attention, and that difference will be narrowed through teacher's discourse practice and teaching strategies through communication strategies.

The Relationship between Mathematics Teachers' Noticing and Responsive Teaching:In the Context of Teaching for All Students' Mathematical Thinking (수학 교사의 주목하기와 반응적 교수의 관계:모든 학생의 수학적 사고 계발을 지향하는 수업 상황에서)

  • Kim, Hee-jeong;Han, Chaereen;Bae, Mi Seon;Kwon, Oh Nam
    • The Mathematical Education
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    • v.56 no.3
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    • pp.341-363
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    • 2017
  • This case study contributes to the efforts on identifying the essential features of responsive teaching practice where students' mathematical thinking is central in instructional interactions. We firstly conceptualize responsive teaching as a type of teachers' instructional decisions based on noticing literature, and agree on the claim which teachers' responsive decisions should be accounted in classroom interactional contexts where teacher, students and content are actively interacting with each other. Building on this responsive teaching model, we analyze classroom observation data of a 7th grade teacher who implemented a lesson package specifically designed to respond to students' mathematical thinking, called Formative Assessment Lessons. Our findings suggest the characteristics of responsive teaching practice and identify the relationship between noticing and responsive teaching as: (a) noticing on students' current status of mathematical thinking by eliciting and anticipating, (b) noticing on students' potential conceptual development with follow-up questions, and (c) noticing for all students' conceptual development by orchestrating productive discussions. This study sheds light on the actual teachable moments in the practice of mathematics teachers and explains what, when and how to support teachers to improve their classroom practice focusing on supporting all students' mathematical conceptual development.

An analysis of characteristics on elementary teachers' noticing in fraction division lessons (분수의 나눗셈 수업에 대한 초등교사의 노티싱 특징 분석)

  • Sunwoo, Jin
    • Education of Primary School Mathematics
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    • v.27 no.1
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    • pp.1-18
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    • 2024
  • Teachers' ability to notice is a crucial indicator of their instructional expertise. Despite the significance of this ability, research in mathematics teacher education has predominantly focused on the noticing of preservice teachers, with limited exploration into the noticing abilities of experienced in-service teachers. This study addresses this gap by examining the noticing characteristics of in-service elementary teachers actively developing their competency in elementary mathematics education. For this purpose, 23 elementary school teachers were asked to complete an analysis sheet while viewing the mathematics lesson video depicting on the concept of (fraction)÷(natural number), allowing us to scrutinize their attending, interpreting, and responding skills in detail. The study's results revealed that teachers demonstrated a tendency to attend mathematically significant aspects related to the teaching of fraction division. They interpreted the observed phenomena through the lens of fraction division's instructional principles, proposing specific pedagogical alternatives. These findings offer valuable insights for mathematics teacher education research.

Teacher Noticing in the Context of a Learning Community (학습 공동체의 맥락에서 일어나는 교사의 노티스(Noticing))

  • Kwon, Na Young
    • Journal of Educational Research in Mathematics
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    • v.25 no.2
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    • pp.139-155
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    • 2015
  • This study aimed to investigate teacher learning in the context of a community. For the purpose of this study, two research questions about the kinds of teacher noticing in a community and the role of partnership were addressed. To build a learning community, a professional development project, PRIME, established partnerships with 11 high schools and one of the cluster meetings were investigated in this study. Three mentor teachers, three preservice teachers, and one university supervisor participated in the cluster meeting. For this study, the multiple data such as audio tapes of cluster meetings, observation notes, and interviews were analyzed using the analysis of narratives. The results showed that the participants engaged in different kinds of noticing of their own beliefs about teaching and learning, teacher practices, and teacher identities including noticing of students' understanding in classroom situations. The partnership played the crucial role of reinforcing relationships among teachers, assigning tasks, and creating various communities.

Characteristics of Pre-service Secondary Mathematics Teachers' Noticing in Their Journals (중등예비수학교사의 활동 일지에서 살펴본 노티싱의 특징)

  • Kwon, Na Young;Lee, Min Hee
    • Journal of the Korean School Mathematics Society
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    • v.22 no.1
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    • pp.63-80
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    • 2019
  • This study aims to investigate noticing of pre-service secondary mathematics teachers. For the purpose of this study, we analyzed journals of four pre-service mathematics teachers. Our analysis was based on a framework including three categories such as Aware, Interpret, and Response. As results, we found a tendency that pre-service secondary mathematics teachers have more general awareness of students and relatively fewer interpretations of students' mathematical thinking than other categories. In addition, in the category of Response, the pre-service secondary mathematics teachers were more likely to explain to students than to promote students' thinking through questions. Based on these results, we would like to discuss implications for pre-service secondary mathematics teacher education.