Math Solutions
    The Newsletter For Math Solutions Participants - Number 24 (Online version) - Fall/Winter 1998-99
    Getting your Math Message Out to Parents
    Making the Home/School Connection
    Written by Nancy Litton
    We’re excited about our newest Math Solutions publication,
    Getting Your Math Message Out to Parents,
    by
    Nancy Litton. Nancy is a classroom teacher with almost thirty years of experience as well as a Math Solutions
    instructor. She’s thought a great deal about how to bridge the gap between home and school and knows that
    teachers must find ways to reach out to parents and communicate with them about what’s going on with their
    children’s math education. In her book, Nancy draws from how she and other teachers approach parents and
    offers practical, effective, and thoughtful suggestions about newsletters, homework, back-to-school nights,
    classroom volunteers, and family math nights. Following is just part of her “Parent Conferences” chapter.
    Holding conferences with parents has a deserved reputation for being time-consuming and emotionally
    demanding. The high-stakes quality of conferences is inherent to the situation: both teacher and parents care
    deeply about the child they are discussing and feel a high degree of responsibility for that child’s success as a
    student and as a person. Finding a way to tap into this high degree of caring in a relaxed and positive way is
    important, because conferences are a rare commodity - a time and place to focus on the needs and abilities of
    each child as an individual. I try to use a conference to get to know my students better: I carefully review their
    work beforehand and ask the parents to be active participants. Ideally, teacher and parents pour equal effort
    into the conference, firming up the notion of a parent-teacher partnership. A conference gives me a chance to
    show parents that I’m knowledgeable about their children and that I’m open to any ideas and information the
    parents have. Most of all, I see a conference as an opportunity to celebrate the many strengths and abilities of
    each of my students.
    The Conference
    My cardinal rule is to begin every conference on a positive note. I generally mention some recent triumph the
    child has experienced at school or some especially endearing quality she or he has exhibited. This friendly
    beginning conveys to parents that I like and appreciate their child. It makes parents feel at ease and gives them
    confidence that I have their child’s best interest at heart. They are also more likely to be receptive to any
    problems I may need to discuss later in the conference.
    After I’ve set this positive tone, I ask the parents to tell me about their child. As I listen to their description, I
    pay attention not only to the information they provide but also to what they leave out. I get them to round out
    their story by asking a question or two. I learn a lot about what parents value and how they relate to their
    children from what they say. Sometimes parents want to get right to the things they see as problems. I listen to
    these concerns, but I also make sure that the conference includes plenty of time to share positive thoughts
    about the child. I want to help parents appreciate their child’s good qualities.
    If parents mention a particular educational goal, I take specific notes so that I can follow up on it throughout
    the year. If the goal is unrealistic - having a first grader memorize the multiplication table by the end of the
    year, for example - I try to respond to the underlying concern, which is that their child encounter a rigorous

    math curriculum. I let them know that I recognize and share their interest in skill development. I might even
    describe how I’ll be helping my students become more proficient with numbers, at the same time emphasizing
    how important it is for children to understand what they’re doing in mathematics. (I’ll also make a note to
    myself that I need to send out a newsletter that describes how number sense is developed.) In any case,
    discussions like this remind me that I need to let parents know what I consider to be developmentally
    appropriate for their children.
    After thanking the parents for their perspective, I offer some thoughts about how my perception of their child
    matches or contrasts with theirs. Then I begin showing the samples of student work I’ve collected, explaining
    what the work tells about the child’s growth. For example, look at first grader Lana’s solution to the Rooster
    problem, shown on the next page. Here’s what I told Lana’s parents:
    Sometimes a piece of literature can be an interesting context for problem solving. I had read aloud
    Rooster’s
    Off to See the World [
    Eric Carle, Scholastic, 1972], a one-to-five counting book that involves one rooster, two
    cats, and so on up to five fish who go on a journey. The problem I posed for the children to solve was, How
    many animals went off to see the world?
    Lana figured out that 15 animals went off to see the world.
    You can see that Lana got the correct answer and that she’s been very clear about how she solved the problem
    through counting. Her work shows that she has a good conceptual understanding of what the problem entails.
    She made a point of using pictures, tally marks, and numbers to solve the problem. She counted accurately, an
    important skill for a first grader. When she brought her paper up to me, it was very important to her that I
    notice how complete she had been. This is just one example of what a conscientious student Lana is. When I
    asked Lana to share her paper with the class, I noticed that the other children also took note of how complete
    she had been. On subsequent problems that the children have been asked to solve, I’ve noticed that her work
    has served as a good example for some of her classmates.
    If I had omitted showing the student work and just described Lana as “well organized and always eager to do
    her best work,” her parents would have been reassured, but they wouldn’t have seen how these characteristics
    play out for Lana when she’s doing mathematics. Being able to back my statements up with a look at how
    Lana actually organized her thoughts on paper in solving a real problem gives a much fuller picture, both of
    Lana’s way of working and what we are doing in the math program.
    For any work I share, I take pains to describe the context of the problem and to mention the strand of
    mathematics it falls under. Then, when I go on to describe how their child approached the problem, parents
    can better understand why the work is significant. In addition to describing the actual mathematical thinking

    that went into the work, I make sure to include my observations about the child’s attitude toward doing
    mathematics, ability to organize thinking, and willingness to persevere in the face of difficulty. I explain that
    children who are committed to working hard on problems, even those that are difficult, are learning the tools
    that will help them throughout their mathematics career.
    Choosing Student Work for Conferences
    I know that having samples of the child’s efforts will give the parents and me something concrete on which to
    focus our attention. While describing the way their child has gone about solving a specific problem, I’ll be able
    to comment on his or her mathematical thinking in a lively way that includes the child’s attitude toward doing
    mathematics. Having a little piece of the child there in the room can even dissipate some of the natural
    uneasiness we may all be feeling. And the student work allows me to give a fuller picture of what math looks
    like in my classroom.
    Choosing work for conferences enables me to reinforce my deep-seated convictions about the way I am
    teaching mathematics. It also helps me become clearer about the choices I’m making in general for my
    students. For example, I asked my second graders to add 35 + 27, explain how they did it, and then write a
    story to match the equation. When I look at George’s solution (see figure below), I’m reminded of how
    important it is to structure assignments that help to reveal how children think. I would never have known that
    George was so gifted mathematically if he spent his time doing pages of double-digit addition. George was
    able to solve the addition problem, explain the steps that he used for his mathematical solution, and create a
    story context that matched the original problem. He then went on to create a new problem (how to share the
    orange peels equally among the six spiders) and solve it accurately as well. When I talked with George’s
    parents about his work, it was clear to all of us that George was being challenged by our math program in the
    best way possible: he was challenging himself, taking every opportunity to extend and articulate his thinking.
    In his paper, George explains how he added 35 + 27 and also creates a story context to match the problem
    Student-Parent Conferences
    Teachers aren’t the only ones who can confer effectively with parents. Sometimes, students can do the best job
    of letting parents know what’s happening in math class. Sessions at which children share their own work can
    take place at home or at school. Maryann Wickett, a third-grade teacher in San Marcos, California, regularly
    enlists her students’ help in reviewing work and reporting progress. Here’s how she goes about it. After her
    class has completed a unit of study, each of Maryann’s students reviews the work he or she has completed and
    chooses three pieces of work to include in a math portfolio. Each of the three pieces must represent at least one

    of five categories:
    1. The child’s best work.
    2. A favorite paper.
    3. A paper that describes a mathematical discovery or theory.
    4. A paper that clearly explains mathematical thinking.
    5. A paper dealing with an idea about which the student is still wondering or unsure.
    The children then write about why they’ve chosen the three pieces. They also reflect on their work in a more
    general way. The completed portfolio consists of a cover letter to parents from Maryann, the three pieces of
    math work, and the child’s two reflective pieces of writing.
    The children then take their portfolio home and share it with their parents. The parents are encouraged to
    comment about what they learned from this process and to write to Maryann about any questions they have.
    Students, parents, and teachers all benefit when student voices are included in the reporting process. Teachers
    are well aware of the value of having their students review and reflect on their own learning, and they enjoy
    knowing that attention is being directed where it should be - on student growth.
    Copyright© Marilyn Burns Education Associates, 2002. All rights reserved.

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