Synchronous Online Collaborative Professional Development for Elementary Mathematics Teachers

Math is often taught poorly emphasizing rote, procedural methods rather than creativity and problem solving. Alberta Education developed a new mathematics curriculum to transform mathematics teaching to inquiry driven methods. This revised curriculum provides a new vision for mathematics and creates...

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Main Author: Krista Francis-Poscente and Michele Jacobsen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Athabasca University Press 2013-07-01
Series:International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/1460/2535
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spelling doaj-b56322d7ae2f4600962f29988bcdbf332020-11-24T23:49:11ZengAthabasca University PressInternational Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning1492-38312013-07-01143Synchronous Online Collaborative Professional Development for Elementary Mathematics TeachersKrista Francis-Poscente and Michele JacobsenMath is often taught poorly emphasizing rote, procedural methods rather than creativity and problem solving. Alberta Education developed a new mathematics curriculum to transform mathematics teaching to inquiry driven methods. This revised curriculum provides a new vision for mathematics and creates opportunities and requirements for professional learning by teachers. Conventional offsite, after school, or weekend professional development is typically “sit and listen, maybe try on Monday”. Professional development that is embedded, responsive, and personalized is known to be more effective at changing teaching practice. Alberta teachers are geographically dispersed making online professional learning a desirable alternative to on-site workshops. As access to and use of the Internet gains momentum in schools across the country, opportunities for collaborative, online professional development become more viable. The online professional development in this hermeneutic study maps on to the new vision promoted in Alberta’s math curriculum, and addresses the challenge of a distributed teacher population. Thirteen geographically dispersed participants, including 10 teachers, a PhD mathematician, and two mathematics education specialists, collaborated in an online professional learning community to build knowledge for teaching mathematics. This paper describes and interprets the shared experiences of learners within an online, synchronous learning community that focused on discipline rich, focused inquiry with mathematics. Findings show that the nature and quality of the mathematics task impacted the quality and nature of the online interaction. Mathematics problems that incorporated easily drawn symbols and minimal text worked best in the online collaborative space. Members of this learning community discovered how to assert their identity in the online environment. http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/1460/2535K-6 educationteacher professional developmentmathematical problem-solvingsynchronous online learning environmentsprofessional learning communities
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Krista Francis-Poscente and Michele Jacobsen
spellingShingle Krista Francis-Poscente and Michele Jacobsen
Synchronous Online Collaborative Professional Development for Elementary Mathematics Teachers
International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning
K-6 education
teacher professional development
mathematical problem-solving
synchronous online learning environments
professional learning communities
author_facet Krista Francis-Poscente and Michele Jacobsen
author_sort Krista Francis-Poscente and Michele Jacobsen
title Synchronous Online Collaborative Professional Development for Elementary Mathematics Teachers
title_short Synchronous Online Collaborative Professional Development for Elementary Mathematics Teachers
title_full Synchronous Online Collaborative Professional Development for Elementary Mathematics Teachers
title_fullStr Synchronous Online Collaborative Professional Development for Elementary Mathematics Teachers
title_full_unstemmed Synchronous Online Collaborative Professional Development for Elementary Mathematics Teachers
title_sort synchronous online collaborative professional development for elementary mathematics teachers
publisher Athabasca University Press
series International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning
issn 1492-3831
publishDate 2013-07-01
description Math is often taught poorly emphasizing rote, procedural methods rather than creativity and problem solving. Alberta Education developed a new mathematics curriculum to transform mathematics teaching to inquiry driven methods. This revised curriculum provides a new vision for mathematics and creates opportunities and requirements for professional learning by teachers. Conventional offsite, after school, or weekend professional development is typically “sit and listen, maybe try on Monday”. Professional development that is embedded, responsive, and personalized is known to be more effective at changing teaching practice. Alberta teachers are geographically dispersed making online professional learning a desirable alternative to on-site workshops. As access to and use of the Internet gains momentum in schools across the country, opportunities for collaborative, online professional development become more viable. The online professional development in this hermeneutic study maps on to the new vision promoted in Alberta’s math curriculum, and addresses the challenge of a distributed teacher population. Thirteen geographically dispersed participants, including 10 teachers, a PhD mathematician, and two mathematics education specialists, collaborated in an online professional learning community to build knowledge for teaching mathematics. This paper describes and interprets the shared experiences of learners within an online, synchronous learning community that focused on discipline rich, focused inquiry with mathematics. Findings show that the nature and quality of the mathematics task impacted the quality and nature of the online interaction. Mathematics problems that incorporated easily drawn symbols and minimal text worked best in the online collaborative space. Members of this learning community discovered how to assert their identity in the online environment.
topic K-6 education
teacher professional development
mathematical problem-solving
synchronous online learning environments
professional learning communities
url http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/1460/2535
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