Chapter 2 ~ Making Learning Visible Starts With Teacher Clarity

Here are the reflection and discussion questions for chapter 2. If you choose to comment on more than one, please use separate comments to keep the conversation organized. Comments for this chapter will be accepted until November 22nd.

  1. Learning intentions can help students make connections between current learning and previously learned content. Identify the learning intention for a lesson you have recently taught. What previously learned content is connected to this learning intention? Did your students see the connection? If so, how did this impact their engagement in the learning? If not, how might you modify the learning intention and experience to bring more attention to this connection?
  2. Learning intentions should be intentionally inviting to students. Look back over your learning intentions from recent lessons and rewrite them to be more inviting to students. Use the examples in Figure 2.1 for guidance.
  3. A lesson can have mathematical content and/or practice learning intentions, language learning intentions, and/or social learning intentions. Consider again your recent lessons and learning intentions, keeping in mind that not every lesson will incorporate every type of learning intention. Which relevant types of learning intentions did you make known to students? What other types of learning intentions might you consider? How can you determine where you want to focus your lessons?
  4. Review the list of Tier 2 words in Figure 2.2. Download the blank template and make a list of the specific general academic (Tier 2) words that are important in your mathematics course(s) along with any Tier 3 (domain-specific) words your students must master. What are your strategies for helping students find success with this vocabulary?
  5. Look at Mr. Stone’s general math rubric in Figure 2.6 and consider one of your learning intentions with its success criteria. Make notes about the specific things you would expect to see from your students in each of the three areas of the rubric, Conceptual Understanding, Explanation and Justification, and Math Terms and Notations.

2 thoughts on “Chapter 2 ~ Making Learning Visible Starts With Teacher Clarity

  1. How I would/will modify my future teaching is to employ a longer version of an Exit Ticket or perhaps reflection giving the students the task to explain what their take away from today’s lesson was and how it will impact their own mathematical practice/thinking. I will ask them to write down a question they wonder about or were surprised by in this lesson.

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