Showing posts with label Numeracy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Numeracy. Show all posts

The PaCT: A Way for Teachers to Gain a Better Understanding of Student Progress (Part 1: Math)

Today I had the pleasure of attending a course to grow my knowledge of PaCT and of the relationship between this tool and the Math Learning Progression Framework. (Here is the Website, if you wanted to have a look for yourself).

One needs to have a reasonable understanding of the Math Learning Progression Framework before you can start using the PaCT. Therefore we started the day with a deep dive into the Math Progressions, where these came from and how these can be used to strengthen teacher practice. 


In order to teach an effective math programme one must have a good knowledge of math to begin with. The level that teachers need to be working at in order to teach successfully is Level Four. (Unfortunately, this does not seem to be the case for most educators)

It is important to note that the website above provides guides, videos and PLD activities that are used nationally to help support a coherent message of what achievement in Numeracy looks like and also what the PaCT supports.
Currently there are are twenty high user schools of PACT and MOE can point schools in their direction to provide support based on region.

The possible elephant in the room is... The Numeracy Progression Framework. This is the content knowledge that teachers need to know to be able to teach math. Teachers confident in their math knowledge should be able to identify what students are doing in math and therefore where they are sitting in terms of the Learning Progression Framework (LPF). Programmes like DIMIC and YouCubed provide a pedagogy around the teaching of math rather than math content.


Looking at the Learning Progression Framework:

There are eight aspects of knowledge: The reasons behind the eight explains each aspect and where the Number Framework sits.
(Side note: Fractions and proportions are integrated throughout the framework. We have not “lost” this in the final aspects.)


Looking at Sign Posts:

Sign posts for learning progress are informed by number framework. Placement of the signposts shows you comparatively when new aspects could be introduced when comparing to others. All placements have been generated by NZCER research so are evidence based. LFP were designed so that all of the meaning would be visible in the examples as words can be interpretive. (The design development in more depth). The illustrations give an example of what the description is there is a big focus on teachers going through the illustrations. TEACHERS MUST read the annotation to understand the illustration. Not just focus on the question. 

The number of signposts per aspect relates to the complexity of learning the aspect and the number of illustrations is determined by the minimum illustrations required to explain that aspect at that sign post.  For example: multiplicative thinking has 9 signposts because NZCER found them to be significantly different.

It is crucial to make sure a teacher understands that it is not just one thing that determines each sign post but rather the range of aspects of a learner at each point.
Teaching teachers to identify what each aspect is and what it looks like in student work. Then from this how to plan for each aspect to be taught every term rather than in siloed subjects - we know teaching this way does not work to build math knowledge.
A question that teachers could be asking is:

How much progress should I be thinking that my students will make this year?

These sign posts are not to be used as examples to teach through or as an assessment. They are used to capture the key things that go on as a student progresses in math. 

NZ math - resource finder - in the future there will be a way to find resources by addressing the gap between signposts under using LPF Aspects. 


An interesting note is that the Framework has removed “Stage 3” because it is a pedagogical step rather than a cognitive one. Students can move from materials to number properties without having gone through the “imaging” phase.

From the site itself:

It is important that students develop their knowledge and skills across all aspects of the mathematics framework so that they can use mathematics and statistics confidently, within the mathematics and statistics learning area, in other learning areas, and in their everyday lives.

The strong connections that exist among the mathematics aspects mean that lack of exposure to all the big ideas in mathematics and statistics can restrict students’ progress. The framework helps you to think about the breadth of your mathematics and statistics programme and provides a way to check that you are planning for a comprehensive coverage of the learning area.


This will only work if teachers programme has the potential to cover multiple aspects. Long term plans crucial to tie aspects into what is happening in other curriculum areas. Look at depth of the signpost. Multi problem rich tasks to support signpost learning. 


The whole idea is around noticing what you have observed students doing. Do not think that you need to Gloss or Numpa, (these tests have always been to improve teacher understanding of Framework - now become overused assessment tool - STOP IT!)   all students to be able to identify where they are achieving. Trust your judgement and provide examples of what the student has done in class - you could also get students to show you a problem as evidence if that was required. Student blogs are a great example of where students can provide evidence of where they are at in math. 



Moving to PaCT - The Tracking Tool: 
(School’s need to log in to PACT and set account if they do not have one. It uses education sector logon.)
Consistency comes from using the same illustrations rather than adapting and making your own. This creates dependable information that can be used by everyone. 

This tool goes from school to school tracking student progress - it is an online digital tracking tool. So let’s get a shared understanding of what each sign post looks like with a group of students. As a Cluster this could be perfect PD - we could create a shared understand of math progress. 

When we are making judgements with the tool we are looking at what students understand independently. Focus is on un-scaffolded understanding.
E.g. starting a session with a class problem and then seeing which students can move past this on their own, which need support and which need a different problem entirely. 
DO NOT only use this tool for a few students! It is for a whole class. There are probably only 2 sign posts that your class sits between. (Side note: we don’t group as a result of sign posting, this is not the message we are giving here).  
We aren’t looking for a perfect fit we are looking at the sign post above and below (to rule them out) and see where they fit best. 
At every point it is what student CAN do. Not what they are beginning to do. 

In October there will be no time windows for when data can be added it can be added authentically at the time it occurs in practise. 

Information on using PaCT reports can be found here. 
This is an example of a report for a class. You can also get a similar looking graph per student. 
You can remove the curriculum trajectory so that the comparison is what typical students on average are achieving (the grey highlighted line). 

The report allows you to add matched student data to the report from students within the school or previous classes. 

The tool also allows the data to be collected at a cluster level. This could have great positive implications for our cluster to help identify pockets of promise. 

There will be pdf's added within the next few months to give more information on how the reports can be used. 


Final thoughts for the day:
If we can empower teachers to use this tool to inform their practice it should have a HUGE positive implication for Math Data at a WF level. 
Teachers who use this tool confidently would have better content knowledge and understanding what next steps are, meaning better focused teaching. 
Another implication could be less testing, it is not needed therefore students and teachers may take WF testing more seriously.
More evidence of the success of implementing this tool can be found here in a case study 






Fantastic Numeracy PD

Yesterday I had the absolute pleasure of sitting in on some of a Numeracy PD session run by Jo Knox. This was really exciting for two main reasons: 
#1. I love Numeracy 
#2 It fits my Spark-MIT inquiry! 
I arrived when the small groups were discussing measurement in non-standard units. They had a photocopy of a hand and were discussing how to measure it. 


The question was then asked - if this is the giant's hand, how tall is the giant? (What an awesome idea - I thought to myself!) This was such a rich and engaging task - we discussed a wide range of math: measurement, averaging, statistics, ratios, number, units. 
Then Jo read a section from the BFG - what a way to tie in literacy and math! It was about determining what they would need for the Queen's Dinner for the giant. "If the average human is 6ft and the giant is 24ft then the difference would be x4. Therefore if the average chair was 2ft it would have to be 8ft for the giant!" (#awesome #maththisfun #loveit) 
I later found that this was a unit from nzmath called Giant Mystery

We were then asked to look at page 13-14 of Effective Pedagogy in Mathematics and discuss whether we felt that this was a worthwhile task or what a worthwhile task would look like. Of course, the general consensus was that the task was open, engaging, involved thinking skills, included challenge and encouraged us to think mathematically. Therefore, the task was worthwhile! 

The thing I liked the most about the session was how enthusiastic and engaged all the staff were. The tasks Jo used engaged everyone, across all levels and made proportions and rations fun! 
Thank you so much for letting me be a part of your PD Point England and thank you Jo for inspiring teachers to make math enjoyable for all! 

Reflecting on where to next for me and my inquiry - I think I need to add a tab for rich and open math tasks on my sharebase - give one, get one.... Yes! 

2017 Numeracy Review

As part of my role within the school, it was my job to complete a Numeracy Review. The key area that I chose to look at was Number Knowledge and Basic Facts. 
My key evaluative question-

Is a lack of number knowledge and basic facts a contributing factor to students not achieving in Numeracy?  What strategies may support accelerating the progress within this area?

I think that this was a good chance to tie in with my Spark-MIT Inquiry. The identified problem is much the same:
Students across the school are not achieving well in Numeracy. Students in the Senior School are struggling to meet National Standard.
Students in the Senior Hub are lacking in their basic facts knowledge and are therefore struggling to continue learning past stage 4 (Stage 4 is the National Standard for after 3 years at school).  
The ikan assessment which is taken in Year 4-6 every term, shows that students struggle with quick recall of knowledge.

The Data
57% of students are sitting Below or Well Below National Standard.

Some questions that I was asking myself from this data are:
  • Knowing what we know about authentic purpose and audience and motivation of students to achieve in Literacy, is there any way we can transfer this to Numeracy? (Kelsey’s Spark-MIT is looking into this further)
  • Are students being given scaffolding in and out tasks in Numeracy?
  • Are we measuring OTJ’s for Numeracy the same across the school?
  • How are we teaching basic facts across the school?
  • How are we tracking student progress across the school?

I felt that it was also important to get more information from the students and therefore completed a student survey.

Feedback from students survey (Rata + Tawa classes)
Students mostly feel okay or happy to do math.
Students mostly feel that they are quick with basic facts
71% of students that have used xtra math say that xtra math is a good way to learn basic facts
Majority of students would rather do basic facts online than with pencil and paper.

I also put out a similar survey to the parents and wider community...
Feedback from parent survey (14 parents)
Most parent feel happy with their knowledge of numeracy to support their child.
50% would like a parent evening and 50% would not.
90% of parents say their child uses mathletics or other online math programs at home.
All parents say that they have an extra 10mins for basic facts practise each night.
Parents would like fun ways to do times tables and basic facts, like there is for reading. Three of the parents would also like some math homework for their child.

It is great to see that the attitude towards math is mainly positive. I do believe that Numeracy Knowledge is a huge barrier to achievement. To move on from here it is a matter of finding some key ways to engage learners to continue learning basic facts at home. I have been reading a lot of Matt Goodwin's posts about his own Basic Facts Inquiry. It is reassuring to see that others are encountering similar problems when it comes to basic facts.


Stage 4 Numeracy Blog

I have been trying to think of a way to share the resources I have created in an easy to find system that can be used by a range of people. The first thing I did was try a website - but I struggled to make it work effectively and look nice! So... 

I have started working on a blog to share my resources for stage four. I thought a blog would be easier to navigate with the labels and the search function. 

I haven't made resources for all of the knowledge or strategy yet - but this is the intention. I am trying to think about Learn Create and Share with each resource - I have done this better on some than on others. 

The students are enjoying working through the activities and are engaged in making screencastifys! I am really enjoying the positive progress they are making through having a purpose and an audience for their work! 

Here is what I have so far! 


Enjoy! Feel free to share/copy 

- Kelsey 

Term 2 - After a day with the Woolf Fischer Research team

I am extremely excited to be heading up to Auckland this weekend for the second Spark MIT professional learning group (PLG).

I have been doing a lot of reading and looking at other schools and what they have been doing for Numeracy. I have also been thinking about the affordances of Learn, Create, Share and reflecting on my practise. Really I have been asking myself "Is my practice the best that it can be from what I know? And is there anything I am missing that could make a difference?" 

I felt extremely privileged to be a part of the Uru Manuka Review of the Data and what this means for practise. The day concluded in me feeling much stronger in my knowledge of powerful learning conversations, the difference between a DLO (digital learning object) and a DLA (digital learning artefact), as well as, thinking about how a students knowledge transfers. 

From this day some things I am going to change/edit in my practise are: 
- Giving students set class time to respond to the feedback that has been given to them online and also verbally. 
-  Aiming to provide positive, helpful and thoughtful feedback to students on all pieces of work (not applying a celling to any task). 
- Ensuring that the tasks I am asking the students to complete have an aspect of higher level thinking to them (know how students can take their learning further or gain deeper understanding through a task) 
- Thinking about blogging as not only a polished piece of work, but also drafts and work that needs some refining
- I am also really interested to know what kind of feedback the students I have prefer - aural or written or videoed? Does it make a difference to them? 

I have been looking in to the tasks I am asking my students to complete for Numeracy in particular and a quote that really resonated with me was from the Woolf Fischer team "Creating provides students with an opportunity to reflect on, synthesise, and come to a deeper understanding of what they read and know – or think they know." I had to ask myself are the create tasks I am prompting allowing students to come to a deeper understanding or are they just completing the task that I have given them?


Here are two examples of the work I have set this term..



Here is a link to a students finished product of this task Dani @ Gilberthorpe




Here is a link to a students finished product of this task Nevaeh @ Gilberthorpe 

I feel like the tasks involved practise of the new skill and the students recordings provide the deeper thinking. I could do more to provide some transferable scaffolds for students and a chance for students to create their own problems or examples... Food for thought anyway!



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