TEN ROLES FOR MATH TEACHERS Cathy L. Seeley/Austin,
Texas
Real teachers in real schools face real challenges implementing
the numerous standards and recommendations for mathematics teachers today.
Many teachers reading the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics'
(NCTM's) Curriculum and Evaluation Standards for School Mathematics (1989)
and Professional Standards for Teaching Mathematics (1991) get excited
about the possibilities for new kinds of instruction just as they are also
bogged down by the overwhelming expectations about how they should provide
that instruction. Within the complex description these two volumes provide
about what teachers should do and how they should act, ten basic metaphors
seem to emerge about new teacher roles. Some of these roles may feel
fairly comfortable to some of you, and other roles may remind you just how
hard it is to live up to you own ideals as a teacher.
- The teacher as architect: Architects create the environment
in which we live and work-both the buildings and the feelings they
evoke. Similarly, the teacher as architect creates the learning
environment for students. From the arrangement of furniture that
facilitates discussion, thought and exploration, to the feeling students
experience when they walk into the classroom, the teacher establishes an
atmosphere where mathematics and learning are important. Most of all,
the teacher creates a place where students feel safe to take risks and
share ideas, while learning to value the opinions of each other.
- The teacher as composer: As a composer creates a musical
score for performance by musicians, the teacher creates the tasks in
which students will engage. Within the rich environment created by the
teacher as architect, the teacher as composer designs or selects
something for students to do that will engage their intellect, stretch
their thinking, increase their mathematical understanding, and expand
their toolkit of how to solve problems in their real world.
- The teacher as movie director: Once a teacher creates the
learning environment and develops the tasks on which students will spend
their time, the teacher as movie director steps in to determine how the
actors will relate to each other, their tasks, and their environment.
The idea of discourse includes questions like: How will students
interact with each other as they go through an activity? What will the
teacher do or say with students? What questions from the teacher can
push a student's thinking just a little farther? What kinds of
communication can really help a student develop mathematical
understanding? These elements of discourse provide a foundation for
student's reflection and communication that can lead to the power of
making generalizations and reasoning mathematically.
- The teacher as stockbroker: Much as a stockbroker constantly
analyzes the stock market, the teacher as stockbroker constantly
analyzes the teaching and learning that occur within the classroom. What
worked today and what didn't work? What will I do differently next time?
What is worth the precious investment of my students' time tomorrow?
- The teacher as ship captain: When captains of large ships
have set a course, they cannot afford to sit back and wait until they
either arrive at their destination or crash on the rocks. Ship captains
must constantly be alert to shifts in weather, ship traffic, and
coastlines, and they must be prepared for unexpected disasters. The
teacher as ship captain deals with even more unpredictable factors than
nature and commerce and must constantly be evaluating how and what
students are learning. We cannot afford to wait until a student crashes
on the rocks before noticing a pupil has veered off course. Rather, the
teacher must work closely enough with students so that s/he is providing
ongoing course correction whenever misunderstandings begin. The teacher
as ship captain may not always correct the student directly or
immediately, but rather, the teacher makes a decision about what kind of
experience can help the student to get back on course in a meaningful
and timely way.
- The teacher as mayor: NCTM's standards describe the
mathematics classroom as a mathematical community, where students and
the teacher are actively involved in creating their learning experience.
This learning community needs the strength of a knowledgeable and
compassionate leader who considers the needs and talents of the
student-citizens, while providing a vision of where the community is
headed and support for getting there. Giving students responsibility for
their own learning means giving up some control and creating a new kind
of classroom leadership that truly guides, encourages, and enlightens
along the way.
- The teacher as the red jacket: A traveler making a long trip
is likely to pass through an airport hub like Atlanta, Dallas, Chicago,
or Denver. In these hubs, hundreds of planes land and take off and
thousands of travelers make connections between flights every day. The
teacher can serve the role of the person wearing a red jacket who greets
the weary, confused and distracted traveler to assist in making
connections. The teacher as the red jacket helps students experience the
rich connections between the threads of mathematics like algebra,
probability, measurement and geometry. The teacher as the red jacket
helps student see the connections between mathematics and science,
social studies, physical education and the arts. And most of all, the
teacher as the red jacket helps students make the vital connection
between mathematics and the world outside of school.
- The teacher as student: Nowhere is a commitment to lifelong
learning more important than in teaching. Even if every teacher today
were completely knowledgeable about teaching standards-based
mathematics, using current technology, and understanding new fields of
mathematics, within six months or a year or two years, there would be a
new need for professional development. Today's teacher cannot afford to
remain static for more than a short time when the world is in a state of
dynamic flux and we daily witness changes in technology, mathematics,
schools, students, and society. In this setting, the teacher as student
makes a lifelong commitment to professional development.
- The teachers as recruiter: Mathematics teachers have
traditionally done a good job of encouraging students to pursue
mathematics-related fields. Encouraging students to become mathematics
teachers, however, has often been something we are reluctant to do,
especially for our favorite students (or those we are related to). We
sometimes communicate that teaching isn't as worthy a profession as
other more lucrative options. If teaching isn't now a career worthy of
our future adults, it is our responsibility as professional educators to
transform it into something that is. The responsibility of the teacher
as recruiter is to communicate not only to students but to the broader
community how important and rewarding our profession can be. The ideal
of teacher as recruiter is reflected in an experience shared with me by
Kathleen, a teacher who recently received a Presidential Award. As she
stepped down from the platform after her statewide award ceremony, she
felt a tap on her shoulder and turned to see her former high school
mathematics teacher. Kathleen shared with her former teacher that she
was the inspiration for Kathleen choosing a career in teaching. As they
were hugging, Kathleen felt a tap on her other shoulder. She turned to
see a former student who told Kathleen that Kathleen was her inspiration
for becoming a teacher. We can all truly hope that the torch will
continue to be passed from generation to generation so that some of our
finest minds can continue to prepare new generations of students who can
think and learn mathematically.
- The teacher as prospector: This is the bottom line of
teaching. Picture the scene: You're in a cave. It''s dark, damp, musty,
and cold, and you are surrounded by solid rock, with nothing but a dim
bulb on your helmet and a pick-ax in your hand. But in the face of this
bleakness, you keep chipping away and chipping away and chipping away,
because you know that somewhere deep inside that solid rock are some
incredible uncut gems and some well disguised nuggets of high-grade
ores. That's why you became a teacher. That's what keeps you teaching
when new expectations seem unattainable.
Permission granted by the author to reprint with credit for
non-profit educational purposes. Cathy Seeley, Austin, TX, copyright ©
1994
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