Available Formats
Teaching Mathematics through Problem-Solving in K12 Classrooms
By (Author) Matthew Oldridge
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
31st October 2018
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Educational: Mathematics and numeracy
Education / Educational sciences / Pedagogy
Decision theory: general
Teacher training
510.712
Hardback
134
Width 159mm, Height 231mm, Spine 16mm
386g
Teaching through problem-solving is a commonly used phrase for mathematics educators. This book shows how to use worthwhile and interesting mathematics tasks and problems to build a classroom culture based on students reasoning and thinking. It develops a set of axioms about problem-solving classrooms to show teachers that mathematics is playful and engaging. It presents an aspirational vision for school mathematics, one which all teachers can bring into being in their classrooms.
We all want our students to be better problem solvers but also authentically engaged in the learning of mathematics. This book marries both practical ideas and a philosophy for joyful mathematics into a wonderful journey that all teachers will enjoy. -- Matthew L. Beyranevand, author of Teach Math Like This, Not Like That and creator of Math with Matthew
Matthew does a fantastic job of challenging our thinking with regards to math education! As someone with a great deal of mathematical knowledge, he does a superb job of asking great questions allowing the reader to pause, reflect and think about his or her own classroom. When I think about math education, Matthew continues to prove to be the 'go-to' guy for positive discourse with regards to best practice and pedagogy! -- Brian Aspinall, edtech innovator, and author of Codebreaker
Matthew Oldridge has deftly marinated his mathematics and English background to create one savory and timely book to finally address where problem-solving lies in math educationwoven inextricably in the lifeblood of a math classroom. The preposition through is the most critical word in the title of this book, as rightfully suggests that problem-solving is the door, window, and infrastructure to building buoyant and beautiful math classrooms. Oldridge invites you to see problem-solving as being baked into classrooms, replete with figurative aromas of chocolate chip cookies and cinnamon buns. That is how appetizing mathematics can be if the problems that we select become embedded portals to the intrinsic awe, joy, and wonder that patiently awaits our studentsand us! Storytelling is the most powerful way to teach, and Oldridge has spun a charming yarn to reconsider how and where we see the essence of mathematicsproblem solving. -- Sunil Singh, Math Specialist, www.Scolab.com; author,"Pi of Life: The Hidden Happiness of Mathematics" (2017)
Matthew Oldridge is a father, husband, mathematics educator, TEDx speaker, and generally a thinker about things.