My Social Mission in Maths Education

 

My Social Mission in Maths Education

The purpose of education is very closely linked to the purpose of life and that is to keep growing in all aspects of personality in order to maximise our potential at multiple levels. For this, it would be necessary to build right from childhood skills and attitudes that help the learners stay lifelong learners in their lives. Lifelong Learning “…serves to reject the school and post-school division to endorse learning across the lifespan, a learning which is worthwhile to the individual citizen and, therefore to the society of which she is a part”, (Field & Leicester, 2001, pp.18).

Keeping this as the vision, when I looked at my classroom for maths at the beginning of my career, I found at least half the students were filled with fear of maths. Maths phobia “…may be defined as a feeling of anxiety that stops one from efficiently tackling mathematical problems”, (Raghunathan, 2012, para. 1). This looked to me a contradiction of the true aim of life and completely unaligned to it.

There are several reasons for maths phobia, such as (a) the structure of maths, (b) the way of teaching and (c) the place accorded to maths in our society. But if we “…help them develop a GROWTH mind-set – that by working at it they WILL learn the material and their brains WILL grow…”, we can help the students to overcome the phobia”, (homeschoolmath, n.d, para. 6).

Need for Systems Change

The systemic change that is needed is at two levels. One is development of teachers, so they follow a deeply inquiring and reflective practice. Teachers need to keep questioning the purpose of education and reflect if their classroom projects the purpose. Teachers need to be taught to be clear on the aim and alignment of education around the aim.

Most common reason for individuals to enter teaching is “to make a difference in the lives of students”, (Fullan, 1993, para. 1). However, their interest starts dropping as “the inevitable difficulties of teaching ... interact with personal issues and vulnerabilities, as well as social pressure and values, to engender a sense of frustration and force a reassessment of the possibilities of the job and the investment one wants to make in it”, (Fullan, 1993, para. 2). The need is for the teacher education program to teach the teachers to “… combine the mantle of moral purpose with the skills of change agentry” (Fullan, 1993, para. 3).

The other development is of maths curriculum with a perspective of development of faculties needed to a mind-set of global citizenship for the students. That is “…ways of thinking and living within multiple cross-cutting communities—cities, regions, states, nations, and international collectives…", (Olds, 2012, para. 6).

Working on the Work

I have been working as a change agent for more than 2 decades. My mission is development of learning environments where maths can be learnt without fear. I have learnt and grown as an educator in my attempts to create inclusive learning spaces. “Developing and engaging and positive learning environment for learners, especially in a particular course, is one of the most creative aspects of teaching”, (Gang, 2018, para. 2).

I discovered that such a learning environment has some components that are, (a) integration of life skills, (b) building perspective, (c) making maths emotionally positive and (d) complete acceptance of the learners. My working space has changed but not the work.

A Maths Teacher

I worked as a maths teacher in few schools over 2 decades. Throughout I looked for ways and means to make maths relevant, interesting and a tool to develop thinking skills.

I created learning environment that were healing spaces for students who feared maths and invigorating to those who wanted to grow. For example, developing a self-learning program mapped onto local curriculum at The Valley school. Integrating Multiple Intelligences with maths at The Pathways IB school. Bringing students to loving maths by integrating art, music and drama in maths curriculum throughout.

I learnt to work in collaboration with colleagues to develop innovative programs in maths in all schools that I worked in. I shared my knowledge and expertise freely with all and realised that synergetic relationships are best for mutual learning and growth.

I learnt to work in harmony with parents for I believe “…that teacher attitudes about parents and teacher invitations to involvement play a significant role in parents’ decisions to become involved”, (Hoover et al., 2005, pp. 8). I challenged their traditional assumptions about marks and facilitated new thoughts where learning was more important than grades.

An Academic entrepreneur

I became a part-time academic entrepreneur while working in the IB school and then stepped out fully when opportunities presented. Over the years I have been working with teachers, publishers and edtech entrepreneurs. I have written books, published articles, developed curricula, conducted workshops online and offline and guided and mentored several individuals in the way of thinking globally for maths. My work can be seen at “humanemaths”, (Kochar, 2019). I do a lot of probono sharing of my knowledge through my “blog”, (Kochar, 2011).

I also continue to grow and develop by learning through courses such as current and international online platforms through LinkedIn and Facebook.

Conclusion

Learning needs to be seen as a social experiment towards a better global existence. The question at the heart needs to be, ‘How can we educate, so we live better?’ This would lead to questions that are reflective in nature. I am constantly ready to work with any agency that I can in order to improve the work of maths education in such a way that a global mind-set has space to be created in the learners of maths.  This is such a gift!

References

Field, J. & Leicester, M. (Eds.). (2001). Lifelong Learning. London: Routledge. URL: https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/9781135699390

Fullan M. (1993). Why teachers must become change agents. Educational Leadership, 50(6). pp. 12-17. Retrieved from http://www.ascd.org/publications/educational-leadership/mar93/vol50/num06/Why-Teachers-Must-Become-Change-Agents.aspx.

Gang, R. (2018). What Makes a Good Learning Environment. Retrieved from https://raccoongang.com/blog/what-makes-good-learning-environment/

homeschoolmath. (n.d.). 7 Reasons behind Math Anxiety and How to Prevent It. Retrieved from https://www.homeschoolmath.net/teaching/motivate.php

Kochar, M. (2011, October 29). Designing a logo with symmetry. Retrieved from https://humanemaths.blogspot.com/2011/10/designing-logo-with-symmetry.html

Kochar, M. (2019, September 23). About Humane Maths. Retrieved from http://www.humanemaths.com/

Olds, K. (2012). Global Citizenship – What are we talking about and why does it matter. Inside Higher Ed. Retrieved from https://www.insidehighered.com/blogs/globalhighered/global-citizenship-%E2%80%93-what-are-we-talking-about-and-why-does-it-matter

Raghunathan, A. (2012, August 28). Math Phobia. Retrieved from https://www.thehindu.com/features/kids/math-phobia/article3832443.ece

HooverDempsey, K., Walker, J., Sandler, H., Whetsel, D., Green, C., Wilkins, A., & Closson, K. (2005). Why Do Parents Become Involved? Research FIndings and Implications. The Elementary School Journal, 106(2), 105-130. doi:10.1086/499194. JSTOR, JSTOR www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/499194

 

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