In his four years of existence, my son Thaddeus has developed a knack for building and connecting things. If he gets a bag of jumbo Legos, he will create an entire jungle filled with imaginary animals! If my wife and I give him a new 100-piece puzzle, he usually ends up putting it together within 24 hours.
If he sees a bunch of his books scattered all over the place, he will either line the books up or stack them neatly in a tall pile. With everything that he creates, he is adamant about making sure it is done with precision.
All that said, it came as no surprise to me when Thaddeus rushed into my bedroom one rainy morning, excited and eager to show me another one of his new creations!
Using a colorful assortment of triangle magnets, he diligently connected them to form a big multi-colored hexagon. After forming the hexagon, he then disconnected it to show me that the hexagon was formed by six smaller color-coded triangles.
As his father, I was so proud of his discovery that the math teacher in me had to unpack this experience further. Many people may watch our video and sum it up just as a cute little boy playing with magnets. What may get lost in the viewing experience are three key lessons that Thaddeus unknowingly teaches all of us teachers about how we need to shift agency back to our learners in the math classroom.
Here are a few of my thoughts:
It’s one thing for us to say we want our math learners to take full responsibility for their own learning, but it’s another to ensure they have ample opportunities to take charge of their learning.
If we can instill that confidence in children as young as Thaddeus, imagine how many more learners will enter school with both a strong interest and a firm foundation in math. At any grade level, these kinds of lessons should serve as the blueprint for meaningful learning in the math classroom.
Kwame Sarfo-Mensah is the founder of Identity Talk Consulting, LLC., an independent educational consulting firm that provides professional development and consulting services globally to educators who desire to enhance their instructional practices and reach their utmost potential in the classroom. He is the author of two books, "Shaping the Teacher Identity: 8 Lessons That Will Help Define the Teacher in You" and his latest, "From Inaction to 'In Action': Creating a New Normal for Urban Educators". Throughout his 14-year career as a middle school math educator, author, and entrepreneur, Kwame has been on a personal mission to uplift and empower educators who are committed to reversing the ills of the public education system in America and around the world. As a staunch ambassador and advocate for teacher empowerment, Kwame has spoken at numerous national education conferences and worked diligently to support the recruitment and retention of teachers of color in the education system. In January 2019, he was one of 35 Massachusetts teachers of color chosen by Commissioner Jeff Riley to be in the inaugural cohort of the InSPIRED (In-Service Professionals Increasing Racial and Ethnic Diversity) Fellowship, an initiative organized by the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education for veteran teachers of color to recruit students of color at the high school, undergraduate and graduate levels to teach in targeted districts within the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. As an InSPIRED Teaching Fellow, Kwame facilitated professional development workshops for aspiring teachers at universities such as Boston College, UMass Boston, and Worcester State University and has served as a guest speaker for non-profit teacher pipeline programs such as Generation Teach and Worcester Public Schools’ Future Teachers Academy. A proud graduate of Temple University, Kwame holds a bachelor's degree in mathematics and a master's degree in education. He was honored as the 2019 National Member of the Year by Black Educators Rock, Inc. for his unwavering commitment to the advancement of the teacher profession.
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