Solve the ProblemePDServicesCoursesBooks and ResourcesEducator ToolsAbout Us
 
 

Classroom Discussions Bundle: Includes Classroom Discussions 2nd Edition Book, Guide & DVD

 
       
Classroom Discussions Bundle: Includes Classroom Discussions 2nd Edition Book, Guide & DVD


Watch clips from Classroom Discussions

From the authors of Math Solutions best-selling book Classroom Discussions: Using Math Talk to Help Students Learn, this companion multimedia resource provides actual video examples of teachers successfully orchestrating academically productive math discourse that includes all students. Features a facilitator's guide with over a dozen suggested professional development sessions aligned to the contents in Classroom Discussions.

Components
Watch, read and discuss how teachers in actual classrooms successfully orchestrate academically productive math talks.

This multimedia professional learning resource offers:
  • 75 video clips, totaling 5 hours of video
  • 20 sessions, totaling thirty-forty hours of professionals development experience
  • 12 lesson plans aligned to Common Core State Standards
  • More than 20 ready-to-use reproducible handouts

Nancy Canavan Anderson, Suzanne H. Chapin,
Catherine O'Connor



ISBN: 978-1-935099-30-7
Price: $249.95

Individual Components


Watch
The accompanying two DVDs organize the seventy-four video clips in two ways for viewing convenience: by chapter and by grade level. The labels on all video clips indicate the section of the facilitator's guide in which the clips are used. The clips range from one to fifteen minutes in length with a total viewing time of approximately five hours.


Read
Classroom Discussions: Using Math Talk to Help Students Learn is based on a four-year research project funded by the U.S. Department of Education. The book is divided into four sections: Talk in the Mathematics Class (introducing five discussion strategies of "moves" that help teachers achieve their instructional goals of strengthening students; mathematical thinking and learning), What Do We Talk About?, Implementing Talk in the Classroom, and Case Studies.


Discuss
The guide offers twenty professional development sessions centered on video clips illustrating best talk practices in action. The sessions are divided into chapters that correspond to the chapters in Classroom Discussions: Using Math Talk to Help Students Learn, Grades K–6, Second Edition (available separately). Included in each of the sessions are activities to use in conjunction with the video clips, reproducible handouts, discussion questions, and assignments for participants.


1st Grade Teacher
Helps Students

5th Grade Teacher
Facilitates Math Talk

What Teachers Say
About Math Talk

What People Are Saying

In my view, the second edition of Classroom Discussions: Using Math Talk to Help Students Learn (Chapin, O'Connor, and Anderson 2009) is the single best book available for learning about and implementing academically productive talk in the classroom. And now, with the companion facilitator's guide, DVDs, and CD package—Classroom Discussions: Seeing Math Discourse in Action—there is nothing comparable. With its classroom video examples from kindergarten through grade 6, this combined resource gives a description of the practices and examples of them in action in urban classrooms—a window into using talk tools to promote learning. And while the facilitator's guide, DVDs, and CD reproducibles focus on mathematics, the principles and practices discussed and illustrated therein are just as powerful in teaching English language arts, science, social studies, or history. The talk tools work extraordinarily well with English language learners and students who have struggled academically. If you need to select one resource for a study group of teachers interested in transforming their practice, this is the one to get.

       Sarah Michaels
       Professor of Education and Senior Research Scholar
       Jacob Hiatt Center for Urban Education
       Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts


I have used Classroom Discussions: Using Math Talk to Help Students Learn (Chapin, O'Connor, and Anderson 2009) for years in my work with teachers and have found it to be the most effective tool for learning to lead discussions in which students not only talk about but also learn math. Seeing what a productive mathematical discussion looks like, with all of the complexities that come with real children in a real school classroom, is the first step toward being able to lead one. Unpacking what is going on in such a discussion, understanding the routines in the teacher's actions and how they are adapted to particular content and particular students is the next step, followed by trying it out and working through the results with a group of peers. The companion facilitator's guide, enhanced with videos and reproducible lesson plans, provides an even richer support across the full spectrum of elementary mathematics.

       Magdalene Lampert
       Professor of Teaching and Teacher Education
       University of Michigan
       Author of Teaching Problems and the Problems of Teaching


Classroom Discussions: Seeing Math Discourse in Action offers a well-developed, sequenced approach to orchestrating math discourse, from what it takes to establish a learning environment that supports students as sense makers to discourse as formative assessment of student understanding of mathematical concepts. The talk moves, video resources, and reproducibles make it easier to tailor the professional experience to the teachers' learning whether they are preservice, early career, or experienced teachers. Boston Teacher Residency instructors and coaches have used the resources in the companion book, Classroom Discussions (Chapin, O'Connor, and Anderson 2009), to design assignments for residents, teacher study groups and as the content for the professional learning for the community of BTR coaches. As a result of focusing on student learning and understanding as it is constructed, we are getting better at assessing effective teaching.

       Lynne Godfrey
       Induction Director
       Boston Teacher Residency
     
© 2013 Math Solutions | 800.868.9092 | One Harbor Drive, Suite 101, Sausalito, CA 94965 Privacy Policy | Terms and Conditions | Order Information | Site Map
flagyl buy online
order cialis best buy viagra here http://www1.eeoc.gov/laws/presentation/

order viagra in uk

buy diflucan for the treatment and prevention of cryptococcosis