Newsletter,  Volume 25, Number 3

Mathematics Council Newsletter

From the Editor’s Pencil

As an elementary generalist, I am fortunate to have the luxury of being able to teach math within a context, much to the chagrin of some of my students. It means that I can find the math in just about anything we do, but when it surprises me, I become quite excited and jump on the problem immediately. When this happened recently, one of my reluctant math students quickly stepped in with, “Mrs MacQ! Take a deep breath and step back from the math!”

Unfortunately, many language-based elementary teachers charged with teaching math are doing just that. They fear the subject and rather than look for ways to teach it differently and more meaningfully, they plod on using the same strategies they were taught, without regard for how well they work or how efficient they are.

Personal strategies are important, but being able to consistently calculate quickly and accurately in one’s head is valuable, too. Don’t we owe it to our students to give them as many different ways to solve problems as we can find? Don’t we also want to avoid another generation of mathephobes? By exciting children about other ways of describing their world, we can help make the language of math

Anne MacQuarrie

President’s Message

Janis Kristjansson

From the Editor’s Laptop

Anne MacQuarrie

Postgraduate Education Opportunity

We Hear You! Responses to “Mathematics or Semantics?”

Lindy Thompson

Katherine Schock

Lis Cressy

Tammy Gauvreau

Deley Rolheiser

Mathematical Literacy An Idea to Talk About

What should be considered as we develop students’ mathematical literacy?

Conference Invitation

Miniconferences?

Alberta Education Update

Elementary Mathematics

High School Mathematics

For Your Consideration from PEC

Carol Henderson

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