Overview

The Philosophy of Teaching is a narrative that describes your conception of mathematics teaching and learning, how you teach, and your rationale for why you teach that way.

Purpose

Being an effective mathematics teacher requires a clear, explicit conceptual framework that guides instructional choices. The Philosophy of Teaching can demonstrate that you have been reflective and purposeful about your teaching, communicate your goals as an instructor and your corresponding actions in the classroom, and provide potential employers with a clear understanding of who you are as a teacher.

Connections to Standards

NCTM Standard 2: Mathematical Practices

Effective teachers of secondary mathematics solve problems, represent mathematical ideas, reason, prove, use mathematical models, attend to precision, identify elements of structure, generalize, engage in mathematical communication, and make connections as essential mathematical practices. They understand that these practices intersect with mathematical content and that understanding relies on the ability to demonstrate these practices within and among mathematical domains and in their teaching.

NCTM 2a) Use problem solving to develop conceptual understanding, make sense of a wide variety of problems and persevere in solving them, apply and adapt a variety of strategies in solving problems confronted within the field of mathematics and other contexts, and formulate and test conjectures in order to frame generalizations.

NCTM 2b) Reason abstractly, reflectively, and quantitatively with attention to units, constructing viable arguments and proofs, and critiquing the reasoning of others; represent and model generalizations using mathematics; recognize structure and express regularity in patterns of mathematical reasoning; use multiple representations to model and describe mathematics; and utilize appropriate mathematical vocabulary and symbols to communicate mathematical ideas to others.

NCTM 2c) Formulate, represent, analyze, and interpret mathematical models derived from real-world contexts or mathematical problems.

NCTM 2d) Organize mathematical thinking and use the language of mathematics to express ideas precisely, both orally and in writing to multiple audiences.

NCTM 2e) Demonstrate the interconnectedness of mathematical ideas and how they build on one another and recognize and apply mathematical connections among mathematical ideas and across various content areas and real-world contexts.

NCTM 2f) Model how the development of mathematical understanding within and among mathematical domains intersects with the mathematical practices of problem solving, reasoning, communicating, connecting, and representing.

Standard 3: Content Pedagogy

Effective teachers of secondary mathematics apply knowledge of curriculum standards for mathematics and their relationship to student learning within and across mathematical domains. They incorporate research-based mathematical experiences and include multiple instructional strategies and mathematics-specific technological tools in their teaching to develop all studentsÕ mathematical understanding and proficiency. They provide students with opportunities to do mathematics – talking about it and connecting it to both theoretical and real-world contexts. They plan, select, implement, interpret, and use formative and summative assessments for monitoring student learning, measuring student mathematical understanding, and informing practice.

NCTM 3a) Apply knowledge of curriculum standards for secondary mathematics and their relationship to student learning within and across mathematical domains.

NCTM 3b) Analyze and consider research in planning for and leading students in rich mathematical learning experiences.

NCTM 3c) Plan lessons and units that incorporate a variety of strategies, differentiated instruction for diverse populations, and mathematics-specific and instructional technologies in building all studentsÕ conceptual understanding and procedural proficiency.

NCTM 3d) Provide students with opportunities to communicate about mathematics and make connections among mathematics, other content areas, everyday life, and the workplace.

NCTM 3e) Implement techniques related to student engagement and communication including selecting high quality tasks, guiding mathematical discussions, identifying key mathematical ideas, identifying and addressing student misconceptions, and employing a range of questioning strategies.

NCTM 3f) Plan, select, implement, interpret, and use formative and summative assessments to inform instruction by reflecting on mathematical proficiencies essential for all students.

NCTM 3g) Monitor studentsÕ progress, make instructional decisions, and measure studentsÕ mathematical understanding and ability using formative and summative assessments.

Standard 4: Mathematical Learning Environment

Effective teachers of secondary mathematics exhibit knowledge of adolescent learning, development, and behavior. They use this knowledge to plan and create sequential learning opportunities grounded in mathematics education research where students are actively engaged in the mathematics they are learning and building from prior knowledge and skills. They demonstrate a positive disposition toward mathematical practices and learning, include culturally relevant perspectives in teaching, and demonstrate equitable and ethical treatment of and high expectations for all students. They use instructional tools such as manipulatives, digital tools, and virtual resources to enhance learning while recognizing the possible limitations of such tools.

NCTM 4a) Exhibit knowledge of adolescent learning, development, and behavior and demonstrate a positive disposition toward mathematical processes and learning.

NCTM 4b) Plan and create developmentally appropriate, sequential, and challenging learning opportunities grounded in mathematics education research in which students are actively engaged in building new knowledge from prior knowledge and experiences.

NCTM 4c) Incorporate knowledge of individual differences and the cultural and language diversity that exists within classrooms and include culturally relevant perspectives as a means to motivate and engage students.

NCTM 4d) Demonstrate equitable and ethical treatment of and high expectations for all students.

NCTM 4e) Apply mathematical content and pedagogical knowledge to select and use instructional tools such as manipulatives and physical models, drawings, virtual environments, spreadsheets, presentation tools, and mathematics-specific technologies (e.g., graphing tools, interactive geometry software, computer algebra systems, and statistical packages); and make sound decisions about when such tools enhance teaching and learning, recognizing both the insights to be gained and possible limitations of such tools.

Requirements

The philosophy of teaching should be a brief but well-developed articulation of your beliefs about teaching and learning in mathematics and your approach to optimizing student performance.

1.     The narrative should be no longer than 1 ½ - 2 pages. References do not count toward the length requirement.

2.     The narrative must address at least one NCTM indicator from each of standards 2, 3, and 4 (minimum 3 indicators total).

3.     The narrative must address how you balance conceptual understanding, procedural understanding, and modeling/application.

4.     Your philosophy must be interwoven with theory and research that extends and substantiates points.

Process

The Philosophy of Teaching is constructed in the Mathematics Methods course (EDUC 426/628).  The philosophy will be re-visited in Phase II and included in the portfolio introduction.

Rubric link

Domain

Limited (1)

Developing (2)

Proficient (3)

Exemplary (4)

NCTM Standard 2: Mathematical Practices

Effective teachers of secondary mathematics solve problems, represent mathematical ideas, reason, prove, use mathematical models, attend to precision, identify elements of structure, generalize, engage in mathematical communication, and make connections as essential mathematical practices. They understand that these practices intersect with mathematical content and that understanding relies on the ability to demonstrate these practices within and among mathematical domains and in their teaching.

Evidence of engagement with essential mathematical practices is not evident or minimally evident.

Evidence of engagement with essential mathematical practices is evident for either students or teacher, but not both.

Evidence of engagement with essential mathematical practices is evident for both students and teacher.

Evidence of engagement with essential mathematical practices is abundantly evident for both students and teacher.

Standard 3: Content Pedagogy

Effective teachers of secondary mathematics apply knowledge of curriculum standards for mathematics and their relationship to student learning within and across mathematical domains. They incorporate research-based mathematical experiences and include multiple instructional strategies and mathematics-specific technological tools in their teaching to develop all studentsÕ mathematical understanding and proficiency. They provide students with opportunities to do mathematics – talking about it and connecting it to both theoretical and real-world contexts. They plan, select, implement, interpret, and use formative and summative assessments for monitoring student learning, measuring student mathematical understanding, and informing practice.

Evidence of meeting the Content Pedagogy standard is not evident or is minimally evident.

Evidence of meeting the Content Pedagogy standard is somewhat evident.

Evidence of meeting the Content Pedagogy standard is sufficiently evident.

Evidence of meeting the Content Pedagogy standard `is abundantly evident.

Standard 4: Mathematical Learning Environment

Effective teachers of secondary mathematics exhibit knowledge of adolescent learning, development, and behavior. They use this knowledge to plan and create sequential learning opportunities grounded in mathematics education research where students are actively engaged in the mathematics they are learning and building from prior knowledge and skills. They demonstrate a positive disposition toward mathematical practices and learning, include culturally relevant perspectives in teaching, and demonstrate equitable and ethical treatment of and high expectations for all students. They use instructional tools such as manipulatives, digital tools, and virtual resources to enhance learning while recognizing the possible limitations of such tools.

Evidence of meeting the Mathematical Learning Environment standard is not evident or is minimally evident.

Evidence of meeting the Mathematical Learning Environment standard is somewhat evident.

Evidence of meeting the Mathematical Learning Environment standard is sufficiently evident.

Evidence of meeting the Mathematical Learning Environment standard is abundantly evident.

Connections to other assessments

1.     EDUC 412: Praxis II Content Knowledge Test Analysis and Reflection

2.     EDUC 426 and Internship: Curriculum Unit Plan

3.     EDUC 426: Philosophy of Teaching

4.     Internship: Praxis II Content Knowledge Test for Professional Licensure

Graders

Course Instructor

 

Additional Resources

1.     Link to NCTM Content Alignment table

2.     Principles and Standards for School Mathematics.

3.     Practice Materials for Praxis II Content Knowledge Licensure Exam

Praxis II Content Test

Paper Version Code

Passing Score

Mathematics: Content Knowledge

5161

168