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Published 2017 Revised 2023
This page for teachers accompanies the Being Resilient Primary and Secondary resources, and the content formed the basis of the webinar that focused on developing students' resilience
If we are going to offer students opportunities of working and thinking like mathematicians, we will need to require them to do more than just copy and imitate what the teacher demonstrates. In Alan Wigley's article, his 'Challenging Model' offers a useful framework for structuring lessons. NRICH resources are developed with this framework in mind and require students to be curious, resourceful, resilient and collaborative. You may wish to read the article before going on.
“In a growth mindset, people believe that their most basic abilities can be developed through dedication and hard work - brains and talent are just the starting point." (Dweck, 2015)
Carol Dweck has provided evidence that students with a growth mindset are much more likely to succeed. How can we promote a growth mindset in our classrooms? How can we encourage students to keep going and work hard when faced with challenges?
A growth mindset classroom provides an environment in which:
Showing a potential map or route through the problem
5 by 5 Mathdokus
Product Sudoku with possible route
Latin Numbers
Showing some possible methods and encouraging students to build on them
Different Deductions
Three Neighbours
Odds, Evens and More Evens
What Numbers Can We Make?
Quadratic Patterns
Marbles in a Box
Offering proof sorting activities
Strike It Out
Diagonally Square
Kite in a Square
Pythagoras Proofs
Pythagoras Perimeters
Using 'hide and reveal'
You can find many more activities in the Being Resilient Primary and Secondary resources
Questions to consider with your colleagues:
Where might your students get stuck?
What is the thinking that you will expect students to do for themselves?
What's non-negotiable?
Are we offering too much (or too little) scaffolding?
Does working in this way give students the sense of achievement we want them to feel?
Are students likely to "hang on in there" for longer than they otherwise would?
How can we nurture this habit of mind whenever students are confronted by new problems?
Models for Teaching Mathematics - article by Alan Wigley
What might a lesson look like, in which students work collaboratively, sharing insights and discoveries in a safe environment? Here is one possible example.
Peter Liljedahl's 14 Practices for Building Thinking Classrooms, in particular Practice 5 (How we answer questions in a thinking classroom) and Practice 8 (How we foster student autonomy in a thinking classroom)
Resilient mathematicians recognise that we all fail sometimes, and when this happens, they bounce back and try alternative approaches. In the film What Does it Feel Like to Do Maths, Andrew Wiles talks about his personal experience of seeking a proof of Fermat's Last Theorem.
Matthew Syed's Bounce: The Myth of Talent and the Power of Practice
In Mindset Carol Dweck analyses how a growth mindset can boost achievement - here is a link to her TED talk
An interview with Dylan Wiliam, focusing on effective questioning in the classroom
In Getting into and staying in the Growth Zone Clare Lee and Sue Johnston-Wilder explain how the Growth Zone model can help develop resilience in learners of mathematics.
Anxiety and Recall - The Mathematical Association's Autumn 2017 edition of Equals
If you'd like to know more about the beliefs that inform the work of NRICH, take a look at What We Think and Why We Think It