America’s Math Problem Demands a Solution:

K12 Coalition and Bellwether Release Roadmap for System-Wide Change.

A middle-aged teacher stands at the whiteboard and works with a male high school student on a math problem.

Edutopia: Five Math Procedures To Help Students Learn From Their Mistakes

In math classrooms, students often interpret a wrong answer as a dead end, making it hard for them to recognize that mistakes can be one of the most powerful ways to learn. “Just as we reread in reading, and revise in writing, we fix problems in math and seek more efficient strategies,” says Kathy Collier, an elementary school instructional coach.

Mistakes push the brain to reconcile contradictory information and build more accurate, durable solutions—research also suggests they catalyze a chain reaction of productive brain activity. Before a learner is even aware of a mistake, “error” neurons fire; milliseconds later, “conflict” neurons respond, signaling the need to resolve competing ideas. In this state, the brain is especially well positioned to encode new information deeply.

In math, learning from mistakes can help students solidify a formula, drive home a complicated concept, or prepare them for future assessments. But this will only happen if students learn to value mistakes. “When teachers create a classroom culture that normalizes error-making and encourages students to analyze, discuss, and understand their missteps, mistakes can be powerful tools,” writes Wendy Amato, chief academic officer at K12 Coalition, in a recent EdWeek article.

Drawing on Amato’s strategies and other classroom-tested procedures, we’ve curated a list of five concrete ways to encourage and celebrate mathematical mistakes. From solo and collaborative projects to formative assessments, these activities help students embrace and reflect on their errors.

Highlight Your “Favorite No”

Making a mistake doesn’t have to be something that students feel they need to hide. In an activity she calls “Favorite No,” Amato uses errors as a starting point for classwide learning.

Continue reading on Edutopia.

Share this Article

In the News

Talk to an Expert

Service Area A: Teacher Recruitment and Retention

Forecasting and Planning

Recruitment Campaigns

Licensure Programs for Paras and Subs

Access to our New Teachers Pipeline

Career Pathing Solutions

Skill Development Solutions

 

Service Area B: Professional Development 

Video Coaching and Self-Reflection 

Professional Development Courses 

New Teacher Programs 

Teacher Institutes 

Video Library Subscriptions 

 

Service Area C: Student Learning Acceleration 

Audits, Analysis and Solution Planning 

RISE Summer School Program 

Supplemental Curricula 

Teacher Coaching 

Institute Courses for Teachers 

 

Service Area D: Continuing Education 

Graduate-Level 1-3-Credit Courses 

Learning Pathways and Certificates 

Master’s Degree Programs 

Doctorate Degree Programs 

 

Service Area E: Leadership Solutions 

Strategic Planning 

Equity Consulting 

Leadership Coaching 

Custom Packages