How To Learn Maths: 9 Strategies For Introducing New Concepts To Students
How to learn maths? I see the phrase ‘teaching for understanding’ quite a lot, and it always confuses me slightly.
For knowledge and skills gained in the maths class to persist beyond GCSE exams (and to be useful in the future), students need to have a deep understanding of the concepts involved. This should be beyond just being able to replicate a method in an exam.
Obviously, within the current education system, there are constraints and external pressures to take into account.
Here, I take you through 9 key teaching strategies for introducing new concepts. These will enhance student understanding while increasing their ability to learn maths in a way that the knowledge and skills gained persist beyond the next assessment!
While this article will focus on classroom practice and planning learning cycles to help students understand new concepts, these principles also apply to independent learning and revision.
Look out for the ‘Student Top Tip’ in each section to share with your class!
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Download Free Now!Let’s dive into those 9 essential takeaways for teachers and students to follow together, whatever stage they’re at on their maths learning journey.
1. Check for prior knowledge when learning new maths
Student Top Tip
When you study maths, check your prior knowledge. Work out what topics you need to know before starting the new maths concept you’re trying to learn. Building on insecure foundations results in insecure knowledge – it’s not a good shortcut.
Mathematics is a hierarchical subject in that understanding new concepts depends on other underlying fundamental concepts. One of Rosenshine’s principles of instruction focuses on prior learning. For example, in order to understand how multiplication works, students need to have a well-developed concept of addition and be able to appreciate the concept of repeated addition and the links to multiplication.
The more complex the level of maths, the more foundational blocks of understanding are needed. For example, fraction addition requires an understanding of:
- What a fraction is and what it represents;
- Equivalent fractions;
- Improper fractions and mixed numbers;
- General integer multiplication and number sense;
- Identifying multiples, including the lowest common multiples.
If one of these underlying concepts is insecure (or missing), learners struggle far more to assimilate the new concept of fraction arithmetic with their existing knowledge; they are attempting to build the new concept up on wobbly foundations.
If misconceptions exist in the foundation blocks, it is likely that these misconceptions will be compounded as students attempt to understand new concepts.
By the time our students reach secondary level, there are many more of these interlinked concepts and many more opportunities for baked-in misconceptions. Clearly, there is not enough curriculum time to re-teach every maths topic from scratch as if students have never experienced it before, so we need to find a happy medium that gives our students the opportunity to explore their prior knowledge and highlight issues.
2. Assess a starting point to establish realistic next steps
Student Top Tip
Work out where to start, and be honest. It’s no good trying to work on solving quadratic equations if you’re still struggling to simplify algebra.
When beginning a new unit of work or topic, it can be useful to give students a quick, low-stakes assessment to judge their prior knowledge and work out a starting point.
Fraction addition example: establishing misconceptions
Taking my example of fraction addition, I might give them a few questions targeting some of the concepts above.
This does not have to be done as a written assessment; a mini-whiteboard quiz is just as valuable and is often a better way to get glimpses of general patterns.
If I was planning a unit on fraction addition, I’d be looking for things like:
- Are students using bar modelling or diagrams?
- Are they using a written (algorithmic) method?
- If they are, is it correct?
- Are errors cropping up with basic arithmetic – does times table recall need work?
- Are they simplifying their answers? (And doing it correctly!)
- Can they tackle mixed number problems using their preferred method – are there issues with improper and mixed number conversion that need to be tackled first?
Before teaching any new content, I’d then plan to go back and address any large-scale misconceptions or stumbling blocks.
In some circumstances, it may be more appropriate to target individual students or small groups with a very brief intervention. For example, by directing them to a personalised learning programme or video tutorials to review the key concepts.
Third Space Learning’s one-to-one, online maths tuition uses diagnostic testing to gauge students’ understanding and identify gaps in learning. Using this information, the programme is then personalised to address each individual student’s needs.
Sometimes, with the amount of curriculum content to get through, it can be difficult to feel confident about spending lesson time reviewing content they ‘should already know’, rather than teaching the new material.
However, ensuring that new concepts are built on more solid foundations has two big advantages.
- The new concept will often be learned more quickly, as students are able to slot the new ideas into a clear existing framework;
- If the new concept is clearly understood, rather than surface-learned, it is more likely to move from the student’s short-term to long-term memory and stay there. This means that less re-teaching will be needed in the future.
3. Work within the constraints of working memory
Student Top Tip
Think about working memory capacity; try to eliminate unnecessary distractions when studying. If possible, you want a quiet, warm, comfortable environment. Put your phone on silent and don’t try to multitask!
Research from cognitive science suggests that direct instruction is generally more effective than discovery-based learning (see Kirschner, Sweller and Clark 2006 for a great discussion of these ideas). We need to be aware of cognitive overload and the relationships between working memory and long-term learning and memory.
Fraction addition example: comparing working memory
This is partially why good prior knowledge is important. Returning again to adding fractions, let’s look at two different students.
Student A | Student B |
---|---|
They understood equivalent fractions when it was taught the first time around. They have a good concept of multiples. They have good times table recall. They have a good understanding of the underlying mathematical concepts. The procedures for calculating equivalent fractions and simplifying fractions are well-organised in their long-term memory. The relevant multiplication facts are there for rapid recall when needed. When they listen to an explanation on fraction addition, their working memory can concentrate fully on the new bits; why a common denominator is important and how to actually add the two fractions. | They can’t really remember what an equivalent fraction is (and probably didn’t really understand it in the first place). They were absent when multiples were taught. They aren’t particularly secure with 6, 7 or 8 times tables. They have a lot more going on in their working memory. – How has \frac{4}{5} suddenly become \frac{24}{30}? – What’s 4 × 6? 6, 12, 18, … – How does the teacher just ‘know’ what the denominator is? Why are they talking about multiples? |
Poor Student B is disadvantaged from the start because their working memory is dealing with lots of additional tasks alongside the new concept. This means that Student B’s progress will be slower than Student A’s.
The gaps in foundational prior knowledge should ideally be filled in before new concepts are introduced. If this is not possible (due to curriculum design or time constraints), we could support Student B by taking some of the cognitive load off their working memory. In this example, we could provide them with a times table grid to refer to. Learn more about cognitive load theory in the classroom here.
This is a hugely oversimplified model, and I don’t pretend to be a cognitive science expert.
However, we’ve all seen this in the classroom where students seriously struggle to grasp a new concept. It isn’t because the new concept itself is particularly difficult, but because their brains are having to work harder than they should because they’re also juggling several other poorly understood fundamental concepts at the same time.
Read more: Dual Coding: A Teacher’s Guide
4. Explore links and underlying mathematical structures using models
Student Top Tip
If you’re not sure how to start a problem, can you use a model or diagram to represent it?
When introducing new topics, rather than teaching these as distinct pockets of information, we should try (where possible) to incorporate the new material into their existing structure of knowledge and understanding. It can be very useful for students to have existing models or frameworks to ‘hook’ the new information onto.
Visualising maths content through modelling
This is where manipulatives and models can be very useful. I particularly like bar modelling and algebra tiles for diagrammatic representations of a mathematical scenario. There are some great interactive versions available online.
It’s worth highlighting that these models are not generally the end goal. That being said, they can be an appropriate stopping point for some students and are valid methods for solving problems at GCSE, particularly on the Foundation papers.
There is sometimes a temptation to skip out modelling, skim over the understanding, and go straight to teaching an algorithm due to time pressures.
However, if students are taught a step-by-step procedure with none of the underlying conceptual ideas, they will be less successful when applying these ideas to non-standard problems. They’ll also be less able to recall the steps when they are needed further down the line.
Fraction addition example: modelling ideas
Returning to our original example of fraction addition, if there were underlying misconceptions relating to how fractions work, I would strip the ideas back down to basics, using partitioned bars to illustrate examples of equivalent fractions.
Ensure students can find equivalent fractions, then build this back up to adding like fractions, and finally, unlike fractions. The speed at which this occurred would depend on the class’s level of understanding.
Another way to explore links is to consider multiple representations of the same topic. For example, I’ve used Jo Boaler’s suggestions for multiple representations of sequences to explore the links between sequences, functions and graphs. This kind of material is great for encouraging students to reason mathematically.
5. Develop familiarity with manipulatives and models
Student Top Tip
Manipulatives and models are much more effective if they are used routinely.
To illustrate this, I discovered algebra tiles when trying to find a way to explain to a group of Year 10s why we half the coefficient of x when completing the square.
I’d attempted to teach the process algorithmically, which had completely confused the majority of the class, and I realised that I was asking them to do something far too abstract on some pretty shaky foundations.
Following a bit of research, I returned to them with some algebra tiles I’d cut out of cardboard. We physically moved the x tiles around to convert the rectangular areas into squares; I definitely saw some pennies drop here as to why it was called ‘completing the square’! After a couple of lessons on this, most of them were completing practice problems fairly competently.
However, we had quite a few hang-ups on getting to grips with how the tiles worked; I was simultaneously asking them to become familiar with a new visual representation of algebra, while also asking them to understand quite a complex new concept.
In subsequent years, most of my classes saw algebra tiles long before I asked them to complete the square with them, and this problem was significantly reduced.
6. Hook classroom teaching into ‘real-world’ frameworks
Student Top Tip
Is there a real-world scenario that can help you to understand the new concept? For example, using proportion in baking to change recipe quantities, or percentages to calculate a price discount off a new pair of jeans.
I don’t really like the phrase ‘real-world maths’. After all, mathematics is the deep underlying structure on which our physical environment is based, but it’s important to try and make connections between classroom mathematics education and the ‘real world’.
For some topics, such as ratios, this can be easy.
E.g. two people complete a job, one works for three hours, the other only works two, how do they split a £50 payment fairly?
Students can engage with this and have some pretty good arguments about why it isn’t fair to split the money 50:50 down the middle, particularly if you select a couple of students to play the parts of the workers.
For other topics, we need to be careful that our real-world examples don’t cloud the picture. I’m thinking about things like using trigonometry to calculate the safe angle of a ladder. While this is a valid real-life application of trigonometry, safe working angles are unlikely to be something that your average 13-year-old needs to think about!
Think again about cognitive overload. Our ratio scenario is going to add a bit of extra processing, but secondary students are likely to have experience with sharing money or at least sharing objects, and the idea of fair and unfair sharing. These ideas will be easier to think about/process and the scenario becomes useful for enhancing understanding.
Where there’s a relevant real-world hook that students have direct experience of, or are likely to understand with little-to-no additional information, this can be a nice way into a new concept. I’d recommend saving the applications for more abstract ideas until students are more familiar with the concepts behind them.
7. Provide carefully chosen examples to work through with students
Student Top Tip
Have a look at some worked examples (YouTube is great for this). Watch an example first all the way through, then pause the video and attempt the next one on your own before resuming and seeing how it’s done.
The type of examples we provide our students can significantly influence how easily they grasp new concepts. Carefully crafting a hierarchy of worked examples will often result in better understanding.
Fraction addition example: worked example hierarchy
So, for fraction addition, this might go as follows:
- Adding two fractions with unit numerators;
- Adding two fractions where one denominator is a multiple of another;
- Adding two fractions with any two denominators;
- Adding three fractions / subtracting fractions / improper and mixed numbers (depending on prior knowledge).
Working this way removes a lot of initial cognitive load, particularly for those students who have gaps in prior knowledge.
When working with unit fractions, we’re only worrying about sorting denominators. Then, when looking at situations where one denominator is a multiple of the other, it’s easier to ‘spot’ the common denominator to use. This also means that students whose multiplication recall isn’t great aren’t worrying about multiples, and can attend to the underlying concepts of fraction addition.
I’d judge the number of necessary examples (and the speed at which to work through them) from the student’s prior knowledge and how they did with their starting points assessment.
For some classes, a brief overview would be sufficient. For some, it might be necessary to break it up into chunks over several lessons:
- First covering unit denominators;
- Then giving students an opportunity to practise this;
- Then moving on to denominators with multiples, and so on.
8. Incorporate guided practice and faded examples into teaching
Student Top Tip
Embrace learning new maths skills with your teacher’s ‘I do, we do, you do’ approach.
When I first started teaching, my process for worked examples was:
- I do one on the board and check for general understanding;
- They’re still confused, so I do another one;
- Some of them are ready to go now, but half of them are still lost, so we do another one as a class;
- Most of them are now getting fidgety, so I set them off on the practice task, then try to rush around to all the students who are still stuck and teach them again individually, inevitably wearing myself out and giving myself a headache!
This process was not particularly effective! I gradually tweaked my process over the years, incorporating a couple of key elements, guided practice and faded examples.
Method 1: guided practice
Guided practice (or ‘I do, we do, you do’ as I call it with students) is a great tool for supporting the learning of any skill, not just learning maths skills.
It’s also closely related to how we appear to learn new skills or concepts naturally. Let’s take the example of a baby learning to walk.
- First, they observe the people around them;
- Then, they try to copy with support;
- Next, they take the first few wobbly steps on their own;
- Finally, they progress to confident walking, then running.
Method 2: faded examples
Faded examples are ones where steps are removed gradually.
- The first example presented has all steps complete;
- The next example omits a stage for students to fill in;
- The next leaves out yet more until students are completing the task independently.
The stage(s) omitted can be at any point in the process, and will probably depend on the topic being taught.
A work in progress: using worked example methods in practice
Now, my examples process looks a bit like this:
- I do an example on the board, sometimes in silence, sometimes with an explanation (depending on the topic/class/starting points);
- We discuss the example and pull out key points through effective questioning;
- I work through a second example using the same process, but ask them to join in to complete the final step on their whiteboards (we do);
- We discuss and look for any misconceptions/problems;
- We look at a third example, with minimal guidance from me, except perhaps the starting step or a hint (we do);
- Students complete another couple of practice problems on their whiteboards, showing me after each one. This allows me to pick up on those who still have misconceptions that need addressing (you do);
- Students begin the independent task, while I support those who are still struggling. At this point, there should be less than five of them, so I get them in a small group and re-teach.
9. Always master the basics before problem-solving
Student Top Tip
Don’t try and tackle problem-solving or applied questions until you’re really confident with the basics!
I’m only going to include a very brief discussion about reasoning and problem solving here due to the scope of this article; this is not to trivialise the very complex issue of ‘teaching problem solving’ (as far as this is possible anyway).
Applying their skills to unfamiliar maths problems is something that students really struggle with. Check out Willingham 2009 ‘Why don’t students like school’ (excerpt) for an explanation of why this is a problem inherent to our brain structure and not a deficit particular to teenagers!
My key takeaway for problem-solving is this: don’t ask students to solve problems when they’ve just met a topic for the first time.
They’re unlikely to have well-formed concepts in their long-term memory to draw upon, and the cognitive load of trying to simultaneously process new information and also solve unfamiliar problems using these ideas will be too great.
This often results in very limited success and a spiral of:
- “I don’t get maths”
- “I don’t understand any of this”
- “I’m rubbish at maths”
When looking to improve students’ problem-solving skills, I’d try to select a topic I know they’d ideally mastered, or at least mostly understood and were fairly confident with. This can be a good opportunity to revisit prior knowledge from previous topics; frequently recalling information from long-term memory means it is less likely to be forgotten.
And there you have it; 9 essential processes for teachers and teachers to work through together, whatever stage they’re at!
We’ve only explored how to learn maths when teaching new concepts. It’s equally important to plan your teaching so that topics are revisited frequently at the appropriate spacing. This ensures that all the hard work on developing conceptual understanding isn’t lost because students forget what they’ve learned.
Read more:
- The Most Recommended Teaching Blogs For Teachers and School Leaders
- Interleaving: What Is It And How Can It Improve Memory And Learning In The Maths Classroom?
- How To Reduce Your Students’ Exam Anxiety: Practical Strategies
- Retrieval practice: improving student recall
- A Teacher’s Guide To Spaced Repetition
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