Teaching Mathematics with Technology - The Friday Institute
See course at go.ncsu.edu/tmt Links to an external site. Overview video: https://youtu.be/MjjSWnd5Fvo Links to an external site.
As a rapid response to COVID-19, and to assist faculty in supporting online instruction in undergraduate and graduate mathematics education courses, Hollylynne Lee Links to an external site., professor of mathematics and statistics education at NC State, will be opening and facilitating a FREE online professional teacher education course Teaching Mathematics with Technology Links to an external site., through the Friday institute for Educational Innovation.
This course is uses research-based materials and is designed to support middle school and high school preservice and practicing teachers in learning to use free technology tools (e.g., Desmos, GeoGebra, WebSketchpad, CODAP, TUVA) to support students' learning of mathematics. Thus, the content of this course could be applicable to secondary mathematics methods courses or courses focused on the use of technology to support mathematics learning and teaching. The course will also be open for practicing teachers to join, so it may be a good opportunity for preservice teachers to interact with math teachers who are rapidly responding to their students’ needs and finding and creating meaningful material to support online instruction.
The course includes a focus on several key Instructional practices such as evaluating and choosing tasks, posing questions, facilitating discussions, and assessing students' learning. Each of the 5 units in the course will include several mathematics tasks that can be used to teach algebra/number, geometry, or statistics/probability concepts and videos of students working on tasks with technology or teachers facilitating discussions in a technology-enabled lesson. There will be discussion forums where participants can interact about what they are learning, especially about the use of technology and students’ thinking.
College faculty could join the course with their students, interact with them in the discussion forums, and choose certain aspects of the course they want to assign. There will also be suggested assignments that faculty could choose to have their students complete and submit to them. Sorry, you have to do your own grading!
Course opens March 23, 2020 and will remain open through May 18, 2020. You and your students can join at any time. Once a unit opens it will remain open. All participants can also come back into the course in the future to find and download materials.