PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Training helps teachers anticipate how students with learning disabilities might solve problems

2021-07-12
(Press-News.org) North Carolina State University researchers found that a four-week training course made a substantial difference in helping special education teachers anticipate different ways students with learning disabilities might solve math problems. The findings suggest that the training would help instructors more quickly identify and respond to a student's needs.

Published in the Journal of Mathematics Teacher Education, researchers say their findings could help teachers in special education develop strategies to respond to kids' math reasoning and questions in advance. They also say the findings point to the importance of mathematics education preparation for special education teachers - an area where researchers say opportunities are lacking.

"Many special education programs do not include a focus on mathematics for students with disabilities, and few, if any, focus on understanding the mathematical thinking of students with disabilities in particular," said the study's first author Jessica Hunt, associate professor of mathematics education and special education at NC State. "This study was based on a course experience designed to do just that - to heighten teacher knowledge of the mathematical thinking of students with learning disabilities grounded in a stance of neurodiversity."

In the study, researchers evaluated the impact of a four-week course on 20 pre-service special education teachers. Researchers wanted to know if the course impacted the educators' ability to anticipate the mathematical reasoning of students with learning disabilities, and help teachers adjust tasks to make them more accessible. The course also emphasized neurodiversity, which defines cognitive differences as a natural and beneficial outgrowth of neurological and biological diversity.

"Neurodiversity says that all human brains are highly variable, with no average or 'normal' learners," Hunt said. "This means that we all have strengths and challenges, and as humans we use what makes sense to us to understand the world. It's a way to challenge pervasive deficit approaches to looking at disability, and to instead use an asset-based approach that positions students with learning disabilities as mathematically capable."

Before and after the course, the teachers took a 40-question assessment. In the test, researchers asked teachers to use words, pictures or symbols to describe a strategy that elementary school students with learning disabilities might use to solve a problem. They compared teachers' responses to see how well they anticipated students' thinking, and also how they might modify tasks for students.

After the course, they saw more anticipation of what they called "implicit action," which is using strategies like counting, halving, grouping, or predicting the number of people sharing a certain item to solve a problem. It's often represented by pictures or words. Before the test, many teachers used "static representations" in which they used mathematical expressions to show solutions. While static representations are abstract representations of solutions, researchers argued implicit actions can reflect how students with learning disabilities themselves might work through a problem.

They found teachers' use of implicit action increased from 32 percent to 82 percent of answers before and after the test, while static representation decreased from 50 percent of answers to 17 percent. Their responses didn't add up to 100 percent because some teachers left some answers blank.

"The course helped teachers move from a top-down, one-size-fits-all view of 'this is how you solve these problems,' to an anticipation of how actual students who are learning these concepts for the first time might think through these problems," Hunt said. "That's a very different stance in terms of educating teachers to anticipate student thinking so they can meet it with responsive instruction." Researchers also tracked how teachers modified math problems to make them more accessible to students before and after taking the course. After participating in the course, researchers saw that more teachers changed the problem type. They saw a shift in 50 percent of answers.

"The benefit of anticipating students' thinking is to help teachers to be responsive and support students' prior knowledge as they're teaching, which is a really hard thing to do," Hunt said. "It's even harder if you don't yet appreciate what that thinking could be."

INFORMATION:

Note to editors: The abstract follows. "Special Educators' Knowledge of Student Mathematical Thinking" Authors: Jessica Hunt, Kristi Martin, Blain Patterson and Andy Khounmeuang Published online in Journal of Mathematics Teacher Education DOI: 10.1007/s10857-021-09508-1 Abstract: To anticipate and respond to the diverse ways of reasoning students with disabilities use to make sense in inclusive mathematics classrooms, special educators require a deep understanding of a diverse array of student thinking. Unfortunately, historic and contemporary data suggest opportunities for special educators to develop this knowledge prior to classroom teaching are diminutive. Further inquiry is needed into pre-service experiences that might support growth in teachers' knowledge. We present results from a semester-long course grounded in neurodiversity and students' mathematical thinking designed to improve 20 special educators' pedagogical content knowledge. Qualitative and quantitative analyses were conducted to determine how the pre-service teachers anticipated students' diverse mathematical thinking before and after experience in the course along with their propensity to adapt problems to respond to diversity during instruction. Furthermore, the pre-test to post-test changes in pre-service teachers' anticipations of students' problem-solving strategies and adaptations of problems were statistically significant. Implications for teacher preparation and future research are shared. Keywords: specialized knowledge, research to practice, teacher perceptions, students' mathematical thinking, special education.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

A third of teens, young adults reported worsening mental health during pandemic

2021-07-12
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- As typical social and academic interaction screeched to a halt last year, many young people began experiencing declines in mental health, a problem that appeared to be worse for those whose connections to family and friends weren't as tight, a new study has found. In June 2020, researchers invited participants in an ongoing study of teenage boys and young men in urban and Appalachian Ohio to complete a survey examining changes to mood, anxiety, closeness to family and friends, and other ways the pandemic affected their lives. The study, co-led by researchers at The Ohio State University and Kenyon College, appears in the Journal of Adolescent Health. Nearly a third of the 571 participants reported that their mood ...

Sensing "junk" RNA after chemotherapy enhances blood regeneration

2021-07-12
Chemotherapy is widely used to treat cancer patients. During the treatment, chemotherapeutic agents affect various biochemical processes to kill or reduce the growth of cancer cells, which divide uncontrollably in patients. However, the cell-damaging effect of chemotherapy affects cancer cells but also in principle many other cell types, including cycling blood cells. This puts the hematopoietic system under severe stress and pushes hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) in the bone marrow to produce fresh cells and replenish the stable pool of differentiated blood cells in the body. Researchers from the MPI of Immunobiology and Epigenetics, together with colleagues from the University of Freiburg, Lyon, Oxford, and St Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, now discovered ...

Fear of rejection vs. joy of inclusion: Faith communities from LGBTQ+ perspectives

Fear of rejection vs. joy of inclusion: Faith communities from LGBTQ+ perspectives
2021-07-12
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. - Some LGBTQ+ people want to be part of faith communities. And though they have concerns about inclusion, they hope to find a faith community that feels like a home, based on West Virginia University research. Megan Gandy, BSW program director at the WVU School of Social Work, is a lesbian and former fundamentalist evangelical Christian whose personal experiences told a story that differed from research available in 2015 when she conceptualized her study. Gandy said the existing research either focused on the positive impacts of faith communities (which excluded LGBTQ+ people) ...

Study shows mental health, support, not just substance misuse key in parental neglect

2021-07-12
LAWRENCE -- Substance use disorder has long been considered a key factor in cases of parental neglect. But new research from the University of Kansas shows that such substance abuse does not happen in a vacuum. When examining whether parents investigated by Child Protective Services engaged in neglectful behaviors over the past year, a picture emerges that suggests case workers should look at substance misuse within the context of other factors, like mental health and social supports, to better prevent child neglect and help families. KU researchers analyzed data of parents investigated ...

MaxDIA -- taking proteomics to the next level

MaxDIA -- taking proteomics to the next level
2021-07-12
Proteomics produces enormous amounts of data, which can be very complex to analyze and interpret. The free software platform MaxQuant has proven to be invaluable for data analysis of shotgun proteomics over the past decade. Now, Jürgen Cox, group leader at the Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, and his team present the new version 2.0. It provides an improved computational workflow for data-independent acquisition (DIA) proteomics, called MaxDIA. MaxDIA includes library-based and library-free DIA proteomics and permits highly sensitive and accurate data analysis. Uniting data-dependent and data-independent acquisition into one world, MaxQuant 2.0 is a big step towards improving applications ...

Genetic analysis to help predict sunflower oil properties

2021-07-12
Skoltech researchers and their colleagues from the University of Southern California have performed genetic analysis of a Russian sunflower collection and identified genetic markers that can help predict the oil's fatty acid composition. The research was published in BMC Genomics. Genomic selection, which helps quickly create new crop varieties, has been a much-discussed topic worldwide for the last 10 years. DNA sequencing and extensive genotyping have been applied to obtain genetic profiles of crops. When analyzed and compared to field data, those profiles help identify genetic ...

NTU Singapore study highlights media's important role in debunking COVID-19 misinformation

2021-07-12
A study by Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) has found that as the type of COVID-19 misinformation rectified by Singapore's mainstream news media evolved over the course of the pandemic, the role played by the media in debunking those myths became increasingly important to citizens in the nation's fight to manage the outbreak. Out of 2,000 news articles on COVID-19 published between 1 January to 30 April 2020, the NTU team analysed 164 news articles. The team observed that news reports correcting science and health-related COVID-19 misinformation were dominant at the start of the outbreak ...

UN's new global framework for managing nature: 1st detailed draft agreement launched

UNs new global framework for managing nature: 1st detailed draft agreement launched
2021-07-12
The UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) Secretariat today released the first official draft of a new Global Biodiversity Framework to guide actions worldwide through 2030 to preserve and protect Nature and its essential services to people. The framework includes 21 targets for 2030 that call for, among other things: At least 30% of land and sea areas global (especially areas of particular importance for biodiversity and its contributions to people) conserved through effective, equitably managed, ecologically representative and well-connected systems of protected areas (and other effective area-based conservation measures) A 50% of greater reduction in the rate of introduction of invasive ...

Urban areas with high levels of air pollution may increase risk of childhood obesity

2021-07-12
Children living in urban areas with high levels of air pollution, noise and traffic may be at higher risk of childhood obesity, according to a study by the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal)--a centre supported by the "la Caixa" Foundation--and the University Institute for Primary Care Research Jordi Gol (IDIAP Jordi Gol). The study was funded by the La Marató de TV3 Foundation. Published in Environment International, the study analysed data on 2,213 children aged 9 to 12 years in the city of Sabadell (Barcelona) who were participating in the ECHOCAT and INMA projects. ...

Species of algae with three sexes that all mate in pairs identified in Japanese river

2021-07-12
For 30 years, University of Tokyo Associate Professor Hisayoshi Nozaki has traveled an hour west of Tokyo to visit the Sagami River and collect algal samples to understand how living things evolved different sexes. Through new analysis of samples collected in 2007 and 2013 from dam lakes along the river, Lake Sagami and Lake Tsukui, researchers identified a species of freshwater algae that evolved three different sexes, all of which can breed in pairs with each other. This phenomenon of three sexes is slightly different from hermaphroditism. In species that normally have two sexes, a hermaphroditic individual who can produce both the male and female sex cells usually exists due to unusual gene expression. Many plants and some invertebrate species have three ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Cost-effective, high-capacity, and cyclable lithium-ion battery cathodes

Artificial intelligence enhances monitoring of threatened marbled murrelet

The solution to kidney bleeding and recovery lies within a hemostasis sponge, using the inherent capabilities of the kidneys

Sylvester Cancer adding cellular therapy to its arsenal against metastatic melanoma

Study finds biomarkers for psychiatric symptoms in patients with rare genetic condition 22q

Medical school scientist creates therapy to kill hypervirulent bacteria

New study supports psilocybin’s potential as an antidepressant

The Lancet Public Health: Global study reveals stark differences between females and males in major causes of disease burden, underscoring the need for gender-responsive approaches to health

Revealed: face of 75,000-year-old female Neanderthal from cave where species buried their dead

Hepatitis B is globally underassessed and undertreated, especially among women and Asian minorities in the West

Efficient stochastic parallel gradient descent training for on-chip optical processors

Liquid crystal-integrated metasurfaces for an active photonic platform

Unraveling the efficiency losses and improving methods in quantum dot-based infrared up-conversion photodetectors

A novel deep proteomic approach unveils molecular signatures affected by aging and resistance training

High-intensity spatial-mode steerable frequency up-converter toward on-chip integration

Study indicates that cancer patients gain important benefits from genome-matched treatments

Gift to UCR clinic aims to assist local unhoused population

Research breakthrough on birth defect affecting brain size

Researchers offer US roadmap to close the carbon cycle

Precipitation may brighten Colorado River’s future

Identifying risks of human flea infestations in plague-endemic areas of Madagascar

Archaea can be picky parasites

EPA underestimates methane emissions from landfills, urban areas

Feathers, cognition and global consumerism in colonial Amazonia

Satellite images of plants’ fluorescence can predict crop yields

Machine learning tool identifies rare, undiagnosed immune disorders through patients’ electronic health records

MD Anderson researcher Sharon Dent elected to prestigious National Academy of Sciences

Nonmotor seizures may be missed in children, teens

Emergency departments frequently miss signs of epilepsy in children

Unraveling the roles of non-coding DNA explains childhood cancer’s resistance to chemotherapy

[Press-News.org] Training helps teachers anticipate how students with learning disabilities might solve problems