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What math teachers are doing wrong

MathEducation #Teaching #Pedagogy #StudentEngagement #GrowthMindset #EdChat

Mahwish Naeem profile on Influential Women
Mahwish Naeem
What math teachers are doing wrong

I see it too often: the bright, curious student who slowly disengages, then switches classes. The reason isn’t that math is “too hard.” It’s often how it’s taught.

If your classroom feels like a rigid, high-pressure procedure factory, students will leave. If it feels like a place to grow, they’ll run to you.

Here are 8 common missteps in math instruction and how to fix them:

1. Starting with Formulas, Not Meaning

When we lead with abstract rules, students memorize steps without understanding. They forget. They panic.

✅ Fix: Start with a situation, a pattern, a puzzle. Let them explore it. Then name the concept together.

2. Teaching “Watch Me, Copy Me”

Passive note-taking and copied examples don’t build brains. They build dependency.

✅ Fix: Use “You try first” problems. Ask, “What do you notice? What do you wonder?” Analyze errors. Incorporate turn-and-talk. Make brains active.

3. Rushing to Procedures, Skipping Sense

A student can solve for x but can’t tell you if x = 150 is a reasonable answer for a pizza price.

✅ Fix: Embed the question into your classroom culture: “Is your answer reasonable? How do you know?”

4. Rewarding Only Right Answers

This makes students terrified of being wrong. Risk-taking and deep thinking shut down.

✅ Fix: Grade and praise the process—the strategy, the justification, the thoughtful revision.

5. Not Diagnosing the Root Misconception

Re-teaching the same way louder doesn’t fix a flawed foundation (e.g., misconceptions with negatives, fractions, or slope).

✅ Fix: Implement 2-minute “misconception check” warm-ups. Use them to form targeted mini-lessons for small groups.

6. Too Much Talking, Too Little Thinking

If the teacher’s voice fills all the space, student thinking gets no oxygen.

✅ Fix: Build in 30–90 seconds of mandatory silent think time before anyone explains or answers.

7. Problems Are Disconnected & Pointless

“When will I ever use this?” is a valid question if contexts are irrelevant.

✅ Fix: Connect math to their world: sports stats, social media trends, personal finance, music, art, and issues of fairness.

8. No Structured Math Talk

If students never articulate their reasoning, they never truly own it.

✅ Fix: Teach them how to discuss math. Provide sentence stems:

  • “I started by…”
  • “I noticed that…”
  • “I disagree because…”
  • “Another way to see it is…”

The Bottom Line

Students don’t leave because math is hard. They leave when they believe:

“If I don’t get it fast, I’m done.”

They come to you when they believe:

“I can grow here.”

The shift isn’t about lowering standards. It’s about building a classroom where struggle is productive, thinking is visible, and everyone’s reasoning has value.

Are you creating a procedure-following culture or a sense-making culture?

#MathEducation #Teaching #Pedagogy #StudentEngagement #GrowthMindset #EdChat

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