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Reading Matters

Research Matters

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14

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Reading Matters | Volume 16 • Winter 2016 |

scira.org CLICK HERE TO RETURN TO TABLE OF CONTENTS

However, my field notes revealed that I had mixed feelings

during this process.

At times, I feel worried. It takes time to do this

(incorporate math and picture books) and today I wonder if it is

worth it. Should I spend these extra fewminutes working with a

child one on one? I struggle with how to use the short amount of

time I have with these students.

Not all of my students were like

Kate and I often felt conflicted about this new way of teaching.

Ben, uncomfortable reader and mathematician

Ben said he could not get good grades in math and gave

thumbs sideways or thumbs down to the picture books, which

did not seem to engage him. However, he used his math journal

to practice other literacy skills. After we read

Jim and the Beanstalk

(Briggs,1970) he wrote:

I wonder if the beanstalk will grow back?

I wonder what he will grow next.

Ben used the questioning skills

we practiced in reading and applied them during math time.

Although Ben was not particularly interested in the

incorporation of children’s literature during math, he enjoyed

asking questions and writing about possible solutions to his

questions. Research suggests that teachers can use math

texts to support students like Ben by encouraging them to

find answers to questions that matter to them (Williams,

2009). This also helps students make connections to the

real world, making math more meaningful and relevant.

In my research journal I wrote:

Working with Ben reminds

me that although I have a goal for using these texts, my attempts

might not reach all learners in the same way.

Reflecting on my

journal entries and other data sources helped me understand

that my efforts to incorporate a variety of math texts into math

time helped Ben and perhaps other students, in other ways I

could not have imagined but were still equally important.

Ellie, ready writer and thoughtful mathematician

Ellie, at the beginning of the year, said that she did not think she

could do math. Ellie gave several thumbs sideways on her slips and

my observations during math class indicated that she seemed to

lack mathematical confidence. After we read

HowMuch is Million?

(Schwartz, 1985), she wrote in her journal:

I notice they used a lot of

big numbers. Like a million. I think that is a lot.

Ellie uses her journal

to clarify her thinking. She thought a million was a big number,

but may not have been certain enough to verbalize it during our

class discussion after reading the text. Without the math journal, I

may have missed this “big moment” for Ellie. It made me wonder if

there were other content concepts, from the math texts we were

reading, that she was trying to process through her journal writing.

Once I started reading the picture books during math,

I noticed that students were more interested in looking at

these books during self-selected reading and after they

finished their work. Although the math books were all

grouped together in the same browsing box, students such

as Ellie showed little interest in them earlier in the year. This

observation supports other research that found students are

more likely to select texts for independent reading if their

teacher has read it aloud to them (Dreher & Dromsky, 2000).

I also noted in my field notes about the change in saw in Ellie

over the year.

I see good progress with Ellie’s understanding of math.

She is taking the concepts and applying themmore consistently in

her seatwork and even with the problems of the day. She seems more

confident and willing to raise her hand to solve a problem at the

board.

Journal entries like that one helped me continue to use the

children’s literature during math for the rest of the school year.

The Bigger Picture

The various sources of data revealed that both successful

and struggling students were actively transferring strategies

(such as predicting and asking questions) they were being

taught during reading and language arts to mathematics

and that the use of children’s literature was fostering this

transfer by giving them more opportunities to use the

strategies with different types of texts. For example, after

learning about making connections during our literacy

block, several students made connections during math time

from the book I was reading to other mathematical books

we had read previously. Such findings connect with Hyde’s

(2006) recommendation that teachers use comprehension

strategies to connect literature to mathematical concepts.

Incorporating children’s literature into daily mathematical

lessons can improve understanding and help children explain

their reasoning (Clarke, 2002). The student’s journal entries

highlighted that some students expressed much deeper

thinking about concepts, beyond what I had seen in the

past with traditional tests and worksheets. The journals also

showed that when a student was struggling to understand

a concept, they struggled to write about it. In terms of the

students’ feelings towards math, utilizing children’s literature

made math time more enjoyable for some students, it did

not impact others, and some students didn’t like it despite

my efforts to incorporate a variety of math texts.

Final Thoughts

Investigating a new practice, incorporating children’s literature

into math time, provided an opportunity for deep reflection.

Rereading my field notes allowed me to see how over time, the

use of a variety of math texts engaged my first graders. This

endeavor also forced me to investigate the types of mathematics

literature I owned as well as what our school library offered.

As a result of what I discovered, I worked with our librarian to

order more math books so all students and teachers would have

greater access to these materials. Each year more books written

that merge the content of math and literacy. Some of my new

favorites include:

From Here to Infinity

by Menotti & Labat;

The Wing

Wing Brothers Math Spectacular!

by Ethan Long;

Seeing Symmetry

by Loreen Leedy; and

Wumbers

by Rosenthal & Lichtenheld.

Hartman (2002) suggests that using various genres in the

classroom helps teachers energize their own teaching. I certainly

found this to be true. I became more purposeful about selecting

texts to read aloud to students, not only during math time but

also throughout the day. I was also able to maximize instructional