Help
Your Child Make Sense of Math: Tips for Parents
Ask
the right questions:
In
helping children learn, one goal is to assist them in becoming critical
and independent thinkers. You can help by asking questions that guide,
without telling them what to do.
Good
questions, and good listening, will help your student make sense of mathematics,
build self-confidence and encourage mathematical thinking and communication.
A good question opens up a problem and supports different ways of thinking
about it.
Questions
to ask your students:
Getting
started
- What
do you need to find out?
- What
do you know now?
- How
can you get the information?
- Where
can you begin?
- What
terms/vocabulary do you understand/not understand?
- What
similar problems have you solved that would help?
While
Working
- How
can you organize the information?
- Can
you make a drawing (model) to explain your thinking?
- What
are other possibilities?
- What
would happen if….?
- Can
you describe a strategy that you can use to solve this?
- What
do you need to do next?
- Do
you see any patterns or relationships that will help you solve this?
- How
does this relate to…?
- Can
you make a prediction?
- Why
did you…?
- What
assumptions are you making?
Reflecting
about the Solution
- How
do you know your solution(conclusion) is reasonable?
- How
did you arrive at your answer?
- How
can you convince me your answer makes sense?
- What
did you try that did not work?
- Has
the questions been answered?
- Can
the explanation be made clearer?
Responding-helps
clarify and extend thinking
- Tell
me more.
- Can
you explain it in a different way?
- Is
there another possibility or strategy that would work?
- Is
there a more efficient strategy?
- Help
me understand this part…
Adapted
from They're Counting on Us California
Math Council 1995 and SciMath, Roseville, MN
|