BLOOMING THROUGH CONFERENCING
PART ONE: ELICITING AND INTERPRETING
As we discussed last time, math conferencing is great way to discover how your students think; what thought processes they use; how they view mathematics; and how they interpret numbers. There are five steps in the conference process: 1) Being attentive to what they say; 2) Eliciting their thoughts; 3) Interpreting their thoughts; 4) Nudging them to a deeper understanding; and 5) Repeat, as necessary.
In today’s episode, we are going to look at how our stance can be either productive or unproductive to student growth and understanding. A teacher’s stance is very important in how receptive students are during a conference. The author explains that a teacher’s stance is how we appear to our students. It is not just the tones of voice we use and our words, but also our body language. If we appear “closed off”, our students will not be receptive. In contrast, if we appear open and curious, our students will be more receptive.
There are three unproductive stances that teachers emulate. A teacher can show a managerial stance, a completion stance, or a “fix-it” stance. Each will not give the teacher a full understanding of student thought processes.
In a managerial stance, the teacher is more interested in maintaining order. While classroom management is necessary and each teacher wants his or her students to be on task, a managerial stance does not promote the most welcoming forms of communication. In the managerial stance, the teacher is looking for students that are not on task, rather than how the students are working to answer the problem at hand. Ensuring that your students remain on task or attend to their work can be accomplished with gentle nudging during the conference. A teacher exhibiting a managerial stance will often appear defensive. This does not help a child’s ability to think nor communicate. It will make the conference very unproductive.
In a completion stance, the teacher’s main concern is arriving at the correct answer, rather than student thought process. A teacher in this stance will nudge her students to the correct answer. This stance stifles the students’ ability to creatively work through the problem and discover their own methods and strategies. It is through this creation process that students learn to problem solve. Problem solving is a skill that students need to have. This skill will be used throughout one’s life.

For instance, a family has three children, each child attends a different school and needs picked up a different times. Which child should be picked up first. As parents (or adults), we need to be able to determine that it only makes sense to pick up the child that is released the earliest first. If, as teachers, we are only concerned with the right answer to an equation, our students will not have the skills necessary to solve the problems that arise in our lives. It is important for our students to explore all the alternatives and create their own solution strategies, so they will be able to do so later on.
In a “fix-it” stance, the teacher is ensuring that his or her students are following the pathway he or she wishes them to follow. As with the completion stance, this stance does not allow for student created strategies and solutions. The teacher leads the students through the solution process that he or she wishes to be used, rather than allowing his or her students to explore multiple pathways of their own creation. If a mistake in thinking has occurred, the teacher is able to gently nudge away from the error without nudging them to a certain process through questions. This approach allows the students to discover their mistakes and self-correct, rather than being led down a specific path.

When a teacher approaches a conference with an open stance, students are more likely to respond in kind. An open stance allows the teacher to gently nudge the students toward a solution. The students are more receptive, as the teacher is open and curious about their work, rather than “judging” it. When using an open stance, the teacher needs to display genuine curiosity over the students’ thoughts, processes and solution strategies. We need to ask questions that elicit an eager, rather than reluctant response. Questions that show an interest in the students’ work and how they are accomplishing their tasks. It is important to remember the destination isn’t the important thing in mathematics, it is the journey. While we still need to learn that 2 + 2 = 4, the strategies that students use to arrive at the answer is more important. Teachers need to foster student creativity through their open curiosity.
When our students feel comfortable discussing their thoughts with us, we can then nudge their thinking in areas that will assist them to the solution. It is important that we don’t do this in a fashion that has our students feeling as though we dragged them there, kicking and screaming, but gently and in their own time and manner. If a student is comfortable using base ten blocks to reach solutions, that is completely acceptable. Being open to student needs and self-created strategies allows students to explore math and learn it, rather than memorize it. It also allows them to feel comfortable with math and not fearful of it.
During a visit to a fourth grade math class, I had the opportunity to wander among the students and observe their work. The class was completing a group of task cards as a break from testing. One student was trying to discover the perimeter of an unknown polygon. The problem asked for the amount of fencing needed to fence in a pasture. The problem contained two measurements. In order to assist her, I asked some probing questions, so she would be able to discover the shape of the pasture and the process to discover the perimeter. The classroom had all of the information she would need to complete the task. However, she was confused by the problem.
I asked, “What shape do you think the pasture is?”
“I don’t know,” she answered.
“How many measurements do you have?”
“Two.”
“Okay, let’s look at some of the definitions on the wall? Do you think the pasture would be a quadrilateral? How about parallelogram?”
“It could be a quadrilateral and parallelogram.?”
“Could it be a square?”
“No, the numbers are different.”
“How about a rectangle?”
“Yes.”
“How would you find the perimeter?”
“You add the sides together.”
It was interesting to watch the “wheels” turn, as she and I explored the possible shapes the pasture could be. I will admit that in that moment, I was unsure whether I was leading her down my chosen path or allowing her to discover her path. I can honestly say that I am still unsure whether I was more concerned with the answer or her discovery. As math has always been my forte, solutions have always been my goal. I need to remember to be open and curious, so my students will discover their own pathways. It is only when we allow our students the freedom to explore, that they bloom and flourish.