Math Learning Strategies
Math Learning Strategies
As students learn these strategies through practice, the teacher models less and
students gradually take over the responsibility of determining which strategy to use.
Students become more independent learners. The goal is for students to generalize
these strategies into other learning situations.
Many learning strategies are discussed in educational literaturefar too many to list
here. One of the most famous and possibly most effective learning strategies for problem
solving in mathematics is George Plyas 4-step problem-solving process (Van de Walle,
1998):
Understanding the problem
Developing a plan to solve the problem
Carrying out the plan
Looking back to be sure the answer solves the problem
These steps apply not only to mathematics and other academic areas but also to life
skills.
How Are Learning Strategies Implemented?
After the strategies have been taught, students may work independently in the class as
the teacher moves around the room, observing and monitoring that students are using
the strategy appropriately. Students may work in small groups and check each others
use of the strategy.
How to Implement Learning Strategies in the Classroom
Administrators should
provide professional development about learning strategies and
monitor teachers to be sure that learning strategies are taught.
Teachers should
have a range of strategies from which to choose;
practice new strategies until they are comfortable with them;
explain why learning strategies are important as they teach them, which motivates
students;
match strategies with the material;
model a variety of strategies in each classdifferent students may be more successful
with different strategies;
consistently encourage students to use learning strategies in learning situations;
monitor students use of learning strategies to ensure they are using them correctly; and
encourage generalization to other subject areas.
Learning strategies should be part of every lesson, but they are more than the lesson. As
teachers model these problem-solving strategies daily, monitor the students use of them,
and encourage students to use the strategies in a variety of ways, students learn to
generalize these strategies into other areas to become independent learners for life.