RRL Math
RRL Math
RRL Math
According to (Dubiel, 2020) is split into three sections each describing a separate area
with implications for high-quality teaching and learning. Each section provides
considerations or lists of resources as well as lists of questions for stakeholders to
think about. The major take-aways are grounded in research and there are
recommendations for resources that can help with implementation of the action items.
The Structures section suggests ideas that are pertinent at the school level. Ideas
include a recommendation for grade school teachers to loop up with their students and
a call to eliminate ability grouping of students for different teachers. Rather, students
with a variety of strengths should be encouraged to work together to complete rich,
complex tasks. Teachers should be allowed to participate collaboratively in
professional development on a variety of topics that will promote student learning..
Above all, structures need to be in place that support teachers in creating high-quality
learning opportunities for all students.
The section on Teaching Practices contains four parts that focus on actions in the
classroom that can promote equitable access for high quality teaching and learning.
The first part is a call to identify essential learning for students per grade-level or
course. Teachers should work together to examine standards and agree on the
essential learnings for their grade level and courses. Considering how the standards
for the current grade level or course connect to previous or subsequent courses is
imperative to identify key topics and understandings. So, collaborating not only
within but across grade levels is important to identify essential learning.
The second and third parts of this section are about determining prior knowledge and
introducing new learning. Talking with teachers of prior grade-levels or classes can
help identify the topics and skills for which students may need additional support. If a
topic was taught during remote learning, some students may be less familiar with it.
Determining prior knowledge through instruction and assessment allows for a focus
on the most pertinent topics. Be intentional about using formative assessment that
supports next instructional steps.
The final part of the Teaching Practices section is about using the most effective
teaching practices advocated by Principles to Actions (2018) by NCTM. These
practices reinforce good teaching strategies like establishing goals, using purposeful
questions, supporting productive struggle, and eliciting and using evidence of student
thinking. If you read only one piece of the original document in full, it is this part of
the Teaching Practices section found on pages 9-10. This particular section of the
document is full of resources that teachers can use to promote equitable and high-
quality instruction for all mathematics learners.
The third section of the document is on Advocacy. We need to continue to work with
multiple stakeholders in education to promote equitable and high-quality teaching and
learning for all students. Budgetary changes will need to occur in these uncertain
financial times, but we need to minimize any potential negative impact on quality
education. We need to revisit our use of large scale assessments that reduce
instructional time and consider instead the use of formative assessment tasks for the
classroom. We also need to advocate support for teachers with professional learning
and with social-emotional needs.
While the “Moving Forward” joint statement is full of ideas and questions to consider,
there are some common themes that thread through the sections of Structures,
Teaching Practices, and Advocacy. I want to highlight three of these themes that are
applicable for teachers of all levels.
Collaborate
Throughout the “Moving Forward” joint statement there are references to teachers
collaborating. Teaching is a surprisingly lonely profession. You are around people all
day long, but constantly in an authority role. It is necessary to take the time to talk
with fellow teachers - plan together, get ideas, and simply check in as we could all use
some social-emotional support.
Identifying essential understandings for grade levels and courses is a task that needs to
be undertaken collaboratively. Groups of teachers work together to analyze standards
and create common goals allows for greater equity among students by keeping
expectations the same across teachers. Collaboratively designing instructional
experiences and common formative assessments also supports high quality and
equitable experiences for students. Teachers need to be allowed to have time, within
the school day, to work with other teachers. Stakeholders in education need to
advocate to protect and promote collaborative time for teachers.
Mathematics teachers and leaders must continue to speak to and support the development and
implementation of educational policies and practices to promote high-quality, equitable mathematics
teaching and learning for every student (NCTM 2014; NCSM 2020a).
Mapping the Reality of Mathematics Teaching and Learning During COVID-19 The shift to a virtual
platform across K12 necessitates the availability of technology remotely to facilitate lesson delivery
and ongoing communication among students, teachers, parents, and other stakeholders (Government of
Ontario, 2020). Initially, making sure that teachers, students, and parents have access to technological
devices was a challenge (Statistics Canada, 2019); therefore, local school boards in Ontario offered
technology pick-ups for laptops, iPads, and tablets for those in need, which ensured access for all
(Strong, 2020). Furthermore, to help students make sense of abstract mathematical concepts using
concrete materials (e.g., measuring sticks, snap cubes, and geoboards), teachers and parents improvised
by using household items, finding links to online manipulatives, or using statistics/graphs about the
pandemic (Skarky, 2020).
Developing a growth mindset (Boaler, 2016; Dweck, 2008) among students is vital for learning
mathematics. It requires consistent and regular guidance from teachers through collaborative
opportunities with peers that allow students to witness multiple solutions (Boaler, 2016). This was re-
envisioned by creating collaborative teams in the form of breakout groups, where students connected
using social platforms/apps.
This section mapped some of the ways mathematics education was reimagined from face-toface to
virtual delivery. As we continue grappling with the COVID-19 situation, we turn to an enactive approach
and propose a contemplative space to make sense of the constraints caused by the pandemic and the
opportunities for reimagining research in mathematics education.
An Enactive Approach
We find enactivism helpful for understanding how the mathematics environment and
community continue to co-evolve during this time of crisis, recognizing that any pregiven
mind/body binaries. Enactivism claims that cognition emerges from a network of interactions
among agents and their environment. From the enactivist perspective, a mathematical
community does not simply react to an existing pandemic environment around them; the
community and the environment co-emerge. The shift from face-to-face to online teaching and
learning environments cannot be seen as a pre-given problem for the community to react to,
but rather as an opportunity for the community to “pose the relevant issues that need to be
addressed at each moment” (Varela et al., 1993, p. 145) and to reimagine mathematics
education within the constraints related to the pandemic. The mathematical community, then,
brings forth the world of significance (e.g., mathematics) on a moment to moment basis
through their actions and interactions with others and with their environment (Varela et al.,
1993), which in our view makes enactivism a relevant lens to study the emerging mathematical
Drawing from complexity and an enactive approach, Davis and Simmt (2003) describe the
(duplication and excess of the features that are necessary for the emergence of an intelligent
collective), (c) decentralized control (no one seems to be in charge of the community and the
community organizes itself as if coordinating agents are present at its centre), (d) organized
randomness (a structural condition that helps to determine balance between redundancy and
internal diversity among members), and (e) neighbour interactions (agents within the complex
system affect one another’s activity). We use these conditions to understand the emergence of
the co-evolving mathematics environment and community in the present context of COVID-19.
The constraints caused by the COVID-19 pandemic provided an opportunity for policy makers,
teachers, students, and parents to work together, exchanging ideas, views, experiences, and
knowledge. Every member of the community contributed towards meeting the common goal
(redundancy) of teaching and learning mathematics. The differing experiences and ideas
brought forth by stakeholders created an internal diversity, which in turn allowed for innovative
ways to learn and teach mathematics. The online platform offered opportunities for
neighbouring interactions within the mathematical community to bounce ideas about teaching
and learning. Switching to technology in the form of video lessons or situating math problems
in real-world contexts were instances where stakeholders interacted with each other.
From an enactivist lens, turning to an online platform was not about adapting face-to-face
pedagogical strategies by simply following a prescribed curriculum towards some optimal goal
through a prescriptive logic; that is, “what is not allowed is forbidden” (Varela et al., 1993, p.
195). It was, rather, about finding other pedagogical strategies while maintaining the viability of
the mathematics education system and moving towards the proscriptive logic—“what is not
forbidden is allowed” (Varela et al., 1993, p. 195). Understanding that what is not forbidden is
allowed opens a space of opportunities for reimagining mathematics education. The online
platform prompted education stakeholders to reimagine possibilities for teaching and learning
In the context of the pandemic, turning to online teaching practices needed to be done quickly
with teachers who may have had little experience with online teaching. Through an enactivist
lens, a viable mathematics education system was reimagined. This points to the need for
Planning is key
The document focuses on three critical areas for planning, namely, structural
considerations, teaching practices, and advocacy. These topics challenge district
leaders and schools to think about who should be in the conversation, what
supports are needed, and what questions should be asked before moving
forward.