| Literature DB >> 34934233 |
Zuhal Yılmaz1, Hande Gülbağcı Dede2, Ruthmae Sears3, Selin Yıldız Nielsen4.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic is an unprecedented situation that influenced all aspects of society, including education. Millions of students found themselves adjusting to a new medium of mathematics instruction, not to mention the teachers who had to provide instruction through remote sources. Considering students' diverse social, economic, and academic background, this study sought to examine teachers' perspectives on factors that support or hinder how equity is attended to in mathematics during remote instruction and the extent it differed from practices utilized when instruction was provided in a face-to-face setting. We also sought to document teachers' perspectives on how they attended to equity in mathematics to support students with language barriers. We interviewed nine teachers to explore their perspectives of factors that support or hinder equity in mathematics teaching and learning during remote instruction compared to face-to-face instruction and how they support the diverse needs (inclusive of language barriers) of students. There were salient factors in this study that supported or hindered equitable mathematics instruction, such as teachers' beliefs, expectations for students, access to resources, students' socioeconomic status, and language barriers. Hence, it is recommended that policymakers, school administrators, and teachers need to collaborate to systematically plan to ensure that all students have access to quality mathematics.Entities:
Keywords: Accessibility; COVID-19; Equitable mathematics instruction; Language barrier; Socioeconomic status
Year: 2021 PMID: 34934233 PMCID: PMC8170451 DOI: 10.1007/s10649-021-10060-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Educ Stud Math ISSN: 0013-1954
Demographic information regarding the teachers and their respective settings
| Teacher | Grade level taught | Experience (in years) | School location | Class type | Students’ (STs) ethnicity | STs’ socioeconomic background | STs’ with language barriers | EBA-TV access rate (%) | Synchronous lessons-access rate (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| T1 | 2nd and 4th | 12 | Rural | Multi-graded | Turkish | Low | No | 100 | 0 |
| T2 | 1st and 2nd | 15 | Rural | Multi-graded | Turkish Kurdish | Low | No | 8 | 0 |
| T3 | 3th | 3 | Rural | Mono-graded | Turkish Zazaki | Middle | Yes | 100 | 80a |
| T4 | 1th | 23 | Urban | Mono-graded | Turkish | High | No | 100 | 100 |
| T5 | 6th and 7th | 3 | Urban | Mono-graded | Turkish Syrian | Low | Yes | 50 | 0 |
| T6 | 8th | 5 | Rural | Mono-graded | Turkish | Middle | No | 95 | 60 |
| T7 | 5th and 8th | 5 | Urban | Mono-graded | Turkish Syrian | High | Yes | 100 | 100 |
| T8 | 9th and 11th | 4 | Rural | Mono-graded | Turkish | Low | No | Not provided | 0 |
| T9 | High school | 27 | Urban | Mono-graded | Turkish | Middle | No | 100 | 70 |
aThe teacher increased the access rate to 100% by addressing the problem
Example of interview questions
| Sections | Face-to-face instruction | Remote instruction |
|---|---|---|
| Curriculum and instruction | What kind of teaching strategies do you utilize to ensure equity and accessibility in face-to-face mathematics instruction? How do you integrate the student’s culture to the math class? | To what extent do you think you manage to implement the teaching strategies you have just mentioned in the distance/remote education environment? How do you integrate the student’s culture to the mathematics class? To what extent is the remote instruction environment offered by the Ministry of National Education sensitive to the local culture and needs of students? |
| High expectation for all students | What do you expect to see in a classroom where high-quality mathematics instruction is carried out? (elaborate on teachers’ expectations on students’ mathematical capabilities, nature of task, student engagement, etc.) | To what extent do your students have an opportunity to access high-quality mathematics instruction in the remote mathematics teaching environment offered to students due to COVID-19? Why? (elaborate on teachers’ expectations on students’ mathematical capabilities, nature of task, student engagement) |
| Support mechanism and access to resources | What kind of support mechanism do you utilize to ensure equity and accessibility in face-to-face mathematics instruction? (NCTM, What do you do to ensure equitable and accessible mathematics learning opportunities for students: • with a language barrier? • with low socioeconomic status? • with mathematical learning difficulties? • with different mathematical achievement levels? | What kind of support mechanism do you utilize to ensure equity and accessibility in remote mathematics instruction? (NCTM, What mechanisms are provided for students with language barriers to ensure access to equitable mathematics learning in remote instruction? What resources are provided for students with low socioeconomic status to ensure access to equitable mathematics learning in remote instruction? What do you do to ensure equitable and accessible mathematics learning opportunities for students: • with a language barrier? • with low socioeconomic status? • with mathematical learning difficulties? • with different mathematical achievement levels? |
Main categories, sub-categories, and factors
| Main Category | Description | Sub-category | Factors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Curriculum and instruction | Teachers’ perspectives on the ways to create access to “all students to a high-quality mathematics curriculum, effective teaching and learning” (NCTM, Ensuring high-quality mathematics instruction for all students requires high expectations for all students (Gutiérrez, | High-quality mathematics instruction (Gutiérrez, | Teachers’ vision of high-quality mathematics instruction (Munter, Student engagement (interaction) Attaining students’ thinking and understanding Nature of the task Teacher factor Teachers’ high expectations for all students (Gutiérrez, |
| Culturally responsive mathematics teaching (Gay, | Cultural experience (Aguirre & Zavala, Language (Aguirre & Zavala, | ||
| Teachers’ involvement in curricular decisions (Cal & Thompson, | Adjusting curriculum and instruction according to students’ experience, mathematical readiness, and needs (Christenson & Wager, Pacing Depth | ||
| Support mechanism | Teacher perspectives on the ways of giving the differentiated support and opportunities for all students regardless of their ethnicity, learning barriers, and socioeconomic status to ensure their equal access to mathematical learning (NCTM, | N/A | After school activities (NCTM, |
| Extracurricular activities (NCTM, | |||
| Allocating extra time (Burris et al., | |||
| Peer learning (O'Donnell & King, | |||
| Access to resources | The ways of ensuring all students have the access to the same curricular materials (Cal & Thompson, | N/A | Access to technology (computer etc.) (Cal & Thompson, |
| Access to manipulatives (Cal & Thompson, | |||
| Access to Internet | |||
| Access to teacher who teaches mathematics | |||
| Access to same amount of lesson time (Cal & Thompson, |