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Examining and conceptualizing the relationship between teacher praise and the co-construction of mathematical competence in classrooms
Institution:1. Department of Education, Santa Clara University, 500 El Camino Real, Santa Clara, CA 95053, USA;2. Department of Education Studies, University of Oregon, Eugene, USA
Abstract:In this study we examined how teacher praise varies across and within four middle school mathematics classrooms in relationship to mathematical competence. We then conceptualized how teacher praise contributes to the co-construction of normative identity: the class’ shared understanding of what counts as being a competent learner in a mathematics classroom. Findings revealed teachers rarely used person-based praise (e.g., “you’re smart”) and frequently gave generic praise (e.g., “good”). Each teacher’s praise patterns supported different co-constructions of mathematical competence. Although some teachers taught the same lessons or ascribed to similar pedagogical approaches, findings suggest teachers’ praise patterns may contribute to the co-construction of different normative identities, some more exclusive and others more inclusive. Findings indicate praise may be a low-stakes and potentially impactful teacher practice with implications for students’ understanding of what it means to be good at math.
Keywords:Praise  Mathematical competence  Mathematics teaching  Normative identity
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