They slink low in their chairs, avoid eye contact at all costs,
and pray the mantra for student invisibility: "Oh please, please
don't call on me."
It's easy for teachers to diagnose "Math Fright," but treating
afflicted students is another matter. According to Julianne Turner,
associate professor of psychology, those who most need math help
often become the most adept at avoiding it. Research by Turner
and colleagues, reported in a recent issue of the Journal
of Educational Psychology, suggests a remedy.
Students will go to great lengths to avoid participating if
they believe making a mistake will cause them to lose face before
their peers. In a study of 1,092 sixth-graders in 65 classrooms
at four diverse schools, Turner found that the classroom learning
environment was key to solving the avoidance problem. Teachers
in what she calls "high mastery/low avoidance" classrooms removed
the "fear factor" from math instruction by making sure that perplexed
students did not feel ashamed or inadequate. Such teachers placed
more emphasis on understanding concepts and procedures than on
arriving at a correct answer for its own sake.
To help students learn, these teachers often would coach students
through a problem, offering hints and seeking assistance from
other students. When the student appeared to understand, the teacher
gave the child an opportunity to demonstrate that understanding.
Many of the most successful teachers put students at ease by
using humor as well as offering words of encouragement, Turner
says. They model their own thinking process, demonstrating that
"being unsure, learning from mistakes and asking questions [are]
natural and necessary parts of learning."