My teaching style centers around one belief: students should be doing the thinking. Over time, this led me to think deeply about what I now call participation architecture — the intentional design of classroom structures that shape how students think, talk, collaborate, and engage during math instruction.
Many students have not yet developed the confidence or skills needed to explain their mathematical ideas, work through problems collaboratively, or make sense of challenging tasks independently. Because of this, they often rely heavily on the teacher for direction and confirmation. I design lessons, routines, and collaborative structures that gradually help students build these skills through discussion, problem solving, and shared thinking.
I focus on creating classrooms where students:
• explain their mathematical thinking
• listen to and build on the ideas of others
• solve problems collaboratively
• develop conceptual understanding instead of memorizing procedures
• take on more of the cognitive work during math lessons
Many of the routines and activities in this store were created to help teachers build classrooms where the hum of student conversation, reasoning, and visible thinking drives the math block. Rather than replacing curriculum, these structures are designed to help teachers transform the materials they already use into more collaborative, high-participation math experiences.
The materials I share here are the same structures and activities I use in my own classroom and intervention groups. Every resource in this store is classroom-tested and designed to work with real students in real classrooms.