Abstract
This paper describes a process in which a practising teacher developed a personal teaching
model for numeracy. Influences included Vigotsky’s Zone of Proximal Development,
Steffe’s counting types, a mathematics education paper which included study of Wright’s
Mathematics Recovery and Burns’ cooperative group teaching, a trial of the Count Me in
Too project with subsequent developments in New Zealand, and an explicit strategy
teaching model derived from the theory of Pirie and Kieren. The teacher uses her teaching
model in a classroom setting. The teacher’s espoused teaching model is compared with its
implementation. Some implications for assisting teachers to construct personal teaching
models are made
Peter Hughes & Lynne Petersen
Constructing and Using a Personal Numeracy Teaching Model in a Classroom Setting