Abstract
As part of an ongoing project, we have developed a model of planning and teaching that is designed to assist teachers to help students overcome barriers they might experience in
learning mathematics. The following is a discussion of one aspect of the model that we term ?enabling prompts?. These refer to the directions, invitations, or questions that a
teacher offers when interacting one-on-one with students experiencing difficulties. We argue that teachers should plan to pose subsidiary questions in the first instance, rather than, for example, offering further explanations. We outline our overall planning and teaching model, we present some examples of enabling prompts used by our project teachers, and we propose some considerations for teachers when structuring their own enabling prompts.
Peter Sullivan, Judy Mousley and Robyn Zevenbergen
Developing Guidelines For Teachers Helping Students Experiencing Difficulty In Learning Mathematics