Abstract
Guided inquiry pedagogy is gaining recognition for promoting deep learning as students connect concepts, understandings and meanings to defend and justify their mathematical ideas. Research describes how it promotes the development of deep understandings, yet the approach can seem at odds with explicit teaching pedagogies that show potential for a rapid rise in mathematical achievement in solving simple, routine tasks. Additional pressure from timed, standardised tests can contribute to confusion about choice when teachers consider implementing pedagogies with which they are less familiar. This paper illustrates what explicit teaching looks like in inquiry as year five students explore angles in polygons.
Kym Fry, Judith Hillman
The Explicitness Of Teaching In Guided Inquiry