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Professional Profile: Dara Glazer

Reaching a New Perspective with...

DARA GLAZER, MR Intervention Specialist Leader and AMVR Champion

Dara Glazer Headshot
Dara Glazer

When Dara Glazer says she wishes she’d had Add+VantageMR training at the beginning of her teaching career instead of 15 years into it, it’s a testament to the program’s powerful and far-reaching results.  Not only is Dara a passionate advocate of AVMR, she’s a champion of its effects, both on those who teach it – and those who are taught by it.

“We know the longer students struggle with math, the wider the gap becomes,” Dara explains.  “Early intervention is key.  I don’t know of any other program that arms teachers with the theoretical knowledge, practical application and ongoing support that Math Recovery provides.”

Dara stumbled into Math Recovery in 2003 when a small group from her district in Colorado went to an introductory session held in Sheridan, Wyoming.  She jumped at the chance to be trained; and from the first day, found herself challenged to think about how children develop their mathematical skills.  She also found herself questioning her own teaching practices.  “Oh, that’s why they didn’t get it!” ran through Dara’s mind repeatedly throughout the training as she reflected on all the 4th and 5th graders who struggled so valiantly yet vainly to learn math.

Today, Dara occupies top status as an MR leader and AVMR champion.  She played a vital role as instructor, coach and trainer at the Summer Institute held last June in Nashville, an experience that brought her closer to others sharing the Math Recovery journey.

“I always learn when I’m with this community,” says Dara.  “The greatest satisfaction comes from the growth and reactions of the participants.  Teachers from all over the country go back to their schools and districts with a new perspective.  It’s both empowering and overwhelming.”

Using Math Recovery in the Hispanic Community

 Because she’s worked with the Hispanic/Latino community for much of her career, Dara also has a unique and very useful multi-cultural perspective.  In addition to her teaching accreditation and Math Recovery certifications, Dara holds an endorsement in Language Minority-Bilingual Education.  She can attest first-hand to Math Recovery’s applicability and success rate in almost every conceivable learning environment.

“Many of the children I work with are from Mexico,” she explains.  “These children come in with a wide range of mathematical knowledge, yet they often struggle in class. From my work in Math Recovery, I have come to realize that our impressions of what these children know are often erroneous. Countless times I’ve heard teachers say, ‘I had no idea he knew so much!’ after giving a Math Recovery Assessment.”

Dara recalls the time she went into a first grade classroom to film some Add+VantageMR assessments to be used with teachers.  She asked the teacher for two of her strongest math students, as well as two others whose math skills were weaker.  Dara describes the experience in detail.

“The first two children were native English speakers with very positive self-concepts about their mathematical abilities.  They both told me how good they were in math, and they were quite competent with the counting sequence and reading numerals.  Both were unsuccessful, however, at solving addition and subtraction problems with screened counters.  Andy could not solve ‘3+2’ with screened counters, and Alice could not come up with any strategy for ‘16 counters take away 4.’  A Hispanic student named Eduardo was next.  He made some errors counting forward and back, and he confused several numerals. Yet Eduardo immediately answered the problem of ‘16 counters take away 4 counters’ with screened materials and could show his strategy by counting back from 16 using his fingers to keep track of the counts.  The teacher was shocked when I told her that Eduardo had the most sophisticated strategies of the four students.

“I use these video clips all the time now with teachers. These assessments clearly isolate areas of strengths and difficulties, and they help teachers of language minority students understand what they know and where they need extra help.”

Dara notes that many of her Math Recovery students have been English language learners, which doubles the process since content and language objectives are both needed equally for each lesson.

“These children need explicit instruction and scaffolded support to use mathematical language to explain their thinking,” Dara explains.  “The materials we use support them and show their thinking -- first concretely, then later with words and symbols. Vocabulary support is important as well. If you’ve ever tried to learn a second language, then you know how hard concepts like ‘before,’ ‘after,’ ‘more,’ ‘less,’ ‘higher,’ and ‘lower’ are to learn. These students return to their regular classroom more confident in their mathematical abilities and in their ability to communicate their thinking.”

Dara finds this aspect of her work in Math Recovery especially rewarding.  “I love working with this population of students!” she says.   “I speak Spanish myself, so I’m able to communicate with parents about what we are working on, and how they can help at home. Two years after participating in Math Recovery, my very first MR student, who was a native Spanish speaker, tested ‘advanced’ on the 3rd grade state mathematics test!”

Advice for Others in Math Recovery

Dara urges everyone engaged in Math Recovery to try and attend at least one annual MR Institute.  “It’s a great place to learn more about the programs and gain new information about teaching math in your own community or school district,” she says enthusiastically.  “Last year, the Institute was held in Kentucky – this spring, it will be in Minnesota.  If you can’t do that, at least check the Math Recovery website to find out about signing up for one of the regional MR conferences around the country.”

As for advice to others new to Math Recovery, Dara has these words of encouragement:  “The journey can be a rewarding and frustrating one.  At first, many of us feel less than adequate because there’s so much to learn. Yet, once it starts making sense, and we see successes with our first students, then we begin to see its power, and we want to change the way math is taught in our schools.  But we are often up against a system that provides little time for teacher collaboration and growth.  Like everything in this field, change takes time.” 

Drawing on her own lengthy experience, Dara concludes, “The Math Recovery community continues to teach, challenge and inspire me. It’s been one of the highlights of my 23-plus years in public schools.”

 

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