Mathematical reasoning at all ages is based on one's ability to develop sound and convincing arguments. While the formality and form of these arguments will vary across grades, all students need to be able to develop, understand, and interpret arguments appropriate to their level of expertise in mathematics.
The essence of mathematical arguments lies in learning to ask, "Why is this true?" and "How can we convince each other that our conclusions are true?" These questions are important regardless of age or grade level. Even as early as elementary grades, when students are introduced to core mathematical ideas such as operations on numbers, they can learn to build informal arguments that justify the strategies they use in computational work and the validity of the structure and relationships they notice when they operate on numbers.
But what exactly is an argument? What makes an argument different from a solution? Scholars have suggested three components of a mathematical argument:
Hence, argumentation in the classroom can occur not only when students provide their solutions and answers to problems but also when they explain how they reached those solutions, shifting the focus from the answer to the process and why the process is appropriate. Providing warrants is one of the most important aspects of argumentation in the mathematics classroom because it makes the reasoning visible and open to justification. Consequently, the single most powerful action a teacher can take to promote argumentation in the classroom is to pose appropriate questions inviting students to make their reasoning explicit by contributing a warrant (Singletary and Conner 2015), that is, naming the inferences or relationships they used.
There are three core attributes of good arguments in school mathematics (Stylianides 2016):
Mathematical arguments, as well as the ideas on which they are based and the mathematical language they use (including symbols, terms, notations, and representations), evolve as students' mathematical sophistication grows. Students in elementary and middle grades are not expected to craft formal deductive arguments. Students in earlier grades should have opportunities to craft arguments that are compatible with their understanding of mathematical ideas and the use language that makes sense to them. Over time, the ability for students to reason and communicate their reasoning in sophisticated ways will mature as they are exposed to increasingly complex mathematics.
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To learn more about Teaching with Mathematical Argument and download a sample chapter, visit Heinemann.com