Abstract
This study presents a specific case of how a teacher in China learned to teach with problem posing through a collaborative, iterative design process with a researcher. Supported by a networked improvement community, at every step of the journey that they undertook, they partnered to design, deliver, and revise a mathematics lesson that fostered students’ learning through problem posing. A detailed travelogue of their journey serves to document what research on teaching through mathematical problem posing can look like and how the teacher learned to teach using this novel approach. We explore the utility of the 3H (head, heart, and hands) model as a powerful way to think about holistic, transformative teacher learning. In addition, we consider aspects of the networked improvement community in which the teacher–researcher partnership operated that enabled capacity for sustaining this kind of effort to change practice.
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