MATHEMATICS

Our students engage in Mathematics, not just arithmetic. While our students develop fluency with numbers and variables and develop mastery of the traditional algorithms during their time at Speyer, we challenge our students to see Mathematics as more than just memorizing procedures and performing calculations. Once students find an answer to a problem, they ask themselves how they know their answer is correct--but that's just the first question! They also ask, among many other questions, whether they could have been more efficient in solving the problem and if their answer is the only possible one. At Speyer, Mathematics is much more than just finding an answer to a problem; instead, we see Mathematics as the way we reason about--and pose--problems. Through the development of explicit problem solving and metacognitive strategies, as well as through the way we invite and consider multiple potential solution methods and answers, we instill in our students a mathematician's habits of mind: exploring, conjecturing, proving, estimating, checking, planning, abstracting, and generalizing.

We recognize that every student who arrives at Speyer is unique. Each student has a different history and relationship with Mathematics, coming to Speyer with differences in natural ability, prior knowledge, and the experiences and opportunities they've had related to Mathematics. Despite these differences, we believe that every student at Speyer can achieve at high levels, and we provide all students an accelerated curricular experience in every grade. To support our students, we form small groups for Mathematics instruction so that each student can receive increased teacher attention and feedback on their independent work; as students make progress, and recognize their own progress, they grow in their self-confidence as capable and competent mathematicians.

As each student develops into a capable and competent mathematician, we also approach Mathematics as a social activity. Students regularly have the opportunity to complete work in groups, allowing students to learn from and build off of each other's work. Every student is empowered to feel like they can provide meaningful contributions to group work; at the same time, students come to the realization that many problems require the collective expertise of a group whose individual members each bring their own unique strengths and perspectives.

Our goal is to ensure each student feels both supported and appropriately challenged, and we recognize that some students are ready to tackle more advanced Mathematics than their same-age peers. We place no ceilings on our students; we continuously monitor the growth of each student, and as students demonstrate mastery with the content being taught, our faculty members collaborate to create individualized and small group learning plans consisting of enrichment or increased acceleration. Our students are actively learning and being challenged every day, and there is always more to learn.

Though Mathematics is already worth studying, and is best studied, for its own sake as a distinct, pleasurable, and intellectually rich subject, Mathematics also has a practical use meriting its study and granting it a privileged place among other subjects: Mathematics provides a shared language and a toolkit practitioners of all fields can use to represent, to understand, and to better the world we live in.

Detailed divisional and grade-level descriptions of Speyer’s math curriculum can be found below.