Six Steps for Effective Maths Mentoring
Here are six mentoring tips to help your student feel more engaged and confident about their maths.
by Ed Smith
But first, letโs add some context: your student hates maths at school. Letโs call her Sophie. Sophie always leaves her lessons feeling humiliated, depressed and mildly concussed.
Your objective today is to teach Sophie fractions. As Sophieโs Oppidan mentor, youโre her part-teacher and part-coach. But your added role as mentor goes deeper: youโre going to encourage Sophie to unstitch the negative stories she tells herself about her ability by following these six simple steps:
01. โI failed a maths test once when I was your ageโ
This is about admiration leading to elevation. Sophie really looks up to you, so admitting that you also make mistakes is great mentorship. Everyone makes mistakes, Sophie! Itโs how we learn from them that counts.
02. โHow do you want to feel?โ
This is about prioritising process over outcome; focusing on the now and not worrying about future exams. So, ask Sophie how she wants to feel right now in this session. When Sophie commits to feeling โhappyโ, โjoyfulโ or โfocusedโ for the next 60 minutes, this quickly becomes self-fulfilling.
03. โYou choose!โ
Greater autonomy leads to greater engagement. Give Sophie ownership over the order in which you approach tasks. This gives Sophie an element of control and means she buys into the process. Sheโs in the driving seat and she controls the speed and structure of the session.
04. โThere are no mistakes - only opportunities to learnโ
This is about fostering a growth mindset. Because Sophieโs lost confidence, sheโs lost the courage to take risks and make mistakes. Explain to Sophie that mistakes in these sessions will be expected, necessary and celebrated because theyโre essential to progress.
05. โI canโt do itโฆYETโ
This simple reframing device encourages Sophie that growth is possible. The story that Sophie tells herself about her maths is fixed and negative. So when Sophie says she โcanโt do fractionsโ, you reply โyou canโt do fractions yet, Sophieโ.
06. โThe evidence suggests youโre better than you think!โ
This is based on the premise that success breeds motivation. Near the end of the session, set Sophie a mini-test thatโs well within her capability. A good mark in a test is a great source of encouragement and motivation to work harder, and something to build on.
Despite normally hating maths, Sophieโs actually had fun today. Sheโs felt in control, sheโs felt happy and focused, and sheโs nailed her test! Same time next week, Sophie?