Connected magazine - Fall 2020

Page 14

CCSU CONNECTED

The music of math Dr. Shelly Jones makes math culturally relevant By Amy J. Barry Even before other educators had begun adding the “A” for Arts to the acronym STEM, Dr. Shelly M. Jones was full-STEAM ahead of the curve. In Jones’s case, she saw a certain harmony between music and math education. Much had been written about the benefits of adding a music component to math classes at the high school and college levels. Jones, a professor of Mathematics Education at CCSU, began to examine how such a combination could benefit younger students.

determine correct note values per measure. The young students put their new skills into practice with a little motivational help from the music of Miley Cyrus and Justin Bieber. By the end of the workshop, students created four-bar songs — an activity that required a fresh look at the values of each note. By 2014, Jones had started conducting workshops for teachers that combined math and music and gave students the opportunity to create their own songs. “Every workshop always sold out and was sitting room only,” she says.“It’s because teachers want to engage

graduate level math courses for practicing teachers. “Part of it is respecting and learning about the contributions different cultures have made to math in addition to Pythagoras — the one name people know,” Jones says. “It’s also about wanting students to develop a positive math identity and not just see it as a procedure, but to realize that a lot of what they’re doing is math.” For instance, she says,“When you’re scheduling something, estimating mileage, using money — that’s math. And by bringing in popular culture and music, students realize,‘Wow, math is everywhere.’” Jones discusses culturally relevant math in further detail in a chapter she co-wrote for the 2015 book “The Brilliance of Black Children in Mathematics: Beyond the Numbers and Toward a New Discourse.” The book, Jones says, addresses the question “What does a math task look at when it’s both culturally relevant and cognitively demanding?” “It’s an awesome book I really enjoyed doing,” Jones says,“because we keep hearing about the achievement gap, often between black and white children. But for this book we focused on black children not from a deficit — not from what they don’t know — but from what they do know.”

Dr. Shelly Jones meets with the ACCESS Girls Who Code group in Bridgeport. (Photo submitted)

“I wanted to find something that would directly connect with younger kids, around fourth grade, when they start learning both musical notes and how to add and multiply fractions,” Jones explains. She decided to conduct her own research in collaboration with musician Dunn Pearson Jr. In their 2013 paper “Music: Highly Engaged Students Connect Music To Math,” Jones and Pearson describe lessons they created and implemented in workshops for middle school students. Students learned to identify notes and their fractional values before moving on to time signatures and how to

students and know how much they like music.” Culturally relevant math In addition to making the arts and math connection, Jones, an educator for more than 25 years, is passionate about making math culturally relevant to students. In a 2016 TED Talk, Jones explains culturally relevant math as another method of engaging and empowering students. It is an idea she incorporates into her coursework at CCSU, including undergraduate level math courses for pre-service teachers, as well as

12 – Central Connecticut State University Connected

Jones’s most recent book is for children. Titled “Women Who Count: Honoring African American Women Mathematicians” (2019), it highlights the lives and work of 29 African American mathematicians. It was inspired by the book and film “Hidden Figures” and a coloring book a colleague created about women scientists. “She told me I should do one about mathematicians,” Jones says.“I wanted it to be a math activity book, so I wrote bios about the women and made up activities to go with their math — fun activities that don’t need a teacher to teach it to you first. It’s a book that students can just pick up and do without a teacher, maybe while riding in the car to grandma’s house.” Jones reports the book became a bestseller less than a year after its release.


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