Math Chat

Mona Iehl

Mona, of Mona Math, reveals the mysteries of how to teach elementary math even if you aren't a math person. Discover how you can develop a buzzing student led math classroom. We cover all things math identity, classroom culture, and student centered instructional practices to help you empower students to love and understanding math deeply.

  1. 2d ago

    Reflecting on the School Year as a Math Teacher

    Send us Fan Mail What if before planning next year… you actually took time to recognize how much growth happened THIS year? In this episode of the Math Chat Podcast, we’re talking about meaningful end-of-year reflection for math teachers, how to recognize the shifts that happened in your classroom, and why reflection is one of the most important parts of learning. Before we jump into planning next year, new classroom supplies, fresh routines, and all the “what should I change?” thoughts, I want to encourage you to pause and really look at the growth that happened this year… for your students AND for yourself. Because reflection is what helps us make meaning from the experience. And teacher friends… this episode is also a reminder that the work you did this year mattered deeply. In this episode, we’ll chat about:  why reflection is one of the most important parts of learning  the 5 reflection “buckets” I use at the end of the school year  how to think about student confidence, discourse, engagement, and perseverance  questions to help you process your instructional growth  why reflecting on community and relationships matters just as much as academics  a simple back-book activity your students will NEVER forget Mentioned in this episode: 📘 Word Problem Workshop Book Club 🎧 Math Chat Podcast Episode 212 Reflection Questions 📱 @hellomonamath on Instagram 📖 Word Problem Workshop Book Information A few favorite reminders from this episode:  “We do not learn from experience… we learn from reflecting on experience.”  “Reflection helps us see the ripples our actions created.”  “Students don’t just remember what they learned. They remember how they felt in your classroom.”  “The community was built through your strategic moves, your caring, your respect, and your hard work.” If you’re enjoying the Math Chat Podcast, leaving a quick review helps more teachers discover the show and build classrooms full of thinkers too.

    15 min
  2. May 4

    Why Your Math Share Time Is Killing Student Engagement

    Send us Fan Mail If your math share time feels disengaged, the issue might not be your students… it might be the structure. In this episode, we unpack how one common routine is quietly reducing student engagement and what simple shift can help students listen, think, and fully participate in math discussions. What You’ll Learn: Why bringing student work to the carpet can actually lower student engagement What the true purpose of the share is in building student thinking and engagement How this routine unintentionally excludes students who need engagement the most A simple shift to increase listening, thinking, and participation How removing distractions improves focus and student engagement during discussions In This Episode  The moment student engagement drops during share time The routine that feels right (but hurts engagement) What students are actually doing instead of listening Reframing the purpose of the share for engagement The students we unintentionally leave out The shift that increases student engagement immediately Protecting attention to build real math discussionsFree Resource Want to increase student engagement and get students thinking more deeply in math? ⬇️ Download: 5 Questions to Ask in Math Class to Get Students Thinking monamath.com/5questions Work With Me Looking to improve student engagement and math instruction across your school or district? I offer professional development and coaching for K–8 teachers and instructional leaders. 🚸 Learn more at monamath.com/leaders

    10 min
  3. Apr 27

    207: You don’t need a new curriculum. You need a different structure.

    Send us Fan Mail Have you ever found yourself walking around during grapple time unsure of where to go or what to say? This episode taps into that exact moment—when students are at different stages and the instinct is to jump in and fix everything. You’ll discover why the real power of grapple time isn’t in giving answers, but in how you respond to student thinking in math. Most teachers were trained to look for correct answers, not to analyze thinking. During grapple time, that leads to scanning for who’s right or wrong instead of understanding how students are reasoning. This episode reframes effective math teaching by showing that grapple time isn’t about struggle—it’s about uncovering and using student thinking intentionally. 🎧 Ready to Transform Your Grapple Time? If this episode got you thinking: 👉 Listen to the full episode for real classroom examples and practical strategies 👉 Subscribe for more actionable math instruction insights 👉 Leave a review to support other educators on this journey 📥 Take Action Today: Try just ONE move in your classroom tomorrow—or reflect on which move you tend to skip. 📘 Want to go deeper? Order the Book HERE! Explore the book designed to help you build a classroom where student thinking drives instruction and math becomes a true language of understanding. Because when you shift how you respond during grapple time…  you don’t just manage the moment—you transform learning.

    12 min
4.9
out of 5
38 Ratings

About

Mona, of Mona Math, reveals the mysteries of how to teach elementary math even if you aren't a math person. Discover how you can develop a buzzing student led math classroom. We cover all things math identity, classroom culture, and student centered instructional practices to help you empower students to love and understanding math deeply.

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