Make Math Happen
Make Math Happen (formerly known as PD for the SOUL) is the podcast for educators ready to move with intention and teach with impact. Hosted by math coach and equity-focused educator Laneshia Boone, each episode bridges practice and purpose to help you design instruction that centers students, builds capacity, and makes learning stick—especially for those pushed to the margins.
Every week, you’ll get strategies that work in real classrooms, grounded reflections that challenge the status quo, and conversations with educators who are making bold moves in math education. From planning with purpose to using charts that anchor learning, from building strong routines to disrupting expired rules, this podcast is where meaningful math instruction comes to life.
You’ll walk away with ready-to-use tools, fresh insight, and the confidence to make every lesson count.
Because when we move with care, plan with clarity, and teach with courage, we make math happen.
Make Math Happen
Connecting Math: Comparing Quantities
Before students can work flexibly with ratios, they must be able to answer a more fundamental question: What exactly are we comparing, and why?
In this episode, we zoom in on the core comparison structures that sit beneath ratios, proportions, geometry, and algebra: part-to-part relationships, part-to-whole relationships, and unit reasoning. You’ll hear how these ways of thinking develop over time, how they connect back to geometry through reference points, structure, and scale, and why the number line remains a powerful organizing tool for magnitude and relative size.
We explore how focusing on unit reasoning and reciprocal relationships helps students make sense of ratios without rushing to procedures. Instead of asking students to compute right away, we center questions like: What if there was only one of either quantity? How would the relationship change? How would it stay the same? These questions surface meaning and build proportional thinking that transfers.
You’ll also hear how routines like Three Reads, visual models, and guided discussion support students who struggle with reading and unfinished learning, and why drawing representations is a strength, not a crutch.
This episode helps teachers and home educators create space for reasoning, reduce cognitive load, and preserve the models students need for deeper mathematical understanding in later grades.
Resources mentioned in the episode:
- Lamon, S.L.: 2001, 'Presenting and representing: From fractions to rational numbers,' in A. Cuoco and F. Curcio (eds.), The Roles of Representations in School Mathematics-2001 Yearbook, Reston: NCTM, pp. 146-165.
- Principles of Instruction
Thanks for tuning in to this episode of the Make Math Happen podcast! If you enjoyed today’s conversation, subscribe on your favorite listening platform, leave a review, and share this episode with your fellow educators.
You can also join the discussion and connect with me directly by clicking the link to join the Math Collective. Together, we’ll keep exploring practical strategies to transform classrooms and inspire students.
Remember, new episodes drop every Sunday at 9:00 am, so mark your calendars! Until next time, keep making math happen, and I’ll catch you in the next episode.
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